Tag Archives: ranks

AMPTP Calls WGA’s Claims Of Division In Studio Ranks False, Says “Member Companies Are Aligned” – Deadline

  1. AMPTP Calls WGA’s Claims Of Division In Studio Ranks False, Says “Member Companies Are Aligned” Deadline
  2. Writers Guild Suggests Studios Should Split From Streamers in Latest Update on AMPTP Standoff Hollywood Reporter
  3. WGA: Studios Should Soften Stance or Break Away From ‘Broken AMPTP Model’ to End Strike Variety
  4. WGA Tells Members That Several Companies Have Privately Expressed “Desire & Willingness” To Negotiate A Deal To End Writers Strike Deadline
  5. As the writers strike continues, WGA is open to deals without AMPTP The Washington Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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North America’s ranks of the ultrarich shrank 4% to $16.5 trillion amid 2022’s epic bear market—and the world actually lost ultrawealthy for the first time since 2019, study finds – Fortune

  1. North America’s ranks of the ultrarich shrank 4% to $16.5 trillion amid 2022’s epic bear market—and the world actually lost ultrawealthy for the first time since 2019, study finds Fortune
  2. Asia’s ultra-rich population records largest drop in the world. Here’s how North America and Europe did CNBC
  3. India bucks the trend, sees increase in population of ultra wealthy in 2022: Report Times of India
  4. World’s ultra-wealthy population SHRINKS for the first time since 2018 Daily Mail
  5. Altrata: Asia Records Sharpest UHNW Decline in 2022 finews.asia
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Alia Bhatt surpasses Kareena Kapoor Khan and equals Katrina Kaif in the 100 crore club, ranks second only to Deepika Padukone – Bollywood Hungama

  1. Alia Bhatt surpasses Kareena Kapoor Khan and equals Katrina Kaif in the 100 crore club, ranks second only to Deepika Padukone Bollywood Hungama
  2. Sunny And Rajnikanth Defeat Alia Bhatt!.. Greatandhra
  3. Ranveer Singh and Alia Bhatt’s ‘Rocky aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani’ enters Rs 100 crore club IndiaTimes
  4. Karan Johar’s ‘Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani’ hits Rs 100 crore milestone in 10 days | Onmanorama Onmanorama
  5. Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani box office collections day 10: Alia Bhatt-Ranveer Singh film earns Rs 105 crore The Indian Express
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Brian Hartline Discusses Desire to Coach in the NFL, Explains How He Started Coaching and Ranks the Top-Five W – Eleven Warriors

  1. Brian Hartline Discusses Desire to Coach in the NFL, Explains How He Started Coaching and Ranks the Top-Five W Eleven Warriors
  2. OSU’s Brian Hartline says he could beat Mike Hart in fight, Hart claps back WolverinesWire
  3. How Kyle McCord or Devin Brown can win Ohio State’s QB competition in the second half of the spring cleveland.com
  4. Ohio State Buckeyes Live: Tate’s coming out party; Peoples commits; Noland next? 247Sports
  5. You’re Nuts: Player you’re most excited to see after another Ohio State scrimmage Land Grant Holy Land
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NY Ranks Near Bottom of U-Haul State Growth List – NBC New York

New York has remained as one of the places in the U.S seeing the highest net-losses of one way U-Haul moving trucks leaving the state.

New York ranked 46th in U-Haul’s Growth States Ranking in 2022, which is one spot lower than 2021 when it placed 45th.

“The U-Haul Growth Index is compiled according to the net gain of one-way U-Haul trucks arriving in a state or city, versus departing from that state or city, in a calendar year,” according to the U-Haul website.

It’s not like the rest of the tri-state gets to gloat too much about their ranking. New Jersey saw a more dramatic fall to bottom of list this year, ranking 45th — nine spots lower than 2021 when it ranked 36th. Connecticut finished toward the middle of the pack at 28th, but that’s 10 spots lower than it was in the previous year’s ranking.

