The two giant video companies have far different strategies, but the same goal: controlling your TV set.
Category: HBO Max
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‘My Mom Jayne’ Review: An Exceptional Family Tale
Mariska Hargitay sets out to learn about her mother, the Hollywood actress Jayne Mansfield, through intimate conversations with her siblings.
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HBO Brings Hot Fellas Bakery From ‘And Just Like That’ to Life
Generations of “Sex and the City” fans turned up for an event in which a Manhattan cafe transformed itself into the bakery from HBO Max’s “And Just Like That …”
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Warner Bros. Discovery Bet on All You Can Eat. Viewers Wanted More à la Carte.
Subscribers to the company’s flagship streaming service, Max, watch HBO content, studio movies and older Warner Bros. series — and little else.
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Warner Bros. Discovery to Split Into Two Companies
The film and television giant will turn its cable networks, including CNN and TNT, into one company and its streaming and studios business into another.
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HBO’s Streaming Service Becomes ‘HBO Max’ Again
Warner Bros. Discovery executives are reinstating the name HBO Max for the popular streaming service. It’s the fourth name change for the app in the last decade.
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The 50 Best Movies on Max Right Now
In addition to new Warner and HBO films, the streamer has a treasure trove of Golden Age classics, indie flicks and foreign films. Start with these.
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‘The White Lotus’ Luxury: How Branded Collaborations Are Capitalizing on Privilege
The hit HBO series satirizes luxury vacationers’ privilege. That hasn’t slowed demand for branded collaborations that sell the show’s lavish lifestyle.
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Warner Bros. Still Awaits David Zaslav’s Promised Renaissance
David Zaslav promised to revive the storied film studio when he took over Warner Bros. Discovery. That was three years ago.
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‘Sesame Street’ Faces Uncertain Future Amid Funding Cuts and Layoffs
Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit behind “Sesame Street,” is confronting what executives have described as a “perfect storm” of problems.
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Where to Watch ‘The Brutalist’
Interested in watching the three-and-a-half-hour epic about a fictional Hungarian architect? Good luck if you don’t live in New York or Los Angeles.
