Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 2004, Time Warner sold the Warner Music Group, along with Warner Bros. Records, to a private equity group led by Edgar Bronfman Jr. [176] In 2019, the since-separated Warner Bros. record division was rechristened Warner Records, as WMG held a short-term license to use the Warner Bros. name and trademarks; as such, the label currently ...
Warner Alliance - a now-defunct contemporary Christian music division owned by Warner Music Group, which operated until 1998. The company was dissolved by Warner purchasing Word Entertainment. Warner Leisure, Inc. - 80% stake; previously known as Leisure Development Corp. of America; closed in 1985
The company's properties are divided into nine business units, consisting of the flagship Warner Bros. film and television studios, comic book publisher DC Comics, Home Box Office, Inc. (including HBO, Cinemax and Magnolia Network), U.S. Networks Group (including the majority of the advertisement-supported cable channels of its predecessors ...
Warner Bros. Discovery, CNN’s corporate parent, announced Thursday it is establishing a new corporate structure that splits off its cable networks from its growing streaming business.
Warner Bros. Discovery stock, which has been gaining ground in recent weeks after falling to a low of about $6 a share earlier this year, jumped 15.4% on the news to $12.49. Zaslav and his team ...
The division was incorporated as Warner Bros. Pictures on March 3, 2003, to diversify film subjects and expand audiences for their film releases. [30] The company became part of the Warner Bros. Pictures Group, which was established in 2008, and Jeff Robinov was appointed the first president of the company. [31]
In addition to offering Warner Bros. Discovery's linear channels, including HBO, to its Xfinity customers, Comcast will have expanded rights to provide ad-supported versions of Warner Bros ...
Wonder Woman (Lynda Carter) in the 1975–1979 television series, Wonder Woman. For four years, from 1967 to 1971, the company's lone output was the existing television series The F.B.I., by 1970, several of the former talent from 20th Century-Fox Television as well as former agent writers was defected to Warner Bros., such as Paul Monash, Rod Amateau, Bill Idelson and Harvey Miller, Saul ...