Word: abc
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...first time in Eisner's reign, nearly every Disney division is sputtering. Ratings at its ABC network are horrible, and the theme park business is suffering from the economic malaise and post 9/11 downturn in travel. Takings at the new California Adventure theme park in Anaheim, one of two new locations, have been disappointing. The film studio is muddling through, and its relationship with Pixar Animation, which produced Toy Story, may be renegotiated on less profitable terms. Such ills have a symptom. Last week, Disney stock hit an eight-year low, closing at $14.65 - down 66 percent from its high...
Kate L. Rakoczy ’04, a Crimson editor, is sharing an apartment in Washington, D.C. this summer with her college roommate. On the rare occasions when she leaves the apartment, she goes to work as an intern at the ABC News Political Unit. Though she’s considering completing her education on the couch in her living room, if Kate does return to Harvard in the fall, she will be a junior social studies concentrator in Lowell House...
Crossley, a former ABC News producer, is most notably known for her work on the “Eyes on the Prize” documentary, a six part PBS mini-series produced by Blackside Productions that chronicles the battle for Civil Rights in the South during the 1960s. Since it first debuted in 1988, the documentary has been viewed by over 20 million people...
Showing true pluck, Trista Rehn has recovered from being dumped in front of 18 million viewers and marshaled the courage to date another day. Last spring on the reality program The Bachelor, ABC provided one man, Alex Michel, with 25 women from among whom he was intended to choose his intended. Rehn was one of two finalists, but in the end she was thrown over for Amanda Marsh. (Marsh and Michel are said to be dating, though not engaged.) This winter, along with a new edition of The Bachelor, ABC will air The Bachelorette and has chosen Rehn, a physical...
...politicians sell a speech--a schoolroom setting or a national park says more than just a talking head. But the Bush team has made a habit of visual message bearing, regularly wallpapering the President's backdrop with the official theme of the day. The backgrounds, designed by a former ABC producer on the President's staff, are a favorite of top Bush adviser Karl Rove, who became a fan during the campaign because he liked how the phrases showed up in still pictures and close-ups. The downside, it became apparent last week, comes when the words ("Strengthening Our Economy...