Fox News garnered a wide margin over CNN among audiences watching Thursday's testimony by national security adviser Condoleezza Rice before the commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks, according to data released on Friday.
The Walt Disney Co. is planning a management shake-up at its fourth-place ABC network to stem a ratings slide and placate dissatisfied investors.
In the space of a month, the CBS News program "60 Minutes" has landed two highly sought-after interviews with authors of books promising news-making revelations about the Bush administration. In both cases the interviews stayed in the corporate family.
Lingerie marketer Victoria's Secret said Saturday that it's products will stop appearing in the flesh on a television special.
An upcoming TV miniseries about an impossibly large earthquake that strikes the West Coast has left seismic experts shaking their heads at what they called gross inaccuracies.
This piece was adapted from the prologue to Pulley's new book, The Billion Dollar BET: Robert Johnson and the Inside Story of Black Entertainment Television, which was published today.
Lawyers who have made their careers defending the makers of breast implants, guns and tobacco are working from a new playbook. Make portions smaller, they advise food clients. Do not fudge the fat grams. Skip "problem ingredients." And if a case goes to trial, choose jurors who go to the gym; avoid those who take diet drugs or support universal health care.
Swing and a miss. A proposal to allow advertising on Major League Baseball uniforms has been quashed by the baseball commissioner, Sen. Chuck Schumer said yesterday.
Wal-Mart and Kmart, two of the nation's biggest retailers, are planning to sell a new DVD player that includes a technology that has riled Hollywood -- a controversial program that can automatically skip sexual content, graphically violent scenes and language deemed offensive.
A federal judge in Denver has ruled that there is evidence that the nation's biggest radio broadcaster and concert promoter abused its clout by threatening to keep artists off the air unless they performed at its shows.