惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
博客园_首页
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
美团技术团队
小众软件
小众软件
V
V2EX
博客园 - Franky
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
S
Security Affairs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
I
Intezer
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
S
Schneier on Security
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
K
Kaspersky official blog
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
AI
AI
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
罗磊的独立博客
O
OpenAI News
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
GbyAI
GbyAI
博客园 - 【当耐特】
C
Cisco Blogs
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
S
Securelist
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
雷峰网
雷峰网
L
LangChain Blog
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
博客园 - 叶小钗
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
J
Java Code Geeks
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog

The Hollywood Reporter

Netflix In Final Talks to Buy Radford Studio Lot at Around $330 Million Price Tag How Scriptation Broke Hollywood’s Addiction to Paper The Conservative Climate Activists Hollywood Ignores Diamonds Are Forever. But Are They Sustainable? Dave Mason, Traffic Co-Founder and “We Just Disagree” Singer, Dies at 79 ‘Secret Lives of Mormon Wives’ Will Resume Production Following Filming Pause Amid Taylor Frankie Paul Investigation ‘Michael’: What Critics Are Saying About the King of Pop’s Biopic ‘Texas Chainsaw Massacre’: ‘Obsession’ Filmmaker Curry Barker in Talks to Write, Direct T-Mobile Deepens Its Promise of Fastest 5G Internet With Same-Day Delivery, Powered by DoorDash Dwayne Johnson and Stephen Merchant Adapting ‘Fighting With My Family’ Into Stage Musical Inside ‘Blue Heron,’ the Most Acclaimed Film of 2026 So Far Broadway Box Office: Grosses Fall Amid Spring Openings, Daniel Radcliffe Cracks Top Five How Peaches Gives Dan Levy’s ‘Big Mistakes’ a Queer Thrill ITV’s ‘Believe Me’: Daniel Mays on the Toll of Playing the “Black Cab Rapist” and Writer Jeff Pope on Focusing on Victims Rather Than the Predator K-pop Icons BigBang Announce World Tour, Tease Group’s “Reset” During Final Coachella Set John Oliver Mocks Trump for Calling Pope “Weak on Crime”: “OK, But Who Gives a Sh**?” Taylor Frankie Paul Posts About “Ugly Parts” of “Healing” After Learning She Won’t Face Additional Domestic Violence Charges ‘Euphoria’ Defecating Pig Starts a Drug War, With Rue Stuck in the Middle Frank Marshall Says ESPN Pulled His Doc ‘Rachel, Breathe’ “An Hour Before Broadcast” Over Rights Disagreement Barack Obama Says His and Michelle’s Production Company Higher Ground Will Go Independent After Netflix Deal Ends Asobi System Artists, Executives on Global Aspirations and Asobi Expo Hawaii 2026 ‘Facts of Life’ Star Mindy Cohn Reveals Cancer Diagnosis How a Gold House Dinner Helped ‘Beef’ Creator Lee Sung Jin Land Season 2 Star Charles Melton Dave Chappelle Pitches Eddie Murphy on Joining Potential ‘Chappelle’s Show’ Reboot at AFI Gala Noah Wyle on the Origins of and Real-Life Connection to His Dark ‘Pitt’ Season 2 Journey Billie Eilish and SZA Join Justin Bieber for Coachella Weekend Two Headlining Set