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BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 Frederik Balfour |
Slicing And Dicing In Asia Field hockey in India, baseball in Taiwan - ESPN and partner STAR Sports are luring viewers all around the region with its new niche programming.  |
BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 Lowry & Hyman |
The Making of ESPN's Baseball Deal More than two years of talks between the ESPN and Major League Baseball offer a telling glimpse into the complexity of today's big-money sports.  |
BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 Mark Hyman |
The Wisdom of ESPN's Solomon Now that cable sports network has an ombudsman, expect newsier news coverage and fastidious self-policing  |
InternetNews October 7, 2005 Tim Gray |
Report: Time Warner and Microsoft Rethink Alliance Media conglomerate Time Warner and software maker Microsoft are once again exploring the possibility of merging the MSN Internet portal with the America Online unit of Time Warner.  |
The Motley Fool October 7, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Eyes on Eisner, Again Disney's former CEO resigns from the company's board, but retirement is unlikely.  |
Reason October 2005 Julian Sanchez |
Porn Inspectors Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is eager to keep a closer eye on porn -- and this is one time the adult entertainment industry would prefer a smaller audience.  |
The Motley Fool October 6, 2005 Will Frankenhoff |
Grupo Televisa Channels Success Investors should stay tuned to this Latin American media giant.  |
The Motley Fool October 6, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Viacom Counts Sheep Details of the Viacom split are as boring as the split itself. No, things aren't going so well for the moribund media stocks lately, but at least some of them are trying.  |
The Motley Fool October 5, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
When Halo Met Hobbits Lord of the Rings' Peter Jackson is tapped for the movie version of the Xbox hit. The Halo movie will be jointly distributed by Universal and News Corp.'s Twentieth Century Fox. Microsoft will receive $5 million up front, and up to 10% of the domestic box office take.  |
The Motley Fool October 5, 2005 Steven Mallas |
Microsoft Scraps Music Plans High royalty demands from labels sink Microsoft's interest in a music subscription service. Let's hope the music companies and the online companies can work this out. Even if it doesn't propel the stock into the stratosphere, Microsoft and music subscription services would be a good fit.  |
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