U-Haul says 2021 saw a record-breaking number of moves and, while this rate has slightly slowed in 2022, the trend of moving to the Southwest and Southeast continues.

Illinois ranked 49th and California ranked 50th on the list as the moving truck company saw high demand for rentals leaving the West Coast, Midwest and Northeast.

For the second-consecutive year and fifth time since 2016, Texas takes the top spot for movers, according to U-Haul’s transactional data. Missouri City, Richardson and Conroe were the cities with the top net-gains for the Lone Star State.

U-Haul’s Growth States Ranking puts Florida in second place and the Carolinas in third and fourth spots for highest net-gain of one way U-Haul movers.

The year’s top climbers were Virginia and Alabama, both ranking 26 spots higher than in 2021. Virginia rose from 31st in 2021 to 5th in 2022, and Alabama rose from 46th in 2021 to 20th in 2022.

The company warns that population and economic growth are not directly correlated with U-Haul migration trends, but says over 2 million truck transactions at its 23,000 U-Haul truck- and trailer-sharing locations are a good indicator of how U.S. states are attracting new residents.

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Afghanistan’s NGO ban for women exposes rifts in Taliban ranks

The Taliban’s latest edict banning women from working for non-governmental organisations (NGOs) has sparked international condemnation and domestic opposition in a country facing economic collapse. It has also revealed splits within the Taliban, with potentially high-stakes risks for Afghanistan’s rulers and its people.

The last week of 2022 began with an awful shock for Sahar H, a 24-year-old Afghan aid worker, and her new year started with severe anxiety.

On December 24 – the day after the Friday weekly holiday in Afghanistan – Sahar was on her computer in Kabul, preparing for an upcoming women’s support session. An NGO programme manager, Sahar did not want her real name, or that of her organisation’s, revealed due to security concerns. 

Engrossed in her work, Sahar barely glanced at her mobile phone when it pinged a WhatsApp message. But when she saw the sender, a fellow NGO worker handling security issues at a partner organisation, it got her attention.

The message contained the latest Taliban edict from the economy ministry and it was a shocker. Citing “serious complaints regarding the non-observance of the Islamic hijab”, the Taliban ordered “all national and international organisations to stop females working” immediately until further notice. Failure to comply would result in revoked licences, the edict warned.

“I immediately stopped working, closed my computer and I just couldn’t stop my tears,” said Sahar in a phone interview from Kabul. “I never thought this would happen.  That day, I lost my most important right: the right to work.”

The edict spelt economic disaster for Sahar’s nine-member family. “All the male members of my family lost their jobs after the Taliban takeover. I was the only one with a job. I was the only one earning a salary and I was covering all the costs – for rent, food, medicines and my younger brothers’ education. Now we are all affected, the whole country is affected,” she said. 

As the world welcomed 2023 with festive lights and fireworks, Afghanistan plunged deeper into a dark night of obscurantism.  Over the past few months, the country’s conservative Islamist rulers have blasted the myth of the “Taliban 2.0” narrative touted during negotiations to enable the 2021 US withdrawal from Afghanistan. They now appear hell-bent on ruining the lives of their fellow Afghans, eradicating women from public life and plunging the country into penury.

Public outrage is mounting inside the country, with protests and walkouts erupting despite the harsh crackdowns on dissent. 

More significantly, there are growing signs of divisions within the Taliban over hardline policies. A tipping point, if it is reached, could have high stakes in a country with a history of settling differences at gunpoint, tipping Afghanistan into civil war. And that could have consequences for the international community – as history has shown.

The ‘Kandaharis’ and ‘Kabul Taliban’ 

Reports of rifts within Taliban ranks have increased since the edict banning women from working in NGOs was issued, and they come from well-informed sources.

“Within the Taliban, this is a minority view. The majority, even in the leadership, is opposed to this decision,” said former US special envoy to Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, in a phone interview from Washington DC.

