Televisa to Merge its Media, Content and Production Assets with Univision in Landmark Transaction, Creating the Premier Global Spanish-Language Media Company
By
Staff
23 hours ago
Televisa-Univision, the new combined company, creates the global leader in Spanish-language media with the largest library of owned content, coupled with unmatched production capabilities to power its leading television, digital and streaming platforms
As the definitive global leader in Spanish-language media, Televisa-Univision will have the operating assets, financial scale and audience reach to accelerate its digital transformation and deliver a differentiated streaming proposition to the underserved global Spanish-language population
Televisa to contribute its content assets for a total value of $4.8 billion, comprised of $3.0 billion in cash, $1.5 billion in Univision equity and $0.3 billion from other sources
Top private law firms plan SWAT teams to fight voting restrictions in court Jane C. Timm
First, it was the businesses. Now, it s the bar.
More than a dozen of the country s top law firms have committed to join forces to challenge voting restrictions across the country, adding legal might to the corporate pressure campaign opposing Republican-led attempts to overhaul elections in the wake of former President Donald Trump s loss.
One of the effort s leaders, Brad Karp, chairman of the law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison of New York, said Monday that 16 firms had signed on so far, including his. The lawyers will act like SWAT teams for legal action, he said. Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a Yale School of Management professor who is working to help mobilize corporate America against the restrictions, described the legal coalition as an army of election law experts ready to dispatch at a moment s notice.
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The current and former CEOs of the blockchain payments company Ripple won t have to bare their financial lives to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission after a ruling on Friday from U.S. Magistrate Judge
Sarah Netburn of Manhattan.
Netburn granted a motion by Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse and co-founder and former CEO Chris Larsen to quash SEC subpoenas for eight years of banking records that the government said it needed to prove that Garlinghouse and Larsen engaged in the sale of unregistered securities when they traded XRP, digital tokens that were originally distributed on the Ripple platform. The SEC also alleges that the two executives aided and abetted Ripple in the sale of more than $1 billion in unregistered XRP between 2013 and 2020.