
Journalist and broadcaster Ian Cross dies
Journalist, author, broadcaster dies month after wife.
Journalist, author, broadcaster dies month after wife.
Comment: MediaWorks plan to sell TV3 caused shockwaves - it's a big wake up call.
A new section in the mobile app will take users to some websites.
Crawford has been with the company since 2016.
NZME has announced a big appointment.
A Netflix boss says the company was looking at consumer-friendly ways to stop sharing.
New York Times: Media outlets joined together to protest encroaching secrecy laws.
Is this the face of surfing in the future?
TV3 presenters will be brushing up their CVs and looking for work outside MediaWorks.
It's been called the most extreme example of politically charged advertising to date.
COMMENT: It's too soon to write the epitaph for Three's headstone, Kerre McIvor says.
520 staff face an uncertain future as channel put on the market — no buyers in sight .
TV3 and MediaWorks have seen plenty of financial turmoil over the past 30 years.
The TV arm of MediaWorks looks a tough sell.
The thing that made MediaWorks special has also proven to be its Achilles heel.
TV host says she just wants to give her former colleagues a hug.
MediaWorks talent have taken to social media in the wake of news of company sale.
Michael Anderson says sale of TV arm is 'no bluff' to get Govt boost.
The NZME Group Director Entertainment departs on November 29.
He said people don't want to live in a world where tech companies decide what's true.
It's been dubbed a smart device in sheep's clothing.
New Zealand Rugby has defended its stake in Sky.
The announcement marks another round in the ongoing battle for NZ sports rights.
Sky is far from giving up the fight for cricket.
Welcome to the great unbundling.
Elie Seidman is who you'd expect to be the master of online hookups.
TVNZ boss Kevin Kenrick earned over $1.5 million in the 2019 financial year.
Comment: Spark has pointed a lot of fingers throughout its streaming woes.
Police allege millions of dollars was laundered by those connected to the gang.
New York Times: Nicholas Kristof has spent 35 years covering international stories.