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Search resuls for: "Barry Diller"


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Martin Starger, who as a senior executive at ABC in the 1970s helped bring “Happy Days,” “Roots,” “Rich Man, Poor Man” and other shows to the small screen — and the network nearly to the brink of No. 1 in prime time — before turning to producing movies, most notably Robert Altman’s “Nashville,” died on May 31 at his home in Los Angeles. His death was confirmed by his niece, Ilene Starger, a casting director. Mr. Starger joined ABC in the mid-1960s and rose to positions of increasing importance, culminating in his promotion to president of ABC Entertainment in 1972. He was culturally ahead of his audience but was pragmatic in his programming choices, but ever striving for better.”
Persons: Martin Starger, ” “ Rich, , Robert Altman’s “, Ilene, Starger, Barry Diller, Diller Organizations: ABC, ABC Entertainment Locations: Robert Altman’s “ Nashville, Los Angeles
How to behave as a superyacht guest
  + stars: | 2024-06-09 | by ( Madeline Berg | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +8 min
Meantime, Giorgio Armani held a party on his yacht for the likes of Sydney Sweeney and Kerry Washington. Being a guest on a superyacht is probably the best kind of guest to be — but the etiquette aboard the multimillion-dollar vessels comes with its own idiosyncrasies. The very few who need to know them — there are only about 5,800 yachts longer than 30 meters at sea, according to SuperYacht Times — already know them. The price to charter Triumph, a 65-meter superyacht, starts at $650,000 a week. According to the industry standard, owning a superyacht will cost 10% of its new-build price annually.
Persons: , Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Barry Diller, Bezos, Koru, Bill Gates, Ari Emanuel, Leonardo DiCaprio, Eos, Diane von Furstenberg, Candice Bergen, Emma Thompson, Jason Blum, Giorgio Armani, Sydney Sweeney, Kerry Washington, they're, Rich, Fraser, he'd, Superyachts Organizations: Service, Business, SuperYacht, Palm, Breed Media, Fraser Yachts, Lamborghini Locations: superyachts, Aden
Read previewDiane von Furstenberg is reflecting on the legacy of the wrap dress. The wrap dress changed von Furstenberg's lifeVon Furstenberg created the wrap dress in 1973, taking inspiration from ballerina's tops and bright fabrics she first saw in Italy, as she shared in the documentary. AdvertisementA model walks in a Diane von Furstenberg wrap dress in 1973. AdvertisementTalita von Furstenberg and Diane von Furstenberg in March 2024. Gotham/GC Images/Getty ImagesAnd though the wrap dress has defined her professional life, von Furstenberg said her family is her greatest source of pride.
Persons: , Diane von Furstenberg, Oscar, Sharmeen Obaid, Trish Dalton, von, von Furstenberg, Fabiola Beracasa Beckman, Tracy Aftergood, Von Furstenberg, Julie Nixon Eisenhower, Oprah Winfrey, Karlie Kloss, it's, DVF, Barry Diller, Talita von Furstenberg, Furstenberg Organizations: Service, Hulu, Tribeca, Business, CNN, Fairchild, QVC, Target, Gotham Locations: Europe, New York, Dalton, Italy
You've heard this one before: A big tech company is offering a lifeline to distressed media companies. That's the argument against a slew of deals publishers have been making with Sam Altman's OpenAI over the past few months. But the OpenAI deals, the publishers emphasize, are straightforward licensing deals for stuff they're already making. AdvertisementWhich means — they say — at the end of these deals, publishers won't have to regret investing in another defunct Big Tech project. But the thing I'm most worried about as someone who makes words for a living isn't a replay of the old Facebook/Apple/Google deals publishers now regret.
