Hong Kong

Mitico Pilots Community-Based Livestreaming at World of Dance Hong Kong

A Hong Kong pilot explores how creator-led distribution could reshape livestreaming for global competitions

Updated

April 8, 2026 5:28 PM

A dance crew performs in sync on stage at World of Dance under spotlights. PHOTO: WORLD OF DANCE HONG KONG

On January 22, 2026, World of Dance Hong Kong became the first global event to pilot Mitico’s community-based livestreaming model. The idea is simple: rethink how live competitions are shared in a digital-first world.

Instead of relying on a single official broadcast, the event was produced as one centralised live feed. It was then distributed across multiple creators and influencers, each hosting the stream for their own audience.

This gave creators room to add their own commentary, adapt the language and bring in cultural context that suited their communities, while the production remained consistent behind the scenes.  

“Dance is a universal language”, said David Gonzalez, President of World of Dance. “Our collaboration with Mitico to produce an international, creator-led livestream in Hong Kong allowed a regional competition to reach a global audience. With personalised commentary from hosts in different languages, we can begin to see how regional events may connect through global communities”. This approach points to a shift away from traditional broadcaster-led distribution and toward creator-led amplification.

A dance crew performs on stage as the audience watches. PHOTO: WORLD OF DANCE HONG KONG

Mitico’s approach begins with a familiar industry challenge: the high cost of production and licensing, which often makes it difficult to livestream cultural and sports events at scale.  

“Many cultural and sports competitions are never livestreamed because traditional broadcasting is too costly and complex”, said Chengcheng Li, Founder of Mitico. “By distributing a centralised production feed through creators and community hosts, regional events can reach global audiences while maintaining a unified production workflow”.

World of Dance (WOD) offered a natural test environment. It started as a global dance competition platform before entering a television partnership with NBC, which later produced four seasons of the World of Dance reality series. While the television programme concluded in 2021, the competition business has continued to expand through an international network of partners. Today, World of Dance competitions are represented in more than 72 countries, producing nearly 100 events each year, with a digital audience of more than 34 million followers across platforms

Despite that scale, many competitions are not livestreamed due to the high production costs and technical demands associated with traditional broadcasting. The Hong Kong event was selected to assess whether a community-led distribution model could offer a more scalable alternative for live coverage.

While no changes to World of Dance’s broader distribution strategy have been announced, the Hong Kong pilot offers an early indication of how global competitions may rethink livestreaming in an increasingly creator-driven media environment.

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How Overstory’s Satellite Data and AI Are Transforming Vegetation Management

What Overstory’s vegetation intelligence reveals about wildfire and outage risk.

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January 15, 2026 8:03 PM

Aerial photograph of a green field. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

Managing vegetation around power lines has long been one of the biggest operational challenges for utilities. A single tree growing too close to electrical infrastructure can trigger outages or, in the worst cases, spark fires. With vast service territories, shifting weather patterns and limited visibility into changing landscape conditions, utilities often rely on inspections and broad wildfire-risk maps that provide only partial insight into where the most serious threats actually are.

Overstory, a company specializing in AI-powered vegetation intelligence, addresses this visibility gap with a platform that uses high-resolution satellite imagery and machine-learning models to interpret vegetation conditions in detail.Instead of assessing risk by region, terrain type or outdated maps, the system evaluates conditions tree by tree. This helps utilities identify precisely where hazards exist and which areas demand immediate intervention—critical in regions where small variations in vegetation density, fuel type or moisture levels can influence how quickly a spark might spread.

At the core of this technology is Overstory’s proprietary Fuel Detection Model, designed to identify vegetation most likely to ignite or accelerate wildfire spread. Unlike broad, publicly available fire-risk maps, the model analyzes the specific fuel conditions surrounding electrical infrastructure. By pinpointing exact locations where certain fuel types or densities create elevated risk, utilities can plan targeted wildfire-mitigation work rather than relying on sweeping, resource-heavy maintenance cycles.

This data-driven approach is reshaping how utilities structure vegetation-management programs. Having visibility into where risks are concentrated—and which trees or areas pose the highest threat—allows teams to prioritize work based on measurable evidence. For many utilities, this shift supports more efficient crew deployment, reduces unnecessary trims and builds clearer justification for preventive action. It also offers a path to strengthening grid reliability without expanding operational budgets.

Overstory’s recent US$43 million Series B funding round, led by Blume Equity with support from Energy Impact Partners and existing investors, reflects growing interest in AI tools that translate environmental data into actionable wildfire-prevention intelligence. The investment will support further development of Overstory’s risk models and help expand access to its vegetation-intelligence platform.

Yet the company’s focus remains consistent: giving utilities sharper, real-time visibility into the landscapes they manage. By converting satellite observations into clear and actionable insights, Overstory’s AI system provides a more informed foundation for decisions that impact grid safety and community resilience. In an environment where a single missed hazard can have far-reaching consequences, early and precise detection has become an essential tool for preventing wildfires before they start.