Netflix co-CEOs Greg Peters and Ted Sarandos sought in a letter to tamp down concerns that the streaming giant is not committed to the movie business.
The two chief executive officers of Netflix Inc. laid out the company’s case for acquiring Warner Bros Discovery Inc., after rival Paramount Skydance Corp. went public with a competing, hostile offer.
Layoffs at major outlets like CBS, NBC, and Teen Vogue disproportionately hit Black journalists, raising fears of a DEI ...
Netflix has a deal in place to buy Warner Bros. Discovery’s studio and streaming assets, including HBO/HBO Max, but ...
In a deal with more twists than a Hitchcock movie, Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. has found itself the belle of the ball in ...
We’re heading into our last full working week of the year, so the news flow is likely to start quieting down. (Be on the ...
Interviews with dozens of actors, producers and camera crews reveal an industry attempting to weigh the lesser of two ...
Why Paramount Skydance is tapping Middle-Eastern investors in hostile bid for Warner Bros. Discovery
Famed media investor Mario Gabelli, a Paramount Skydance shareholder, is among those who have pledged their WBD shares to the ...
Paramount pitches Netflix as a European Union nonstarter, but regulators seem unfazed — and Trump may be the only audience ...
If Paramount achieves victory in its hostile takeover bid, the addition of Warner Bros. Discovery to its portfolio would, in ...
Trump has said he will be "involved" in the government's regulatory review of a WBD deal. Injecting the president's animus ...
Netflix and Paramount’s rival bids for Warner Bros Discovery offer competing futures for jobs, streaming prices, and ...
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