PinkPantheress Throws Star-Studded Birthday Bash During Coachella Set With Slew of Celeb Guests Former U.S. Presidents, Entertainment, Sports and Media Leaders Convene in Rare Gathering to Celebrate Country’s 250th Anniversary Olivia Rodrigo Debuts “Drop Dead” Live During Surprise Appearance at Addison Rae’s Coachella Set Nadia Farès, ‘The Crimson Rivers’ Actress, Dies at 57 Charlize Theron Jabs at Timothée Chalamet’s Ballet, Opera Remarks: “AI Is Going to Be Able to Do His Job in 10 Years” Andrew Lloyd Webber Says He’s a Recovering Alcoholic Nathalie Baye, French Actress Known for ‘Downton Abbey’ and ‘Catch Me If You Can,’ Dies at 77 She Broke Barriers as a Production CEO in the Middle East. Then She Had to Evacuate the Region L.A. Production Crisis Now Mayoral Race Flashpoint Horror Highlights from the 2026 Overlook Film Festival Why Sundance Winner ‘Ricky’ Is Self-Distributing: “We Refuse for You Not to See It” Meet a Hollywood Advocate for Animal Welfare Brandi Rhodes, Wife of WWE Champion Cody Rhodes, Is Getting a New Reality Show (Exclusive) Hollywood Winners & Losers: CinemaCon Edition — Marvel Soars, DC Slips Jill Biden Tried to Win a Role on ‘Heated Rivalry’ — But She Was Outbid Online Personalities and Comedians Overtake TV and Newspapers as Primary News Sources Tyrese Haliburton Launches Production Company, Signs Multiyear Development Deal With Wheelhouse (Exclusive) Why the New ‘American Gladiators’ Doubled Down on Pro Wrestlers Hulu Nabs Four More Video Podcasts As Licensing Heats Up (Exclusive) ‘Humboldt USA’ Explores How Our Relationship With Nature Has Changed Through the Prism of a German Proto-Environmentalist ‘Heat’ Is a Doc That Asks Who We Become When Being in Our Own Skin Is Unbearable (Exclusive VdR Trailer and Chat) ‘Perfect Crown’ Scores Disney+’s Biggest K-Drama Debut to Date Ben Stiller Reveals He Didn’t Love All the ‘Meet the Parents’ Sequels ‘American Pie’ Star Shannon Elizabeth Says She Joined OnlyFans After Hollywood “Controlled the Narrative” of Her Career How ‘Hacks’ Finally Killed Its Central Feud Pam Abdy and Sandra Bullock Talk Paramount-Warners Deal and ‘Practical Magic 2’ ‘The Pitt’ Boss Says Noah Wyle’s Season 2 Storyline “Shows What Can Happen if You Don’t Take the Time to Resolve Mental Health Issues” Lynette Howell Taylor, Sara Murphy and Nastasya Popov to Discuss Power at Archer Film Festival The Best HBO Max Deals and Free Trial Hacks to Watch ‘Euphoria,’ ‘The Pitt’ and More Singer D4vd Arrested for Murder of Teen in Los Angeles, Police Say ‘Street Fighter’ Movie Trailer Brings the Pain — and the Camp Why CBS Remains Bullish on First-Run Syndicated Shows Pete Hegseth Reads Tarantino’s Fake Bible Quote From ‘Pulp Fiction’ at Prayer Service Tribeca Festival 2026 Lineup: Katie Holmes-Joshua Jackson Reunion Movie ‘Happy Hours,’ Films With Susan Sarandon, Dustin Hoffman, Quentin Tarantino Brian Williams Returns: Former NBC News and MSNBC Anchor Launching Netflix Podcast USC Has Just Launched an AI “Institute” for Actors For ‘The Roots of Madness,’ a Filmmaker Traveled to Conflict Zones to Explore Why So Many People Become Refugees ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Review: Jack Reynor and Laia Costa Grapple With Ancient Evil and Grand Guignol Gore in