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[5] MYSanAntonio.com, or MYSA, is editorially independent of ExpressNews.com. [6] From 1881, the San Antonio Express-News' main competitor was the San Antonio Evening Light , which became a Hearst publication in 1924 and was shut down, in 1993, when Hearst bought the Express-News .
Hearst-Argyle was formed in 1997 with the merger of Hearst Corporation's broadcasting division and stations owned by Argyle Television Holdings II, [1] which is partially related to the company of the same name who (in 1994) sold its stations to New World Communications, stations that eventually became Fox-owned stations (Hearst itself, unusual for any American broadcast group, has never held ...
List of assets owned by Hearst Communications, a privately held American-based media conglomerate based in the Hearst Tower in New York City, USA.: Publishing [ edit ]
Hearst also began acquiring radio stations to complement his papers. [18] Hearst saw financial challenges in the early 1920s, when he was using company funds to build Hearst Castle in San Simeon and support movie production at Cosmopolitan Productions. This eventually led to the merger of the magazine Hearst International with Cosmopolitan in ...
John Augustine Chilton Hearst (born October 24, 1952) is an American business and media executive, film producer and philanthropist. [1] [2] He plays a leadership role in the family-owned Hearst Corporation, one of America's largest diversified media companies where he has been a member of the board of directors since 1990. [3]
A&E Television Networks, LLC (doing business and stylized as A+E Networks) is an American multinational broadcasting company owned and operated as a 50–50 joint venture between Hearst Communications and The Walt Disney Company through the General Entertainment Content unit of its Entertainment division.
George Randolph Hearst Jr. (July 13, 1927 – June 25, 2012) [1] was an American businessman and member of the wealthy Hearst family. He served as the chairman of the board of the Hearst Corporation from 1996 through to his death in 2012, succeeding his uncle Randolph Apperson Hearst. He was a director at the company for over forty years.
The following year he succeeded his father as a trustee of the trust that controls the company and chooses the directors. In 1996, he was a co-founder of the @Home Network Broadband Internet service with Milo Medin, cable companies Tele-Communications Inc. , Comcast and Cox Cable where he served as the company's first chief executive officer. [ 2 ]