Amazon founder Jeff Bezos dined with President Trump hours after overhauling the Washington Post’s opinion section — in the tech billionaire’s latest action to cozy up to the nation’s new chief executive.
After taking creative control, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos asks social media who should be the next James Bond, and most people want an obvious choice.
In the latest example of billionaire media moguls doing my job for me, Bezos has informed WaPo staff that their opinion page will defend “free markets.”
There is no record of the announcement attributed to Bezos or of the social media exchange that the post references.
Jeff Bezos announced changes to the Washington Post opinion pages to support personal liberties and free markets, leading to the resignation of opinion editor David Shipley. This change follows the Post's controversial decision not to endorse a presidential candidate in 2024,
Washington Post staffers outraged at Jeff Bezos’ stunning plan for opinion pages that prompted top editor to quit - ‘I have a feeling this isn’t gonna bring back the 250k subs,’ one Post reporter wrot
Following the shock news that Amazon has taken full creative control over James Bond, with long-term Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson stepping back, the question on everyone’s lips is: who should be the next 007?
In a past life, Lauren Sánchez and Tony Gonzalez were once together. It's a fact that's surprising sports fans today, considering who Sánchez is engaged to.
Never has a free press been more important - THE INDEPENDENT VIEW: Editorial: The new US power brokers claim to venerate free speech – until someone disagrees with them
An email sent by Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos to staff Wednesday about a new direction for the Opinion Section drew several sharp, public rebukes.
Jeff Bezos, The Washington Post's billionaire owner, recieved harsh criticism from social media users after taking to online platforms to announce that the publication will only publish certain types of pieces in its opinion section.
A number of mainstream media figures ripped Jeff Bezos for his decision to revamp the Washington Post's opinion section