News

Warner Bros. Discovery is not alone. Comcast Corp.’s RIO-N -1.16% NBCUniversal is spinning out its cable networks, including ...
Roku (ROKU) stock is surging after it announced a partnership with Amazon's (AMZN) ads team to create the largest CTV ...
NEW YORK— In a landmark agreement to overtake the burgeoning connected TV (CTV) advertising market, Amazon Ads and Roku today ...
FTC Seeks Information From Top Advertising Agencies as Part of Ad-Boycott Probe Among firms that received requests are Omnicom, WPP, Dentsu, Interpublic and Publicis. Boeing Stock Rises. Its ...
Disney will pay Comcast’s NBCUniversal nearly $439 million for its stake in Hulu, taking full control of the streaming ...
Free streaming platform Zone-ify is rolling out a feature enabling viewers to play video games via their TV remote, a first ...
Warner Bros. Discovery’s announced separation follows the industry’s latest M&A trend. In this case, separation is easy.
Warner Bros. Discovery, the media conglomerate that owns HBOMax, TNT Sports, and CNN, will be splitting into two companies.
Four years ago, David Zaslav clinched a debt-heavy deal to merge cable mainstay Discovery Inc. — which he’d run since 2006 — ...
Warner Bros. Discovery is restructuring, creating separate entities for its streaming and cable operations to better align with media consumption trends and to strengthen each division's focus.