As the head of the US team that negotiated the February 2020 peace agreement with the Taliban in Doha, Khalilzad spent months engaging with senior Taliban officials in the Qatari capital.

File photo of Zalmay Khalilzad, left, and the Taliban’s Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar signing a peace agreement n Doha, Qatar on February 29, 2020. © Hussein Sayed, AP

Khalilzad, who was born and raised in Afghanistan, stepped down from his special envoy post in 2021. But he says he is still in touch with some Taliban officials although he declined to name them. “I talked to them in the past and I’m talking to them now and they are very much against this decision,” he asserted. 

The problem, though, appears to be a divide between the more moderate Taliban officials and the inner circle of arch conservatives ensconced around the Taliban’s reclusive emir, Hibatullah Akhunzada, based in the southern city of Kandahar.

Undated photo of Hibatullah Akhunzada released in a message ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid al Fitr. © Afghan Islamic Press via AP

Dubbed “the Kandaharis” or sometimes, “the shura” (council), the rural old guard is widely believed to be responsible for the Taliban’s most controversial policies, including restrictions on female education and the reintroduction of corporal punishment, including public lashings.

Unlike the Taliban officials in Kabul, the Kandaharis rarely, if ever, engage with outsiders. “I don’t know, frankly, the leaders who have decided this ban on women working for NGOs. I don’t deal with them. One can only speculate where they are coming from and what brought on their views, but speculation might not be useful,” maintained Khalilzad.

Sobbing schoolgirls, sputtering Taliban officials 

The first public sign of differences within Taliban ranks came in March 2022 over the movement’s controversial position on female education.

For months leading up to the March 23 reopening of Afghan schools after the winter break, Taliban officials promised that the ban on girls attending high schools would be lifted.

But just a few hours before the scheduled reopening, as Afghan girls waited at school gates, the Taliban abruptly reversed course. When the last-minute ban order reached the schools, news teams, invited by the education ministry, recorded devastating testimonies of girls in their school uniforms sobbing in despair.

In their immediate responses to the press, Taliban officials appeared to be caught off-guard, sputtering justifications on Islamic principles as they absorbed the blows of heated questioning by journalists.

In an extraordinary display of public disagreement, the Taliban’s deputy foreign minister, Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, later appealed for the reopening of girls high schools in a televised speech to a gathering of top Taliban officials and leaders in Kabul.

Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai speaks to reporters after talks in Moscow, Russia, on May 28, 2019. © Alexander Zemlianichenko, AP

Stanikzai so far has gotten away with his public expression of disagreement. Other Taliban ministers have not been as fortunate. 

Ministers promise – and are then fired

The December 24 ban on women working for NGOs came just days after the Taliban extended the restrictions on women’s education from high schools to universities. 

Shortly after the August 2021 takeover, the then-acting minister of higher education, Abdul Baqi Haqqani, announced that universities across the country would have separate female classrooms. 

It was a decision that segregated females, but didn’t deny them a university education. 

The minister’s announcement provided a green light for universities, enabling them to continue classes for women, often with a curtain separating them from male students. 

But in October 2022, the higher education minister was fired and replaced by arch conservative Nida Mohammad Nadim, who is notorious for his opposition to female education, calling it un-Islamic and against Afghan values. 

Barely two months after Nadim’s appointment, women were barred from attending universities.

Meanwhile the Taliban’s first education minister, Noorullah Munir, who told reporters in September 2021 that women will be allowed to study in schools in accordance with Sharia law, suffered a similar fate. 

Under the orders of the Taliban emir, Munir was replaced by the head of Kandahar’s provincial council, Habibullah Agha, last year.  

“The Taliban over the past 20 years have undergone a significant change in their composition to the extent that those now advocating for the ban, or have an antipathy to women’s modern education, are now a minority.

They are a powerful and influential minority who have gathered around the emir at the top,” explained Ahmed-Waleed Kakar, founder of The Afghan Eye.

