+Vote!
Silicon Alley Insider (Free subscription) | 25/11/2009
Ricky Van Veen is branching out from CollegeHumor -- but not entirely. The co-founder and former editor of the online comedy hotspot recently became CEO of Notional, a new multimedia production company backed by Barry Diller's InterActiveCorp. (Diller owns Connected Ventures, parent company of CollegeHumor and now Notional.) Read the rest of this story » See Also: Boxee...
3Vote!
MSNBC.com: U.S. Life (Free subscription) | 27/11/2009
But the area's real rhinestones come courtesy of private capital. There's Frank Gehry's IAC Building, a twisting white-glass office for Barry Diller's billion-dollar media company, and Richard Meier's two glass towers on Perry Street, which reportedly inspired Calvin Klein, Martha Stewart, and Nicole Kidman, among others, to plunk down $2,000 a square foot for raw, concrete floors and...
3Vote!
MSNBC.com (Free subscription) | 27/11/2009
But the area's real rhinestones come courtesy of private capital. There's Frank Gehry's IAC Building, a twisting white-glass office for Barry Diller's billion-dollar media company, and Richard Meier's two glass towers on Perry Street, which reportedly inspired Calvin Klein, Martha Stewart, and Nicole Kidman, among others, to plunk down $2,000 a square foot for raw, concrete floors and...
+Vote!
Digital Spy (Free subscription) | 26/11/2009
... a big, long, complicated paper trail in terms of ownership - it was bought by different studios; Barry Diller bought it… that's the world of Universal Television. And if Universal TV gets bought, it'll get even more complicated," he said.The 55-year-old will next be seen in TNT drama Men of a Certain Age, premiering December 7.
3Vote!
Salt Lake Tribune (Free subscription) | 25/11/2009
... big deals just for the sake of synergy (AOL-Time Warner), never got addicted to doing deals (see Barry Diller), never made dubious investments that put a strain on her core business (Sumner Redstone and Midway), never let in-house corporate politics boil into public view (Michael Eisner). And, while building a murderer's row of daytime programming that includes "Dr. Phil," "Rachael...
+Vote!
bizjournals (Free subscription) | 23/11/2009
Video game developer InstantAction Inc. is leaving its roots in Eugene, taking its 100 employees and splitting them between new divisions in Portland and Las Vegas.The company — a subsidiary of Barry Diller’s $1.4 billion New York Internet media conglomerate — says the moves are needed to spur job recruitment as it looks to boost its headcount by as much as 30 percent in the next year.“In...