WarnerMedia names Ann Sarnoff as CEO of Warner Bros - 2 minutes read
WarnerMedia names Ann Sarnoff as CEO of Warner Bros
(Reuters) - WarnerMedia on Monday said it appointed Ann Sarnoff as the chief executive officer of Warner Bros, the first woman to run one of Hollywood’s most powerful studios in its 96-year history.
Sarnoff, currently president of BBC Studios Americas, will take over the studio behind “Wonder Woman,” “Friends” and the Harry Potter franchise, following a scandal involving its previous studio chief.
“I want to work closely with colleagues across WarnerMedia and make the whole more than the part,” Sarnoff said in a phone interview. “I want to take what is a very successful legacy and history and make it even stronger going forward.”
AT&T Inc, the second largest U.S. wireless carrier, acquired Warner Bros as part of its $85 billion purchase of Time Warner last year. Some Warner Bros content will be distributed on a new WarnerMedia streaming service set to launch in early 2020.
The former chairman and CEO of Warner Bros, Kevin Tsujihara, resigned from the studio in March, following a report that the married executive had sought help securing roles for an actress after the two had sex. Tsujihara’s attorney denied the executive played a “direct role” in the actress’ hiring.
“Ann has shown the ability to innovate and grow revenues and has embraced the evolution taking place in our industry,” Stankey said in a statement.
Sarnoff has also held leading executive roles at the National Basketball Association, Viacom and Dow Jones.
Source: Reuters
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Keywords:
Chief executive officer • Warner Bros. • Reuters • Chief executive officer • Warner Bros. • Cinema of the United States • David Sarnoff • President of the United States • Americas • Wonder Woman • Friends • Harry Potter • AT&T • Mobile network operator • Warner Bros. • S85 (Berlin) • Time Warner • Warner Bros. • Streaming media • Chairman • Chief executive officer • Warner Bros. • Kevin Tsujihara • Senior management • National Basketball Association • Viacom • Dow Jones & Company •
(Reuters) - WarnerMedia on Monday said it appointed Ann Sarnoff as the chief executive officer of Warner Bros, the first woman to run one of Hollywood’s most powerful studios in its 96-year history.
Sarnoff, currently president of BBC Studios Americas, will take over the studio behind “Wonder Woman,” “Friends” and the Harry Potter franchise, following a scandal involving its previous studio chief.
“I want to work closely with colleagues across WarnerMedia and make the whole more than the part,” Sarnoff said in a phone interview. “I want to take what is a very successful legacy and history and make it even stronger going forward.”
AT&T Inc, the second largest U.S. wireless carrier, acquired Warner Bros as part of its $85 billion purchase of Time Warner last year. Some Warner Bros content will be distributed on a new WarnerMedia streaming service set to launch in early 2020.
The former chairman and CEO of Warner Bros, Kevin Tsujihara, resigned from the studio in March, following a report that the married executive had sought help securing roles for an actress after the two had sex. Tsujihara’s attorney denied the executive played a “direct role” in the actress’ hiring.
“Ann has shown the ability to innovate and grow revenues and has embraced the evolution taking place in our industry,” Stankey said in a statement.
Sarnoff has also held leading executive roles at the National Basketball Association, Viacom and Dow Jones.
Source: Reuters
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Chief executive officer • Warner Bros. • Reuters • Chief executive officer • Warner Bros. • Cinema of the United States • David Sarnoff • President of the United States • Americas • Wonder Woman • Friends • Harry Potter • AT&T • Mobile network operator • Warner Bros. • S85 (Berlin) • Time Warner • Warner Bros. • Streaming media • Chairman • Chief executive officer • Warner Bros. • Kevin Tsujihara • Senior management • National Basketball Association • Viacom • Dow Jones & Company •