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Rosie O'Donnell turns 63: a look back

Rosie O'Donnell turns 63: a look back

Yahoo21-03-2025

TV personality, comedian, actress and writer Rosie O'Donnell, known for "The Rosie O'Donnell Show," "The View," and "America," turns 63 on March 21, 2022. Here's a look back at her career through the years.

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Why the Warner Bros. Discovery merger was doomed from the start
Why the Warner Bros. Discovery merger was doomed from the start

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time5 hours ago

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Why the Warner Bros. Discovery merger was doomed from the start

Warner Bros. Discovery's split is the latest proof that conglomerates are deeply out of fashion. Glomming diverse operations together smooths out profits through business cycles. It mutualizes economic risk. But it also mutualizes scandal, tainting a corporate empire with the real or perceived sins of one subsidiary. And with President Donald Trump looking for points of leverage, corporate sprawl is a real liability. ABC, CBS, CNN, and MSNBC are blips on the bottom lines of Warner Bros., Disney, Paramount, and Comcast. But they're lightning rods for controversy — Trump has sued two of those channels and complains constantly about the other two — and suck up executives' time and attention. News channels were never cash cows, but at least they were trophy assets that were fun to own. Not so much these days. It's not just the president: These companies' broad footprints leave no easy choices in the culture wars. Hollywood talent, middle-America cruise passengers, coders building streaming apps, and the guy installing your cable all get mad about different things. Conglomerates have lots of ways to get in trouble. This isn't entirely a new problem. In 1996, Martin Scorsese was shopping a movie about the Dalai Lama. Universal Studios, which was owned by Seagram at the time, passed. 'I don't need to have my spirits and wine business thrown out of China,' then-CEO Edgar Bronfman said. His fears were well-founded, and a preview of what we're seeing now: Disney made the movie, and landed on a Chinese blacklist that threatened the opening of its Shanghai theme park. Breakups like those announced by Warner Bros. Discovery and Comcast might be freeing for both sides. The next time Trump criticizes MSNBC, he can't threaten Comcast with (hypothetically) OSHA agents descending on Universal Orlando. Mark Lazarus, who will run Comcast's new cable spinoff, will be more exposed to political pressure without a corporate parent. But he can decide what to put on MSNBC without wondering what it will do to Harry Potter theme parks. For the second time in seven years and the third time this century, a company that bought the Warner Bros. entertainment empire wishes it had not. Failures to foresee tectonic changes — and the lure of media moguldom — has turned one of the most storied names in Hollywood into a dealmaking albatross. The split unwinds the 2022 merger of CNN and HBO owner WarnerMedia with Discovery, a jumble of cable channels offering humbler fare. It was a bet that content companies needed to be bigger to compete with Netflix, and that consumers would want to watch , Anderson Cooper's war zone dispatches, and in the same place. Its previous owner, AT&T, bought what was then called Time Warner in 2018 for about $100 billion, including debt, and almost immediately regretted it. In 2021, it struck a deal to sell it to Discovery for a package of cash and stock worth about $43 billion — a roughly $40 billion writedown (AT&T has disputed the latter number.) Go back further, and its predecessor was party to what is widely considered the worst corporate merger in history, the union of AOL and Time Warner in 2001. The M&A math is a bit hard to decipher, but a business worth around $100 billion to AT&T seven years ago is now roughly half of Warner Bros. Discovery, which trades at $24 billion today. It's not even the good half: Cable is in long-term decline, and CEO David Zaslav's parting gift to SpinCo is a 20% stake in the more valuable studio and streaming businesses that will stay behind. Why do companies keep getting this so wrong? After all, Netflix launched its streaming service in 2007, and Bob Iger first sounded the alarm about cord-cutting in 2015. AOL presaged the confluence of tech and media, but broadband killed dial-up and the dot-com bubble burst. AT&T, too, was onto something when it aimed to deliver shows directly to people's phones. But it was outmaneuvered by nimbler streamers, slowed down by a creaking debt load, culture clashes, and the Justice Department. Tech giants like Amazon have paid up for sports rights, a key part of the cable bundle. The result is a cable business melting faster than bosses expected. The winner in all this? Rupert Murdoch, who agreed to sell 21st Century Fox — a collection of cable channels plus a movie studio, more or less identical to Warner Bros. — to Disney for $71 billion in 2017, at what would prove to be the top. Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data

Bethenny Frankel fires back at Joy Behar over remarks on 'The View,' calls co-host 'miserable'
Bethenny Frankel fires back at Joy Behar over remarks on 'The View,' calls co-host 'miserable'

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Bethenny Frankel fires back at Joy Behar over remarks on 'The View,' calls co-host 'miserable'

