Meg James is a senior entertainment industry writer for the Los Angeles Times. She was the lead reporter for The Times’ coverage of the deadly “Rust” shooting on a New Mexico film set in 2021, work recognized by the Pulitzer Prize board as a finalist in breaking news. A member of the Company Town team for two decades, James specializes in covering television, corporate media and investigative projects. She previously wrote for the Miami Herald and the Palm Beach Post. A native of Wyoming, she is a graduate of the University of Colorado and Columbia University.
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The 6th Circuit Court of Appeals blasted the FCC’s attempts to regulate broadband internet, but state laws in California and New York remain intact.
A federal appeals court in Ohio ruled that the Federal Communications Commission lacked authority to reinstate open internet rules.
Walt Disney Co. and its chief executive have made a sharp pivot since doubling-down on diversity and inclusion efforts in the wake of George Floyd’s murder in Minneapolis four and a half years ago.
HBO threw ‘Sesame Street’ a lifeline a decade ago, enabling the production of new episodes. Warner Bros. Discovery has decided to stop financing first-run episodes after this season.
Investors cheered the news that Warner Bros. Discovery planned to separate its cable channels, except for HBO, into a separate unit.
Conservative media titan Rupert Murdoch cannot change his family trust and give control to his son Lachlan after his death, according to a Nevada probate commissioner ruling.
Warner Bros. Discovery reaches an agreement for Comcast Corp. to continue carrying its cable channels, including HBO, TNT, CNN and Animal Planet.
Hallmark rolls out ‘Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story,’ one of the holiday movies inspired by the Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce romance. The football player’s mother, Donna Kelce, has a small part.
‘Moana 2,’ Disney’s sequel to the beloved original film, is expected to break Thanksgiving weekend box office records with as much as $200 million in ticket sales.
Investors are calling foul over Warner Bros. Discovery’s loss of its NBA media rights deal.