“But there are other leaders within the Taliban who are all widely reported to be against this ban,” Kakar continued. “So the real question is, to what extent can the current mode of decision making and the nature of those decisions persist in the face of overwhelming opposition across the country, but also increasing opposition within the Taliban itself.”

Mandated to obey the emir – except…

While the internal divisions are growing, Kakar thinks it’s unlikely that they could splinter the Taliban.

“Since their inception up until this day, the Taliban are ideologically and religiously committed to obey the leader even when they disagree with the leader. That is a religious commitment,” Kakar explained. “The only time this does not apply is if the leader were to do something anti-Islamic.”

Khalilzad believes that time has come. “They have to reverse course of sticking to this decision [on the NGO ban] when the leader does something in violation of Islamic principles and the people are against it,” said the Afghan-American diplomat, who also served as US ambassador to Afghanistan. 

“I believe the Taliban leaders opposed to this decision need to get together and stand up to their leader. This is a challenge: will they rise up to the occasion and work with other Afghans. If they don’t, they will alienate the Afghan people.”

The stakes, according to Khalilzad, are high. “The public mood is changing towards anger and opposition, providing a gift to those who want war. That’s not what Afghans want and that’s not what the Taliban want,” said the former US diplomat. 

When asked if he shares these views with Taliban officials, Khalilzad replied in the affirmative. “I do bring it up with them. They say they understand, but they say this will take time, one has to be patient. I say time is not on their side, anger will grow, pressure will grow, and they will be blamed for the increased suffering of the people. They don’t push back,” he recounted.

Uncertainty and hope

While the Taliban men dither and ask for patience, their womenfolk are sinking into misery as every window of opportunity gets slammed in their faces.

From her home in Kabul, Sahar worries about funding for the programmes she runs. “We were preparing for long-term projects. We already submitted our proposal for 2023 to donors, we were optimistic about getting funds,” she explained.  “But with this Taliban decision, donors are unsure about continuing their funding.”

As a new year kicks off, Sahar says she refuses to give up in despair. “My request is for people from around the world, for donors, not to abandon Afghan women. It’s a very tough situation, but I won’t give up,” she said. “I am optimistic for 2023, there will be better days. The women of Afghanistan will not be forgotten.”

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WHO Ranks The Deadliest Pathogens, Including The Mysterious ‘Disease X’ : ScienceAlert

The World Health Organization said on Monday it was thrashing out a new list of priority pathogens that risk sparking pandemics or outbreaks and should be kept under close observation.

The WHO said the aim was to update a list used to guide global research and development (R&D) and investment, especially in vaccines, tests, and treatments.

As part of that process, which started on Friday, the United Nations’ health agency is convening over 300 scientists to consider evidence on more than 25 virus families and bacteria.

They will also consider the so-called “Disease X” – an unknown pathogen that could cause a serious international epidemic.

“Targeting priority pathogens and virus families for research and development of countermeasures is essential for a fast and effective epidemic and pandemic response,” said WHO emergencies director Michael Ryan.

“Without significant R&D investments prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, it would not have been possible to have safe and effective vaccines developed in record time.”

The list was first published in 2017.​

It currently includes COVID-19, Ebola virus disease and Marburg virus disease, Lassa fever, Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), Nipah, Zika, and Disease X.

For each pathogen identified as a priority, experts will pinpoint knowledge gaps and research priorities.

Desired specifications for vaccines, treatments, and diagnostic tests can then be drawn up.

Efforts are also made to facilitate clinical trials to develop such tools, while efforts to strengthen regulatory and ethics oversight are also considered.

The revised list is expected to be published before April 2023.

Pandemic treaty

The pathogen threat sessions come as the WHO prepares for the next round of talks towards a pandemic treaty.

An intergovernmental negotiating body is paving the way towards a global agreement that could eventually regulate how nations prepare for and respond to future pandemic threats.