Persons: You've, It's, Sam Altman's OpenAI, Axel Springer, Rupert, Barry Diller's Dotdash Meredith, Laurene Powell, haven't, OpenAI, it's, Jessica Lessin, Lucy, Charlie Brown, , Let's, Bob Iger, ChatGPT, that's Organizations: Service, Vox Media, Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, Laurene Powell Jobs, Atlantic Media, Apple, Google, Facebook, The New York Times, Big Tech, New York Times, Microsoft, Netflix, ABC, Disney
The Daily Beast’s new leaders will do a round of voluntary buyouts intended to cut costs by $1.5 million, in one of their first major moves to try to revitalize the flagging digital tabloid. The new leaders, Joanna Coles and Ben Sherwood, both media veterans, joined the company in April in exchange for an equity stake in the business. Barry Diller’s company, IAC, maintains control of the publication. The Daily Beast’s union told its members in a memo this week that workers would have until June 14 to apply for a buyout, after which the publication would accept applications “in reverse seniority order until they meet their $1.5 million threshold.”Decisions on additional applications beyond that threshold would be up to the company, and there would be “a moratorium” on further layoffs until the end of the year, according to the union’s memo. The cuts are not targeting any particular coverage area.
Persons: Joanna Coles, Ben Sherwood, Barry Diller’s Organizations: IAC, Daily
Young adults are throwing their support behind calls for a four-day workweek. A new national survey from CNBC/Generation Lab of 1,033 people aged 18 to 34 found that an overwhelming 81% of respondents believe a four-day workweek would boost their company's productivity, while 19% said productivity would decline. Exos, a U.S. coaching company that trains top athletes and leads corporate wellness programs, recently reported results from the first six months of an ongoing four-day workweek experiment. Other four-day workweek trials have shown similar gains. Although respondents to the CNBC/Generation Lab survey largely agreed on workweek length, they were less unified when asked about work setting.
Persons: Sen, Bernie Sanders, Mark Takano, Barry Diller, Steven Cohen, Cohen Organizations: CNBC, Representatives, IAC, New York Mets Locations: USA, U.S
Little Island, the $260 million park on the Hudson River that opened in 2021, was imagined as a haven for innovation in the performing arts. But the park’s cultural offerings — mostly sporadic, one-off works — have so far fallen short of those ambitions. Now Barry Diller, the billionaire media mogul who paid for the park, is setting out to deliver on the original vision, financing a robust, four-month annual performing arts festival on Little Island, the park announced on Monday. The festival, one of the most ambitious artistic undertakings in New York City in recent years, will promote new work in music, dance, theater and opera. “I want people to enjoy the originality and adventure of Little Island,” Diller said.
Persons: Barry Diller, Scott Rudin, Diller, Twyla Tharp, Mozart’s, Figaro, Anthony Roth Costanzo, , ” Diller Locations: Little, New York City
The Daily Beast has long been an outlier in the digital empire of the billionaire Barry Diller. As sites like Match.com and Expedia made millions over the years, Mr. Diller’s digital tabloid lost money, publishing scoop after scoop but struggling to turn a profit. Mr. Sherwood and Ms. Coles will be granted an equity stake equivalent to roughly half of The Daily Beast, with IAC keeping the majority, according to a person familiar with the matter. Mr. Sherwood, 60, will be its chief executive and publisher, and Ms. Coles, 61, will be chief creative and content officer. The decision to bring in Mr. Sherwood and Ms. Coles came after Mr. Diller considered a sale of The Daily Beast and had conversations with various suitors.
