HarperCollins Puts Its Money on New ‘It Books’ Imprint
By MOTOKO RICH
Just a month after it shuttered an entire division, the publisher is opening a new imprint focused on pop culture and content derived from the Web.
Just a month after it shuttered an entire division, the publisher is opening a new imprint focused on pop culture and content derived from the Web.
A licensing agreement could lead to the creation of a new premium Web site for music videos.
A restaurant patron who asks for tap water instead of bottled will be helping to supply clean water to developing countries.
The company is burnishing its environmental credentials, and working with Hearst magazines to promote them.
Cablevision will use demographic data to route ads to specific households in parts of the New York City area.
Festival promoters for events like Bonnaroo are trying to improve ticket sales by dividing the price of admission into smaller bites.
The struggling video rental chain has hired the law firm Kirkland & Ellis to help it restructure its debt, the company said on Tuesday.
Owners of iPod and iPhone Touch can download free software that will provide access to the 240,000 e-books on Amazon.com.
The confectionery behemoth Mars is introducing a campaign for its best-selling brand, Snickers, that is centered on a make-believe language called Snacklish.
The global purveyor of financial news will offer searchable transcripts and video in the next few months.
The justices will decide whether courts may approve global class-action settlements that include claims they would not have had jurisdiction to decide.
Rick Santelli, a CNBC reporter who suggested a “Chicago Tea Party” to protest the mortgage bailout plan, said he did not coordinate his comments with right-wing groups.
The sudden assignment of Jane Velez-Mitchell to a permanent slot in the Headline News nightly schedule became a surprising success for the network.
Hate commercials? They may enhance your television-viewing experience.
The company that owns both papers will start publishing the tabloid Daily News as an edition of the broadsheet Inquirer starting March 30.
Film and television workers are asking the state to expand, not cut, a program of tax breaks to production studios.
As upscale food magazines like Gourmet and Food & Wine try to survive the shaky economy, it is out with the truffles, in with the button mushrooms.
As copyrighted material is excerpted online, some owners would rather have clicks than credit.
After 150 years, the Rocky Mountain News was closed for good, leaving residents with one remaining large newspaper and not many takers.
While Hollywood and network studios are struggling to find the future, the creators of the show “South Park” have created a visionary broadcasting model.
Dave Smith, deputy editor, is answering questions from readers March 2-6, 2009.
Recovery.gov, the Web site started by the Obama administration, seems to be the Internet version of a 1960s’ construction sign, “Your Tax Dollars at Work.”
Compare commercials from year to year and watch some of the most memorable spots.
The advertising environment for the nation’s best-known magazines is swiftly eroding.
An interactive look at how movies have fared at the box office since 1986.
The New York Times television critic discusses Web video and media convergence.