They are due to meet in Geneva from December 5 to 7 for a third meeting to draft and negotiate a WHO convention or other kind of international agreement on pandemic preparedness and response.

A progress report will be presented to WHO member states next year, with the final outcome presented for their consideration in 2024.

An initial draft text for the December meeting emerged last week.

The Panel for a Global Public Health Convention, an independent coalition of statespersons and health leaders, said the draft did not go far enough, despite its bright spots.

The panel said Monday that more should be done to establish accountability and clear timelines for alert and response to avoid damaging consequences when an outbreak emerges.

“Once an outbreak is detected, there are often a few critical hours to report, assess and act to stop the spread of a disease before it becomes virtually unstoppable,” the panel said in a statement.

“The current draft does not go far enough to call out the urgency needed to either prepare for disease X or known pathogens, or to respond at the early stage,” it said.

“From December 2019 when information about the new coronavirus was suppressed, to multiple countries taking a ‘wait and see’ approach when COVID-19 cases were first reported… we’ve seen the damaging consequences of inaction at the onset.”

© Agence France-Presse

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CSGO August 1 patch resets all players’ ranks with matchmaking fix

. Last updated: Aug 02, 2022

CS:GO is undergoing a major rank reset yet again after Valve pushed “multiple changes to the competitive matchmaking algorithm” in the game’s August 1 patch. All players will have to win a game to see their new rank, which has likely changed a few tiers.

CS:GO’s in-game matchmaking queues, especially for competitive, are seen as a bit of a meme. The matchmaker can often struggle to find balanced games, and players ranks are often skewed to the low side.

This isn’t helped by the presence of third-party programs like FACEIT or ESEA often taking the very competitive players off the public queues. 

However, Valve is trying to entice players to push for Global Elite in CS:GO by making some major adjustments to in-game competitive matchmaking. In doing so, everyone has had their ranks reset somewhat.

“Typically when we ship changes to CS:GO’s matchmaking system, the adjustments are small enough that we don’t include them in our release notes,” developers told players on August 1. “However, today’s update affects all CS:GO players so it requires some explanation.”

“When you launch CS:GO, you’ll notice that your Skill Group is not displayed–you’ll have to win one more match to reveal your Skill Group. Most of you will notice a change to your Skill Group, but some of you may find that you were already in the right place.”

While Valve didn’t specify the exact matchmaking changes ⁠— only that there were “multiple changes to the competitive matchmaking algorithm” ⁠— players are hoping it can fix some of the issues with how skewed ranks are.

It’s not the first drastic rank reset CS:GO has gone under either. Valve pushed forward one very early in the game’s existence after players found themselves with highly-inflated ranks. Since that adjustment, players have been skewed very heavily towards Silver and Gold Nova.

To find out exactly where you’ll land, you need to win one competitive game. After you do that, your new Skill Group will be revealed.

On top of the matchmaking changes, Valve also updated the cannons on Ember as part of the CS:GO August 1 patch. You can find the full notes below.

CSGO August 1 patch notes

Maps

Ember

  • Changes to Cannons
    • Altered the angle that the North cannon faces
    • Cannons can now be aimed upwards, and is now 2x faster
    • Now have 3 firing speeds (change with mouse2)
    • Reduced inaccuracy multiplier
    • Killfeed now shows weapon icon
    • Produce a beefy screen shake and more particle effects
    • Base model now also rotates
    • Added damage falloff to cannonballs after their initial collision
    • Fixed being able to bumpmine away from cannon and keep control
    • Fixed cannons continuing to turn when no longer in use
  • Added bus to bus stop outside Industry

Miscellaneous

  • Multiple changes to the competitive matchmaking algorithm, which will require Skill Groups to be recalibrated for accuracy. Your Skill Group will not be visible until you win your next match.
  • Game instructor should now correctly reload saved state if it is disabled and re-enabled.
  • Game instructor floating hints are disabled in competitive matches.