Persons: Barry Diller, Expedia, Diller, he’s, Ben Sherwood, Joanna Coles, Sherwood, Coles, Janice Min Organizations: Disney ABC Television Group, Hearst Magazines, IAC, Daily, Hollywood, Ankler Media, The Hollywood Locations: Ben
New York CNN —Shares of Trump Media & Technology Group are in free fall. Trump Media is now trading below $31. Trump owns a dominant stake of 78.8 million shares in the company, which generates little revenue and is losing users. At the closing high for Trump Media’s stock price, the former president’s stake was valued at $5.2 billion. Trump Media disclosed losing $58 million in 2023 on very light revenue of just $4.1 million.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump, , Shannon Devine, Capital’s Matthew Kennedy, Billionaire Barry Diller, ” Shannon Devine, it’s Organizations: New, New York CNN, Trump Media & Technology Group, Trump Media, Nasdaq, Trump, Big Tech, ” Trump Media, CNN, Expedia, People Magazine, IAC, CNBC Locations: New York
Trump Media stock sinks to post-merger low
  + stars: | 2024-04-05 | by ( Matt Egan | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +1 min
CNN —Shares of Truth Social owner Trump Media & Technology Group tumbled 12% on Friday, sinking to their lowest level since the company went public last week. Despite this week’s losses, Trump Media shares have still spiked by more than 130% so far this year. Trump Media recently disclosed losing $58 million last year on very light revenue of just $4.1 million. Barry Diller, the billionaire chairman of Expedia and People Magazine owner IAC, told CNBC on Thursday that Trump Media is a “scam” and people buying the stock are “dopes.”“I mean, it’s ridiculous,” Diller said on CNBC. “The company has no revenue.”A Trump Media spokesperson denounced critics of the company.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Barry Diller, , ” Diller, Trump, ” Shannon Devine Organizations: CNN, Social, Trump Media & Technology Group, Trump Media, Nasdaq, Trump Media’s, Wall Street, Expedia, People Magazine, IAC, CNBC Locations:
Read previewThe proxy war between Disney and billionaire activist investor Nelson Peltz is over. According to The Wall Street Journal, Peltz's hedge fund Trian Partners may have profited about $300 million by waging a 16-month proxy battle against Disney, citing anonymous sources familiar with the matter. AdvertisementLast February, Bloomberg reported that Peltz made about $154 million in paper profit after buying 9.4 million shares of Disney. After all, Peltz waged two separate proxy battles against Disney in less than two years. AdvertisementWhen asked about the outcome of Peltz's proxy war, IAC chairman and billionaire Barry Diller told CNBC's Squawk Box on Thursday that the battle was a "grand waste of time" and questioned the value of Petlz's activist campaign.
Persons: , Nelson Peltz, Bob Iger, Iger, Peltz …, Peltz, Trian, James Park, Barry Diller, CNBC's Organizations: Service, Disney, Wall Street, Business, Bloomberg, The, University of California, IAC, Trian Partners Locations: Los Angeles
Trump Media is "a scam," and people buying its high-flying stock are "dopes," IAC and Expedia Chairman Barry Diller said Thursday in a scathing takedown of the social media company whose majority shareholder is former President Donald Trump. "I mean, it's ridiculous," Diller said on CNBC's "Squawk Box" when asked about Trump Media. When Trump Media began trading last week with the ticker DJT, its share price rocketed up about 50% to close to $80 before settling down. As of Thursday morning, Trump Media shares were selling for nearly $47. Trump Media on Monday reported it had net losses of $58 million in 2023.
Persons: Barry Diller, Donald Trump, Diller, Trump Organizations: Trump Media, IAC, CNBC
Companies may eventually transition to four days in person, with a flexible Friday option, according to Barry Diller. Which is what is going to lead to — I think sensibly — not necessarily a four-day work week, but four days in the office, and Fridays you can work from home or work at your own schedule." In the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, companies have gravitated toward flexible working schedules, but the multitude of options has created some "chaos" at companies, according to Diller. Diller isn't the only investor calling for a more flexible working norm. During an interview with CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Wednesday, Mets owner Steve Cohen said that the growth of artificial intelligence could lead to a shortened four-day work week.
Persons: Barry Diller, CNBC's, Diller, Steve Cohen Organizations: IAC, Wednesday, Mets
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBarry Diller: Sensible for companies to move to a '4 days in office, Fridays flexible' standardBarry Diller, IAC chairman and senior executive & Expedia chairman and senior executive, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Disney's proxy fight win over activist investor Nelson Peltz, Paramount's merger discussion with Skydance, whether TikTok poses a national security threat, DOJ's antitrust lawsuit against Apple, AI regulation, the prospect of a 4-day workweek, and more.
