Variety | A Brief History of Warner Bros. Leadership Since 1970 by William Earl
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Warner Bros. has seen a rapid succession of leaders since the 1970s, beginning with Steven J. Ross, who turned a struggling studio into Warner Communications and orchestrated the 1989 merger with Time Inc.; Bob Daly and Terry Semel then built a powerhouse of film and TV franchises throughout the 1980s‑90s; Gerald Levin oversaw the 1990 merger that created Time Warner, later adding Turner and launching The WB before the ill‑fated AOL merger championed by Steve Case; Richard Parsons stabilized the post‑AOL company and shed “AOL” from the name; Jeff Bewkes streamlined the business, spun off cable and AOL, and sold to AT&T; Barry Meyer invested heavily in “Harry Potter” and expanded TV; Kevin Tsujihara guided the studio through the early streaming boom until a scandal ended his tenure; John Stankey, Jason Kilar and Ann Sarnoff navigated the AT&T era, COVID‑era release strategies, and the launch of HBO Max; and current CEO David Zaslav now runs Warner Bros. Discovery, pushing cost cuts to manage $43 billion of debt while reshaping the studio’s future.
Read more: https://variety.com/lists/warner-bros-leadership-ross-zaslav/
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