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New Orleans ranks as genital herpes capital of U.S. as scientists discover why virus keeps coming back


HOUSTON — New Orleans may be the famous home of Mardi Gras, but a new study finds it’s also the new home of genital herpes.

A team from STDcheck.com reports that New Orleans had the highest prevalence of genital herpes cases in a study of more than 130,000 Americans in over 30 U.S. cities. More than one in five people (20.4%) tested in New Orleans had the herpes virus. That’s far above the national average of 15.7 percent, according to researchers.

“New Orleans could be on the precipice of having a public health crisis due to the high spread of genital herpes in the city. We cannot stress enough that sexually active people use protection to avoid contracting an STD,” says Dr. David Jayne, the Medical Director of STDcheck.com, in a media release.

Study authors note that New Orleans has seen a recent explosion of genital herpes cases during the pandemic — skyrocketing by 57 percent since 2019. Three years ago, researchers estimate that only 13 percent of New Orleans residents had the virus.

Since there is currently no definitive cure for the STD, researchers urge adults to continually get tested if they’re sexually active. They add that herpes “doesn’t have to be the end of your sex life.”

Rounding out the top five metropolitan areas with the highest rates of genital herpes are Salt Lake City (19.2%), Cincinnati (19.1%), Charlotte (19%), and Orlando (19%).

“Unprotected sex is dangerous and people need to know if they have been exposed to prevent more severe health problems,” Dr. Jayne says.

Why does the virus keep coming back?

In a separate study, scientists in Germany have also discovered what causes herpesviruses to continually come back and plague their carriers.

To this point, doctors have discovered eight different herpes viruses which infect humans. After the initial infection, they settle down and stay relatively dormant within the body — but the virus never goes away completely. When patients experience a flare-up, itchy cold sores, blisters, or shingles appear in the problem areas.

The new study in the journal Nature discovered a previously unknown cellular mechanism which the viral microRNA uses to reactivate herpes in a patient.

For the first time, study authors found that the viral microRNA in herpes acts as a master regulator, causing the reactivation of the virus. During this research, the team focused on human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6), which more than 90 percent of the population carries without ever noticing it! This particular herpesvirus only causes problems if it continues to awaken from its dormant state.

“How herpesviruses reactivate from a dormant state is the central question in herpesvirus research,” says Julius-Maximilians-Universität virologist Lars Dölken in a university release. “If we understand this, we know how to intervene therapeutically.”

Discovering the key to herpes flare-ups

The team discovered that the key appears to be the viral microRNA called miR-aU14. In HHV-6, the regulatory miR-aU14 comes from the virus itself. As soon as the viral microRNA expresses this gene, it starts disrupting the metabolism of human microRNA.

This leads to a chain reaction within the human body that ultimately disrupts the immune system’s ability to sense the presence of viruses. When this happens, the herpesvirus is able to switch from a dormant to an active state.

U.S. Metropolitan Areas With The Highest Genital Herpes Rates:

  1. New Orleans-Metairie, La. (20.4%)
  2. Salt Lake City, Utah (19.2%)
  3. Cincinnati, Ohio (19.1%)
  4. Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, N.C. (19.0%)
  5. Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, Fla. (19.0%)
  6. San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, Calif. (18.9%)
  7. Las Vegas-Henderson-Paradise, Nev. (18.7%)
  8. St. Louis, Mo. (18.3%)
  9. Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, Ore. (18.1%)
  10. Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, Texas (18.0%)
  11. New York-Newark-Jersey City, N.Y.-N.J. (18.0%)
  12. Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, Ill. (18.0%)
  13. Raleigh-Cary, N.C. (17.9%)
  14. San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad, Calif. (17.8%)
  15. Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif. (17.7%)
  16. Washington D.C.-Arlington-Alexandria, Va. (17.6%)
  17. Indianapolis-Carmel-Anderson, Ind. (17.5%)
  18. Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, Colo. (17.4%)
  19. Oklahoma City, Okla. (17.4%)
  20. Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, Pa.-N.J.-Del. (17.4%)
  21. Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, Minn. (17.4%)
  22. Jacksonville, Fla. (17.3%)
  23. Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, Texas (17.1%)
  24. Sacramento-Roseville-Folsom, Calif. (16.9%)
  25. Columbus, Ohio (16.9%)
  26. Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Mass. (16.9%)
  27. Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler, Ariz. (16.9%)
  28. San Antonio-New Braunfels, Texas (16.6%)
  29. Milwaukee-Waukesha, Wis. (16.5%)
  30. Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, Wash. (16.5%)
  31. Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Alpharetta, Ga. (16.1%)
  32. Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, Md. (16.0%)
  33. Kansas City, Mo. (15.7%)
  34. San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif. (15.4%)



