The L.A. wildfires are expected to increase costs for people and companies trying to make movies and television shows in Southern California.
Jennifer Medina, a political reporter who lives in Los Angeles, writes about a reporting trip that took her to both the ...
Le Goy has been a Sony executive for 25 years. He succeeds Ravi Ahuja, who ascended to the top studio job. Sony Pictures is ...
Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos explains why award shows and premiere are vital for keeping Los Angeles' 'diverse workforce ...
Sitting at a desk all day, it’s common for your shoulders and chest to round forward. As we type, the shoulders pull in and together. Consequently, the front of the body — the pecs — tighten up and ...
New York Times reporters have been writing personal portraits about the fires in the California Today newsletter. Here is a collection of their dispatches on what the disaster means to them, and to ...
One day after Justin Baldoni filed a lawsuit against Blake Lively, Ryan Reynolds and Leslie Sloane over their It Ends With Us ...
Keke Palmer and SZA’s “One Of Them Days” is a stark reminder of the scarcity — and necessity — of funny Black women duos ...
Grammys will proceed as planned on Feb. 2, Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. said, as Los Angeles faces several deadly ...
It Ends With Us” actor and director Justin Baldoni has sued his co-star Blake Lively and her husband, “Deadpool” actor Ryan ...
Companies including Amazon, Starbucks, McDonald's, and Google are participating in relief efforts for the Los Angeles fires.
As Hollywood goes through vast technological, financial and global change, the state’s cornerstone entertainment industry and its workers face a hard reality: Lost jobs may never come back.