With investors bracing for a nasty recession many are wondering if the entertainment industry could be recession-resistant?
The volatility on Wall Street this week sent cable and satellite TV stocks down through the week, recovering a bit in Friday trading.
No more Hollywood nights in those Hollywood hills for Rick Wagoner. General Motors is pulling out of its longtime sponsorship of the Academy Awards leaving ABC without...
We’ve seen some real tear jerkers in our day but this story looks unusually sad. On Monday Lehman Brothers cut the stock ratings on Disney, Time Warner, CBS and News Corp.
Unfortunately, no, for Time Warner. Cramer explains why the stock is down Monday.
Fort Pitt Capital Group's Kim Caughey is charged up about General Electric.
Is Yahoo a buy on optimism that it might get back together with Microsoft?
By anyone's reckoning, it was a rough week. Crude oil continued its relentless climb; banks and brokerages gave hints of more discouraging news; government data pointed to a weak economy; even strong companies like Nike, Oracle, and Research In Motion issued cautious guidance; and Federal Reserve policymakers, widely perceived as powerless to help, left interest rates unchanged. But all week, even through the worst of the market's sell-offs, CNBC guests offered
There are a lot of downdrafts in the media-business atmosphere right now, but Tuna Amobi of Standard and Poor's has "strong-buy" ratings on a couple of high-profile companies.
Following are the day’s biggest winners and losers. Find out why shares of Time Warner and Borders popped while AIG and Boeing dropped.