Luminate's homepage reads like a map of what entertainment now sells to itself: music charts, film and television credits, streaming viewership, research, brand consulting and industry intelligence, all packaged for companies that need a number before they can make a decision. [1]
The old version of this business was a chart; the current version is an anxiety index, with Luminate saying its music product measures 23 trillion data points from more than 500 authorized partners across more than 50 genres in 48 markets, while its film and television product tracks people, projects and companies from development through distribution and its streaming product ranks original shows and films by minutes watched and audience share. [1]
The front page also turns current Hollywood problems into sellable report categories, including creator-economy jobs, lagging Los Angeles TV production, production incentives, the Hollywood exodus, superfan demographics and a May 2026 state-of-the-industry report. [1]
That is the useful divide: fans argue over shows, studios argue over labor, incentives, locations and audiences, and Luminate sells the measurement layer between them. [1]
The caveat is that the homepage is broad, so the paper can describe the product map but should not print detailed claims from any one report until that report is separately fetched. [1]
-- CAMILLE BEAUMONT, Los Angeles