Former "Real Housewives of New York" star Bethenny Frankel fired back at "The View" co-host Joy Behar on Sunday, calling Behar "miserable" over comments she made during the ABC daytime talk show on Wednesday about Frankel's appearance. "So, Joy Behar took a swipe at me on 'The View.' Whoopi [Goldberg] mentioned that I was talking about the show, saying that none of us looked the way that we looked two hours prior. It took a lot of work and glam teams," Frankel said in a video posted to her TikTok on Sunday, explaining "The View" segment discussing her recent participation in a fashion show. Frankel, 54, walked the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit runway last week and said after the Miami event that the women went through a lengthy glam process before hitting the runway. The co-hosts of "The View" played a clip of Frankel's comments during the show on Wednesday, to which Behar reacted, "I appreciate her candor, but her boobs are still fake." "These are a lift, from like 20 years ago, maybe 15, 20 years ago," Frankel said, responding to Behar's comments. "This is actually a lift, Joy. But, the thing that that show really illustrated was that women my age and older, women of a certain age, can live their lives freely with happiness and joy. And that we're not washed-up, miserable older women." Former 'View' Co-host Says Joy Behar Calling Carrie Underwood 'Un-american' Is 'Selfish Publicity Gain' "I actually feel sorry for Joy that she hasn't lived her life, or doesn't seem to be living her life, with any joy," Frankel said. "You have to be really miserable to take a swipe at something that is literally self-deprecating." Read On The Fox News App Frankel accused Behar of kicking a person while they're down, and pointed out that she made the original comments to explain that a lot of work went into the swimsuit models' runway appearances. "Sadly, Joy is painting the picture of the older, seemingly miserable, washed-up woman that all of us are trying to show that we aren't," she added. "You keep being happy, you keep living your life, you keep being the example of a woman of a certain age that you would be proud of, and we have women like Joy Behar that remind us of who we don't want to be." Behar's comments during "The View" were met with laughter from the audience and fellow co-hosts. Frankel said in her original video, "Every woman that was with me on that stage did not look that way two hours prior, okay, it was everybody's job, and that's what goes on in Hollywood and the entertainment industry and the images that you and your daughters see of women of Kim Kardashian, of Beyoncé, of J-Lo, of every famous person, that there is a lot of work that goes into that, a lot of glam, a lot of contouring, a lot of lighting, a lot." 'The View' Host Joy Behar Lectures Dems To 'Get Off Your Butts' And 'Ambush' The Airwaves To Counter Trump A representative from "The View" did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The co-hosts also discussed a clip of Cheryl Burke, who used to be a dancer on "Dancing With The Stars," during which she dismissed rumors about having undergone plastic surgery, taking weight-loss medication, and whether she's faced any health issues. Co-host Sara Haines said during the discussion, "I think all we know now that, from airbrushing magazines, to filters on social media, to a two-hour prep to go down a runway, like, of course, no one wakes up that." Click Here For More Coverage Of Media And Culture Behar quipped, "That's not true, I wake up exactly like this."Original article source: Bethenny Frankel fires back at Joy Behar over remarks on 'The View,' calls co-host 'miserable'

Bethenny Frankel blasts ‘washed-up' and ‘miserable' Joy Behar after fake boobs claim
Bethenny Frankel blasts ‘washed-up' and ‘miserable' Joy Behar after fake boobs claim

New York Post

time7 hours ago

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Bethenny Frankel blasts ‘washed-up' and ‘miserable' Joy Behar after fake boobs claim

Don't mess with the Queen B. Bethenny Frankel fired back at Joy Behar for the comedian's comments about Frankel's viral appearance at the Sports Illustrated swimsuit fashion show. On 'The View' last week, the panel reacted to a TikTok clip of Frankel, 54, explaining that she and the other women who walked the Miami runway went through a lengthy glam process to look the way they did. Advertisement 9 Bethenny Frankel walks in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit runway show in Miami on May 31. BACKGRID 9 Joy Behar on 'The View.' ABC 'Well, I admire her candor,' Behar, 82, said, 'but her boobs are still fake. Just saying.' Advertisement A few days later, Frankel made another TikTok where she clapped back at Behar. 'So, Joy Behar took a swipe at me on The View,' Frankel began. 'Whoopi mentioned I was talking about the show, saying that none of us looked the way that we looked two hours prior. It took a lot of work and glam teams. And Joy's response was, 'I appreciate her candor, but she has fake boobs.'' 9 Bethenny Frankel claps back at Joy Behar on TikTok. Bethenny Franke/Tiktok The 'Real Housewives of New York City' alum explained that she got a breast lift around 20 years ago because she had 'saggy' and 'floppy' boobs in high school. Advertisement 'So this is actually a lift, Joy,' Frankel sternly said. 9 Bethenny Frankel during the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit runway show in Miami. BACKGRID She continued: 'But the thing that that show really illustrated was that women my age and older, women of a certain age, can live their lives freely with happiness and with joy, and that we're not washed-up, miserable older women.' 'I actually feel sorry for Joy that she hasn't lived her life, or doesn't seem to be living her life, with any joy,' Frankel added. Advertisement 9 Joy Behar backstage at her new play 'My First Ex-Husband' on May 1. Bruce Glikas/WireImage 'You have to be really miserable to take a swipe at something that is literally self-deprecating and literally leveling the playing field, saying, 'Yeah, we all look like this, but we had a lot of work that day,'' the Skinnygirl founder stated. 'But she had to kick someone when they were already saying they're down.' Frankel went on to accuse Behar of 'painting the picture of the older, seemingly miserable, washed-up woman that all of us are trying to show that we aren't.' 9 Bethenny Frankel walks the runway at the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Runway Show. Scott Roth/Invision/AP 9 Bethenny Frankel attends Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Kick Off Dinner With KYU, Drinking Pig BBQ and Shiso on May 30. Getty Images for Sports Illustrated 'You keep being happy, you keep living your life, you keep being the example of a woman of a certain age that you would be proud of, and we have women like Joy Behar that remind us of who we don't want to be,' Frankel concluded. 9 Joy Behar steps out in New York City on March 19. GC Images The reality star wowed fans when she strutted her stuff in several sexy bikinis, including a leopard-print one-piece, at the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Runway Show on May 31. Advertisement 9 Bethenny Frankel in her leopard one-piece swimsuit. Getty Images She later addressed the discourse around her appearance on social media, telling her followers, 'Listen, I can tell you with great certainty that every woman that was with me on that stage did not look that way two hours prior.' Frankel also said there was 'a lot of glam, a lot of contouring and a lot of lighting' before the women took the stage.

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