Adult movie star Chanel Preston knows not everyone approves of her chosen profession, but she never thought it would affect her ability to open a bank account.
There has been the distinction between physical and electronic works--books, songs, movies--since digital goods became widely available a decade ago, but it is now under attack, both in the courts and the marketplace, reports The New York Times.
Pandora reported better-than-expected earnings, and the CEO said it was leaving after 9 years with the company, reports CNBC's Julia Boorstin; and James Marsh, Piper Jaffray senior research analyst, weighs in.
Jeff Allen buys, re-tools and sells cars for top dollar, so he must be doing something right. Read ahead to see 10 cars he restored that turned major profits.
Cablevision Systems is claiming that Viacom sought to extract a nearly $1 billion penalty if it refused to pay for low-rated channels it did not want in order to access more popular channels.
Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal is severing ties with Forbes Magazine because he claims his net worth is grossly undervalued. Kingdom Holdings CFO Shadi Sanbar offers insight.
Time Warner's decision to spin off Time Inc. will allow the media conglomerate to focus entirely on its cable television and film businesses. The New York Times reports.
A television consultant claims that former Vice President Al Gore and others at Current TV stole his idea to sell the struggling network to Al-Jazeera.
An alliance between Beppe Grillo's anti-establishment 5-Star Movement and Italy's center-left could pave the way for tough conflict of interest rules, forcing Silvio Berlusconi to choose between politics or his vast media empire.
Movies may fade from memory, but a cool car is forever. Read ahead to see CNBC.com’s list of 10 cars from the silver screen whose memories have hung around long after the credits rolled.
When Walt Disney welcomes shareholders to its annual meeting on Wednesday, it will face opposition on two fronts—Bob Iger's dual role as chairman and CEO and its compensation plan.
Guy Bisson, Senior Analyst at Screen Digest, tells CNBC why cable providers are extremely well-positioned to capitalize as the industry moves towards content provided over the internet.
Internet-delivered TV, which until recently was unready for prime time, is the new front in the war for Americans’ attention spans, The New York Times reports.