By RICHARD SANDOMIR
Johnny Weir and Tara Lipinski, whose analysis drew praise during the Winter Olympics in Sochi, have earned an expected promotion to the lead team for the sport on the NBC Sports Group.
By RAVI SOMAIYA
Mr. Weisenthal, who has built a devoted following at Business Insider, where he writes up to 15 articles a day, will lead a markets and finance site at Bloomberg.
By ALEXANDRA ALTER
“After,” Anna Todd’s wildly popular web novel based on Harry Styles of the boy band One Direction, is being published as a book.
Bits Blog
By FARHAD MANJOO
The Voyage’s main trick is a high-resolution display that is on par with the high-resolution displays now found on most of our other mobile devices.
Bits Blog
By DAVID STREITFELD
Amazon has reached a deal with Simon & Schuster, one of the Big Five publishers, while the retailer’s battle with another publisher, Hachette, grinds on.
By BEN SISARIO
The streaming service, which sells online access to 20 million songs, will let subscribers add up to four accounts at half the usual price.
By CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY
The company said its net income in the third quarter grew 48.6 percent, year over year, aided by political advertising.
By BROOKS BARNES
The new service, which is expected to start by June, will emphasize a curated selection of films intended for an art house audience.
By SALMAN MASOOD
Analysts said that the 15-day suspension seemed aimed at curtailing coverage that has been increasingly critical of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
Bits Blog
By EDWARD WYATT
Senator Patrick Leahy, the Vermont Democrat, called on Comcast to commit to never allow so-called fast lanes on its network.
By CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY
Aaron Kushner maintains that his Freedom Communications, parent of The Orange County Register and other papers, is on the road to success.
By LESLIE KAUFMAN
In a bid to expand its own audience, the social media and blogging site is reaching out to fans of certain shows through deals with the shows’ creators.
By NOAM COHEN
Stephen Colbert chided the search engine for getting his height wrong, a situation that highlighted challenges about the accuracy and sources of its information.
By KEN BELSON
NFL Now, a mobile video service, provides game highlights, updates and news reports directly to fans and competes with TV and cable networks.
DealBook
By MICHAEL J. DE LA MERCED
The investment firm has taken a majority stake in Creative Artists Agency, further tying it to the industry powerhouse after first making an investment four years ago.
By ELIZABETH JENSEN
The first products from a partnership between the nonprofit producer of “Sesame Street” and the children’s speech recognition company ToyTalk could be available early next year.
By CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY
Local newspapers nationwide now deliver with their Sunday papers a 24-page color tabloid edition of The Post.
By EMILY STEEL
The moves by CBS and HBO signal a watershed moment for web-delivered television, where viewers have more options to pay only for the networks or programs they want to watch — and to decide how, when and where to watch them.
By EMILY STEEL
The premium network is launching a stand-alone service in an attempt to lure a new generation of viewers who might have canceled their cable service.
By STUART ELLIOTT
The Association of National Advertisers just five months ago acquired the Brand Activation Association. All three groups have long histories.
By ALEXANDRA ALTER
The change will allow the imprint, which was founded 16 years ago by the writer Dave Eggers, to be more ambitious in areas that hold little commercial promise.
By KATRIN BENNHOLD
After his acquittal from the phone hacking scandal, Charles Brooks sought to be reimbursed by the government for the legal costs of his defense.
By ALEXANDRA ALTER
Richard Flanagan, who was honored for “The Narrow Road to the Deep North,” is the third Australian to win the prize.
By JONATHAN MAHLER and RICHARD SANDOMIR
Simmons, whose three-week suspension for calling Roger Goodell a liar ends Wednesday, could be something of a litmus test for the power of individual brands in a shifting media landscape.
By CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY
The two titles, Martha Stewart Living and Martha Stewart Weddings, will be pitched to advertisers along with 14 Meredith brands.
DealBook
By EMILY STEEL and DAVID GELLES
While Mr. Buffett is well known for his financial success, his holding company has little following outside Wall Street — but an effort is underway to change that.
By LESLIE KAUFMAN
Ms. Nguyen was brought in two years ago to expand the website’s audience — something she has had great success doing.
By BILL CARTER
Instead of toppling NBC’s evening newscast during the week of Sept. 29 for the first time in over 260 weeks, it turns out that NBC News won that week.
The Upshot
By JUSTIN WOLFERS
A French economist studies how to regulate market competition, which deals with complex and subtle issues, many specific to the particular market.
Sidebar
By ADAM LIPTAK
Rulings have allowed a protest at a soldier’s funeral and struck down buffer zones around abortion clinics, but the plaza outside the court seems to be a different matter.
By BILL CARTER
The AMC program crushed even the N.F.L. on Sunday night among the 18-49 demographic. Also, the networks reported improved ratings for the premiere week.