Persons: Barry Diller, Nelson Peltz Organizations: Sensible, IAC, Apple
Barry Diller on Truth Social: It's a scam
  + stars: | 2024-04-04 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBarry Diller on Truth Social: It's a scamBarry Diller, IAC chairman and senior executive & Expedia chairman and senior executive, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Disney's proxy fight win over activist investor Nelson Peltz, Paramount's merger discussion with Skydance, whether TikTok poses a national security threat, DOJ's antitrust lawsuit against Apple, Truth Social, AI regulation, the prospect of a 4-day workweek, and more.
Persons: Barry Diller, Nelson Peltz Organizations: Truth, IAC, Apple
Barry Diller shares urgent warning about AI
  + stars: | 2024-04-04 | by ( Jordan Hart | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +1 min
Billionaire Barry Diller said it's time to get serious about regulating AI. Diller has two suggestions for legislators about how to reel in AI. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . The latest titan to voice alarm is the media billionaire Barry Diller, who raised his concerns about AI to CNBC on Thursday. "All attention should go towards regulating artificial intelligence, and we don't have a minute to lose," the IAC chairman said.
Persons: Barry Diller, Diller, , we're Organizations: Service, CNBC, IAC
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with IAC chairman and senior executive Barry DillerBarry Diller, IAC chairman and senior executive & Expedia chairman and senior executive, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Disney's proxy fight win over activist investor Nelson Peltz, Paramount's merger discussion with Skydance, whether TikTok poses a national security threat, DOJ's antitrust lawsuit against Apple, AI regulation, the prospect of a 4-day workweek, and more.
Persons: Barry Diller Barry Diller, Nelson Peltz Organizations: IAC, Apple
Barry Diller thinks employees should come into the office — but he'll settle for four days a week. Diller told CNBC different hybrid work models are causing chaos, and advocated for a standard model. On Fridays, Diller sees a future where people "can work from home or work at your own schedule." AdvertisementBarry Diller believes all the hybrid work models adopted by different companies in the wake of the pandemic are spawning "chaos." On Fridays, Diller foresees a future where employees "can work from home or work at your own schedule," he said.
Persons: Barry Diller, Diller, , Diller foresees Organizations: CNBC, Service, IAC, Business
Barry Diller thinks that shareholders of Truth Social's owner have been scammed. The IAC chairman pointed to Trump Media's low revenue and said he doubts Truth Social will grow. Shares for Trump Media and Technology Group initially surged after going public, but have since tumbled. AdvertisementBarry Diller has a message for Trump Media shareholders: "I think they're dopes." But that moment in the sun was short-lived, and shares of the former president's social media platform have since come crashing down to earth.
Persons: Barry Diller, Organizations: Truth, IAC, Trump, Trump Media, Technology Group, Service, Business
Kushner and Kloss take over Life magazineLife, the iconic photography-focused chronicler of the 20th century, has taken on many forms, including a weekly magazine, a website and the occasional special issue. Kushner and Kloss are buying the publication rights to Life from Dotdash Meredith, the print and digital publisher. The deal is being done through Bedford Media, the media start-up that Kloss leads as C.E.O. Life was once a central part of American culture, featuring the work of renowned photographers like Robert Capa and writing by top authors. (Ernest Hemingway’s “The Old Man and the Sea” first appeared in its pages.
Persons: Kushner, Kloss, Barry, Josh Kushner, Dotdash Meredith, Robert Capa, Ernest Hemingway’s “ Organizations: IAC, Bedford Media Locations: OpenAI
Read previewIt's been just about a year since Koru, Jeff Bezos' $500 million megayacht, set sail from the Oceanco shipyard in the Netherlands, capturing the attention of yachting insiders and land dwellers alike. Unlike many other megayachts, Koru, which media billionaire Barry Diller's Eos inspired, is designed as a sailing yacht. AdvertisementLike most other megayachts, Koru is powered by her engines, which are reportedly innovative in their use of a kinetic energy recovery system. AdvertisementTeak or not, the yachting industry isn't generally known for being all that environmentally friendly — or indeed lowkey, so many who BI talked to didn't buy into the idea that Koru is "too much." It's the latest superyacht to capture the yachting world's attention.
