Hollywood’s Message to Red States: Our Movies Are for You
After a period of openly using movies to display progressive values, studios seem to be heeding a message from many ticket buyers: Just entertain us.
By Brooks Barnes
After a period of openly using movies to display progressive values, studios seem to be heeding a message from many ticket buyers: Just entertain us.
By Brooks Barnes
Vivian Jenna Wilson’s remarks, in an exclusive interview with NBC News, were a response to Mr. Musk’s comments about her transgender identity.
By Aimee Ortiz
The company is trying to make the league accept its match of Amazon’s bid to broadcast games starting with the 2025-26 season.
By Tania Ganguli
The SAG-AFTRA union wants higher pay for the use of voices and images and protection from losing jobs to artificial intelligence.
By Brooks Barnes and Kellen Browning
The litigation stems from a March 10 interview in which George Stephanopoulos, the network’s star anchor, referred to a civil case brought against Mr. Trump by E. Jean Carroll.
By Michael M. Grynbaum
Rupert Murdoch, the patriarch, has moved to change the family’s irrevocable trust to preserve his media businesses as a conservative force. Several of his children are fighting back.
By Jim Rutenberg and Jonathan Mahler
The league rejected a bid by Warner Bros. Discovery to match Amazon’s offer.
By Tania Ganguli, Kevin Draper and Nicole Sperling
Guided by a keen sense of timing, she covered wars, sports, riots, politics and more for The A.P. in the ’70s, when few women worked as news photographers.
By Trip Gabriel
Born into a patrician family, he used Harper’s and later his own Lapham’s Quarterly to denounce what he saw as the hypocrisies and injustices of a spoiled United States.
By Robert D. McFadden
Organizers avoided disruption by agreeing to give performers on temporary contracts a greater cut of broadcast royalties.
By Aurelien Breeden
He brought to his writing a sharp sense of humor, honed in stand-up comedy clubs, and never pulled punches even though he was an unabashed Democrat.
By Sam Roberts
President Biden, who has been sidelined with Covid, is set to address the nation this week.
By Stuart A. Thompson
Progressive publications said President Biden’s decision to withdraw from the 2024 election was heroic. Conservative commentators suggested that if he is unable to campaign, he should step down from the presidency, too.
By Santul Nerkar
Ms. Kurmasheva, a Russian American working for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, had been charged in relation to an antiwar book she edited.
By Ivan Nechepurenko
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A judge also threw out a separate lawsuit against the network brought by a specialist in Russian disinformation.
By Michael M. Grynbaum
The celebrated 1990s police procedural is coming to Peacock in August.
By Maya Salam
President Biden’s decision to bow out after a disastrous debate confirms that in a TikTok era, TV is still the biggest political arena.
By James Poniewozik
The film was a global phenomenon and seemed to herald a new era of embracing stories by, about and for women.
By Nicole Sperling
Donald Trump sued the Pulitzer Prize Board over its 2022 statement reaffirming its decision to award a prize for coverage of the 2016 Trump campaign’s ties to Russia.
By Rebecca Robbins
Viewership peaked on Thursday night starting around the 15-minute mark of Donald Trump’s speech, as he delivered a vivid reconstruction of last weekend’s assassination attempt.
By John Koblin
The organization, and its influential film festival, may stay in Park City, Utah, or move to another location like Atlanta or Cincinnati.
By Nicole Sperling
Once again, a show with little following has become hugely popular once it starts streaming on Netflix.
By John Koblin
The former Fox News host, who is now firmly a part of Donald Trump’s inner circle, appeared to relish his return to the limelight.
By Michael M. Grynbaum
He used his platforms on CNN and Fox Business to share baseless conspiracy theories. His tenure at Fox ended after the network was sued for defamation over claims of voting machine fraud.
By Alex Williams and Michael Levenson
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A lawsuit that Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni won is one of several she has filed against critics. Press-freedom groups say it is a concerning practice.
By Elisabetta Povoledo
Shows like “Bridgerton” and “The Roast of Tom Brady” performed well for the streaming service, which now has 278 million subscribers worldwide.
By Nicole Sperling
After time away from the spotlight, the right-wing host is increasingly welcomed by Trump’s inner circle. He also made a surprise visit to Fox’s convention studio.
By Michael M. Grynbaum and Jim Rutenberg
Carlos Espina is among a new kind of social media personalities whom politicians, especially those in the Biden White House, view as modern-day broadcasters.
By Sapna Maheshwari and Ken Bensinger
A production technique gave the impression that Rachel Maddow and other star anchors were reporting in Milwaukee, not from 30 Rockefeller Plaza.
By Michael M. Grynbaum
The agreements, set to begin after next season, could potentially pay the league about $76 billion over 11 years.
By Tania Ganguli and Kevin Draper
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