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Who’s In, Who’s Out In Executive Ranks – Deadline

The final bow has been placed atop the $40 billion merger of WarnerMedia and Discovery, forming one of the largest pure content players in the media business.

The AT&T spinoff maneuver formally closed late Friday, and Monday will see Warner Bros Discovery stock begin trading, under the ticker symbol “WBD.”

Discovery CEO David Zaslav had been set as the new leader of Warner Bros Discovery since the time the deal was first proposed last May. Questions swirled for months, though, about the leadership team he would put in place. Earlier this week, he wound up favoring Discovery brass across the board (something Deadline’s reporting had predicted a month ago).

JB Perrette, who had been head of streaming and international for Discovery, was installed as CEO and president of global streaming and interactive entertainment. Gunnar Wiedenfels, former CFO at Discovery and one of the architects of the merger, will hold the same title at the new company but with slightly expanded turf. Other key promotions went to longtime exec Bruce Campbell, who became chief revenue and strategy officer; and Kathleen Finch, the former head of lifestyle brands who now oversees all linear networks.

Other notable appointments at the new company included four more Discovery vets: Adria Alpert Romm, chief people and culture officer; David Leavy, chief corporate affairs officer; Lori Locke, chief accounting officer; and general counsel Savalle Sims.

HBO chief Casey Bloys and Warner Bros film and TV bosses Toby Emmerich and Channing Dungey also were confirmed to be continuing on in the new structure, as was international chief Gerhard Zeiler. Yet the confirmation of the initial flight of execs didn’t put to rest all of the uncertainty, however. A significant vacancy, for example, exists atop Turner Sports, a role that opened up when Jeff Zucker exited last February. (His CNN replacement, Chris Licht, has no sports oversight.) Personnel overhauls are being mulled for many other parts of the empire as the integration process begins.

Consolidation will define the larger org chart, in another round of streamlining for WarnerMedia staffers who have endured several of them over the past few years. The $3 billion cost savings promised to Wall Street by Discovery will mean significant job cuts. Details of those reductions — who stays and who goes — will be the next closely watched set of developments in the entertainment world’s most consequential deal in years.

One thing is clear: The top-level regime put into place by former WarnerMedia CEO Jason Kilar is largely gone, starting with Kilar himself. Nine of his 11 direct reports exited the company, including studios and networks chief Ann Sarnoff and streaming overseer Andy Forssell. Other departures included those of CFO Jennifer Biry; human resources chief Jim Cummings; EVP of communications and chief inclusion officer Christy Haubegger; EVP and chief revenue officer Tony Goncalves; general counsel Jim Meza; and chief technology officer Richard Tom.

Shortly before announcing the close of the deal, Jon Steinlauf was named Chief U.S. Advertising Sales Officer of the new company. There was no immediate word on the status of WarnerMedia ad sales chief JP Colaco. Like Andy Forssell and Richard Tom, Colaco had worked for years at Hulu, which Kilar ran as CEO. He also had a senior exec post at Vessell, the YouTube rival Kilar founded and later sold to Verizon.



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