Persons: , Jeff Bezos, Koru, they'd, Federico Rossi, Barry Diller's Eos, he'd, Bezos, Lauren Sanchez, Origin's, Shephard, That's, Anders Kurtén, I'm, Jerry Jones, Bernard Arnault, Mark Zuckerberg Organizations: Service, Palm, Business, Industry, Yachts Locations: Netherlands, St, Myanmar
Best Movies of 2023
  + stars: | 2023-12-01 | by ( Manohla Dargis | Alissa Wilkinson | More About Manohla Dargis | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
I saw hundreds of new films with a variety of plots and styles made on every imaginable scale and budget. The movies have ostensibly been at death’s door at least since the shift to sync sound, which isn’t to undersell the industry’s business woes. “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” was “cursed,” read one headline; “‘Mission: Impossible 7’ falls short of expectations,” ran another. The moaning in the trades gave way to klaxon horns when much of SAG-AFTRA went on strike on July 14. This year also reminded us that a mass audience will happily get out of the house for movies without superheroes.
Persons: Manohla, Rockwell, Martin Scorsese, shutdowns, Topsy, , bullish, Indiana Jones, , AFTRA, Barry Diller, “ Barbie ”, “ Oppenheimer ” Organizations: Yahoo, Sundance Film, Writers Guild, SAG, Paramount, Marvel Locations: Cannes
Call it déjà vu: Jeff Bezos and fiancée Lauren Sanchez had an engagement party, again. Guests included the likes of Oprah, Kris Jenner, Barbra Streisand, and Robert Pattinson. AdvertisementWhy have one engagement party when you can have two? Guests included the likes of Kris Jenner, Oprah Winfrey, Robert Pattinson, Salma Hayek Pinault, and Barbra Streisand, per Vogue. AdvertisementGuests at Bezos' and Sanchez's first engagement party included big names like Leonardo DiCaprio, Bill Gates, the Queen of Jordan, Andrew Garfield, and Bumble founder Whitney Wolfe Herd, according to Page Six.
Persons: Jeff Bezos, fiancée Lauren Sanchez, Barry Diller, Diane von Furstenberg, Oprah, Kris Jenner, Barbra Streisand, Robert Pattinson, , Lauren Sanchez, Oprah Winfrey, Salma Hayek Pinault, Bezos, Leonardo DiCaprio, Bill Gates, Queen, Jordan, Andrew Garfield, Bumble, Whitney Wolfe, Sanchez Organizations: Service, Beverly, Vogue
Opinion | Ivanka Trump, Witness for the Prosecution
  + stars: | 2023-11-11 | by ( Nina Burleigh | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
The woman Republicans once talked of as a candidate for president — after her dad’s eight years, of course — is both known and a cipher. They seemed to have in their possession way too many Trump Organization documents with her arabesque signature and too many of her emails in which nine-figure loans were being discussed. Before her stint in Washington with her father, Ms. Trump was pals with the children of the American aristocracy — even if their parents scorned him as a parvenu and a golf cheat. A granddaughter of a woman who worked as a maid in the Carnegie mansion and a great-granddaughter of the widowed German immigrant who gave the Trump Organization its start, Ms. Trump was the first Trump woman to the manner born. For that, even more than the beauty her father frequently and creepily extolled, she played a special role in the Trump Organization.
Persons: , ” Barry Diller, Maureen Dowd, Trump, ” Alexandra Wrage, , Letitia James Organizations: Republicans, New, Prosecutors, Trump Organization, Carnegie, Trump Locations: New York, Washington
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with IAC and Expedia chairman Barry DillerBarry Diller, IAC and Expedia chairman and senior executive, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the end of the Hollywood writers' strike, the media landscape at large, A.I. revolution & the impact on entertainment, and much more.
Persons: Barry Diller Barry Diller Organizations: IAC, Hollywood
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