Eight Gosling movies, including "Drive," will be available throughout February
Deal comes amid growing demand for wireless services and bandwidth
They unite to provide low-income families with affordable access
Its upcoming YouTube channels are not enough, Google wants to be in the cable business as well
Company reports loss of 128,000 home video subscribers, increase of 89,000 Internet customers
TV Essentials package offers basic stations but eschews pricier offerings including the sports network and Comedy Central
The move will add 750,000 customers to the cable distribution system's base
Viacom is pressing three major lawsuits, each likely to end in an out-of-court settlement that boosts revenue. It's just the way Redstone rolls
Former CBS Sports president says it could happen
Producers, distributors, aggregators and tech enablers are now pitted in momentous clashes, with tens of billions of dollars at stake
Media companies have gone to court over what can and can't be offered for consumption on the Apple gadget
Dish Network and Time Warner Cable reach temporary deal with cable channels
Robert D. Marcus will replace outgoing Landel C. Hobbs
Report: Major studios negotiating with Cox, Comcast and Time Warner to allow subscribers to watch films on demand ahead of their DVD release
The cable giants are considering moves to better position themselves against Comcast
Long-term deal concerns both cable and online content; deadline was supposed to have been midnight Wednesday
mMedia companies make "significant progress" amid Marathon negotiations over programming fees
Company demos prototype in YouTube video
Month after settling dispute with News Corp., Glenn Britt says recurring battles with programmers "not working for consumers"
New York City viewers report seeing an ad from cable giant claiming there's an agreement. It was premature
FCC might order News Corp. to continue offering its channels for a short period
Michael Govan on his vision, the heated "popcorn" talk with the public -- and playing make-up with Martin Scorsese.
In July, some 38 million people watched a video on Hulu.
Pledges of $150,000 keep program alive until June 2010.
Time Warner has closed 12 studios that offered community programming in Los Angeles because of a new law.
Time Warner Cable and Viacom agreed to renew carriage of Viacom's MTV Networks, which include Nickelodeon, MTV, VH1 and Comedy Central.