The Eugene Weekly Will Resume Printing After Embezzlement Discovery
Posted in: UncategorizedThe Eugene Weekly was forced to lay off all 10 of its staff members last month after it discovered tens of thousands of dollars in unpaid bills.
The Eugene Weekly was forced to lay off all 10 of its staff members last month after it discovered tens of thousands of dollars in unpaid bills.
Hollywood was on strike for much of the year. And yet the time viewers spent streaming shows and movies went up. A lot.
The TV ad market is changing FAST-er than ever. From the Hollywood strikes to a soft ad market, advertisers had to contend with several obstacles in 2023. Those obstacles are having a lasting impact, accelerating the move to streaming and FAST channels, firmly cementing sports and live events as coveted inventory, and changing how the…
Even for the most discerning home cook, it’s a burden that lays heavy: cooking more pasta than you need. That’s why, when it found out that one in four pasta dishes made globally are wasted, Italian pasta and sauce maker Barilla made tackling food waste its mission. Drawing on the Italian tradition of using pasta…
When you have no job, and too much time on your hands, the little things begin to grate.
When you have no job, and too much time on your hands, the little things begin to grate.
When you have no job, and too much time on your hands, the little things begin to grate.
As documentaries and series about teams proliferate, it’s easy to pine for the ones that offered the clearest windows into the game.
The owner, Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, had raised concerns with Kevin Merida, who stepped down this month, over reporting about a wealthy doctor and his dog.
Having an ad during the Super Bowl broadcast costs a lot of money. Aside from the $7 million for a 30-second ad buy, there are huge production costs and, most likely, a big celebrity fee on top. Many brands are opting out of the game in favor of being somewhere around it. Pre-Super Bowl campaigns…
He won two Pulitzer Prizes by transforming accounts of doctors at work into in-depth, narrative articles that read like dramatic short stories.