Wendy Lee is an entertainment business reporter, covering streaming services such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and Apple TV+. She also writes about podcasting services, digital media and talent agencies. Lee was part of a team that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in breaking news reporting of the fatal shooting on the set of “Rust.” She previously covered tech for the San Francisco Chronicle and worked at KPCC-FM (89.3), the Star Tribune in Minnesota and the Tennessean. She is a graduate of UC Berkeley.
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Brett Ratner is directing his first movie seven years after facing sexual harassment allegations reported by The Times. In 2017, six women, including actor Olivia Dunn, accused Ratner of sexual harassment and misconduct.
On Monday, WWE “Raw” will stream exclusively on Netflix. The wrestling franchise is hoping for a huge global and multigenerational audience following years of success on TV and drama inside and outside the ring.
The first season of ‘Squid Game’ remains Netflix’s most popular show, with more than 330 million views on the streaming service. Will Season 2 top that?
Google’s proposed solutions come after the U.S. Department of Justice urged a judge to force the search giant to sell its popular Chrome browser.
Netflix is continuing to add to its live sports programming, announcing it will stream the 2027 and 2031 FIFA Women’s World Cup tournaments.
The partnership will give CAA-represented actors and athletes access to YouTube’s tools to manage and identify AI content that shows their digital likeness.
Virgin Music Group, a division of Universal Music Group, said Monday that it acquired Downtown Music Holdings for $775 million.
Writers Guild of America sent a letter to Hollywood studios including Disney, Sony and Netflix, asking them to take action against tech companies who are using writers’ work to train AI.
Three members of the Animation Guild’s negotiation committee say they oppose the tentative contract that the union reached with major studios over terms governing artificial intelligence.
OpenAI on Monday said it will release its controversial text-to-video tool to the public with different subscription tiers.