Visceral Family Nightmare Juilliard Names Interim Drama School Leadership Team, Including Laura Linney Jamie Dornan Gets Puffy for Moncler by Eating Popsicle and Blowing Piece of Bubble Gum Carey Mulligan on Going Ballistic in ‘Beef’ Kit Connor, Taika Waititi to Voice Animated ‘Charlie vs. the Chocolate Factory,’ Netflix Drops First Look Roku Hits 100 Million Streaming Households Worldwide Behind the Hacker Leak of ‘Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender’ Nicholas Hoult Leads a Crew of Criminal YouTubers in First ‘How to Rob a Bank’ Footage Anne Hathaway and Dakota Johnson Face Off in First ‘Verity’ Trailer ‘Four Minus Three,’ Film About Family, Tears, Clowns and Hope That Won a Berlin Award, Sells to France, Canada, Australia Mel Brooks Unveils Title to ‘Spaceballs’ Sequel James Bond Casting Process Teased by Amazon MGM: “A Responsibility We Don’t Take Lightly” Jason Statham Unleashes ‘The Beekeeper 2’ Footage on CinemaCon “All Hail the Queen”: Donna Langley’s Power on Full Display as Snoop Dogg, Christopher Nolan, Steven Spielberg Bet on Universal ‘Masters of the Universe’: Camila Mendes Saves Nicholas Galitzine’s Life in New Footage Michael B. Jordan, Adria Arjona Get Flirty in Action-Packed ‘Thomas Crown Affair’ Trailer ‘The Fear of 13’ Theater Review: Adrien Brody Brings Unquestionable Commitment to a Death Row Drama Dulled by Pedestrian Writing Survival Horror Video Game ’99 Nights in the Forest’ Movie in the Works at 20th Century Studios Alec Baldwin on Career Ups and Downs, ‘Rust’ Prosecution’s Toll on His Health and Future Plans: “I Want to Retire” ‘Rooster’ Star Danielle Deadwyler Has Always Been the Goofball ‘The Audacity’ Creator Looks for Humanity in Silicon Valley: “It’s the Only Way Forward” Katy Perry Denies Ruby Rose’s Graphic Sexual Assault Claim: “Dangerous Reckless Lies” Lena Dunham Talks Adam Driver’s Temper and Being a “Lamb to the Slaughter” Making ‘Girls’ in New Memoir Mario Adorf, German-Italian Star of ‘The Tin Drum’ and ‘Winnetou,’ Dies at 95 Trump’s $10 Billion Lawsuit Over Epstein Story in Wall Street Journal Dismissed — but Not for Good Valerie Lee, One of the Young Munchkins in ‘The Wizard of Oz,’ Dies at 94 Netflix’s ‘Big Mistakes’ Took Dan Levy Out of His Comfort Zone. He Wants Hollywood to Know Why That’s OK Israeli Artist Noga Erez Gets Emotional During Coachella Set: “I’m Just Heartbroken and Sad” Justin Bieber’s Low-Key Coachella Performance Fuels Sexism Debate Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Attend Ted Sarandos’ ‘Beef’ Season 2 Event Following Netflix Drama Coachella Hot Shots: All the Highlights From Weekend One in the Desert Scarlett Johansson Says It “Was Tough” in the Early 2000s Because Actresses Were “Pulled Apart for How They Looked” Lila Raicek Broke Up With Roy Price Amid Scandal. Her Debut Novel is Definitely Not About It. When Wonder Woman Gave Primetime a Lift Justin Bieber Goes Heavy On ‘Swag’ In Much-Anticipated Coachella Headlining Set Trump Calls Tiger Woods From Rehab as Melania Addresses Her Epstein Statement on ‘SNL’ Box Office Milestone: ‘Super Mario Galaxy’ Soars Past $300M in U.S. and $600M Globally
Ted Turner, Maverick Mogul and CNN Founder, Dies at 87
Paul Bond · 2026-05-06 · via The Hollywood Reporter

Ted Turner, the media visionary who forever altered the news business by founding CNN and helped introduce Americans to pay TV by creating cable channels like TNT, Turner Classic Movies and Cartoon Network, has died. He was 87.

Turner, who later turned his attention to saving the planet and pushing progressive political causes, died Wednesday, according to a statement from the family released by Turner Enterprises. Turner died peacefully surrounded by his family. He battled Lewy body dementia in recent years.

Turner wrote his own version of the Ten Commandments he called “11 Voluntary Initiatives,” a copy of which he carried on a printed card kept in his wallet; famously donated $1 billion to the United Nations; and spent several years as the largest shareholder of Time Warner, where he was nevertheless fired as vice chairman shortly after the conglomerate’s ill-fated merger with AOL.

He also was married to two-time Oscar-winning actress Jane Fonda for a decade.

A former owner of baseball’s Atlanta Braves and an expert yachtsman in his younger days, Turner won the America’s Cup in 1977, then appeared drunk at the resulting news conference, an embarrassing moment that caused him to cut back on his alcohol consumption before he quit entirely in 2011.

He told Stephen Galloway of The Hollywood Reporter a year later that he was rarely depressed, even though he had contemplated suicide and was once wrongly diagnosed as a manic depressive. He did suffer from “a mild to moderate case of anxiety” but boasted of an IQ of 128 — “in the 97th percentile,” he noted.

During the same interview, Turner said he was no longer interested in the media business but was passionate about his 2 million acres of property. The environmentalist, in fact, was racking up hundreds of thousands of miles a year on his private jet, visiting his 14 ranches that were home to 55,000 bison.

The charismatic Turner was the nation’s second biggest land owner after Liberty Media chairman John Malone, and his fortune was estimated at $2 billion, down from a high of about $11 billion at the height of the Internet bubble, when AOL used its overpriced stock to acquire Time Warner at the turn of the century.

He said at the time that the merger that created the now-defunct AOL Time Warner was “better than sex,” words he’d soon regret. 

Often described as a loose cannon, Turner was nicknamed “Mouth of the South” and “Captain Outrageous” as he often courted controversy, once comparing fellow media mogul Rupert Murdoch to Adolf Hitler and challenging him to a pay-per-view boxing match.

On another occasion, shortly after hijackers brought down the Twin Towers, Turner described the terrorists as “brave” men whose actions were motivated by world poverty, and he accused Israel of terror against Palestinians. Afterward, he explained both of those comments by telling The Guardian: “Look, I’m a very good thinker, but I sometimes grab the wrong word … You know, I wing it.”

Brash even as a young man, Turner attended Brown University but didn’t graduate because he was kicked out after he was caught with a woman in his private quarters. He did, however, eventually amass 46 honorary degrees.

Robert Edward “Ted” Turner III was born in Cincinnati on Nov. 19, 1938, to Florence and Robert Edward Turner II. His father, a billboard magnate, was a stern man who would whip his son with a razor strap for stepping out of line, but the youngster refused to capitulate to his dad’s authority.

When Turner was 24, his father, battling depression and under the influence of alcohol and pills, shot himself dead, leaving the advertising business to his son. (Turner’s younger sister, Mary Jean, had already died from lupus at age 17.)

Turner’s earliest — and in hindsight, brilliant — moves as the newly minted owner of a small media business were to threaten lawsuits to regain control of assets his father had agreed to sell before dying. He then acquired some local radio stations before diving into TV with the purchase of a UHF station in 1970 and changing its call letters to WTCG — for “Watch This Channel Grow.”

It did, of course, first by running reruns of Bugs Bunny cartoons and shows like Gilligan’s Island, Star Trek and I Love Lucy before acquiring the rights to Braves games in 1973. Three years later, he boldly used satellites to turn WTCG into what he called a “superstation” to compete with HBO by broadcasting old movies and TV shows, along with sports, to a national audience.

WTCG became WTBS after he purchased that call sign from a radio station for $50,000 with the idea of branding his burgeoning media conglomerate as Turner Broadcasting System. His purchase of the Braves, as well as the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks and his creation of the Olympic-style Goodwill Games in 1986, were partially motivated by a desire to sew up sports rights for TBS.

A bold risk-taker who never seemed to mind stretching his finances to the limit, Turner had been nursing an idea of a round-the-clock news channel for nearly a decade before he purchased an old mansion in Atlanta, supplied it with television equipment and hired a dozen anchors.

He sunk $21 million into the venture and launched CNN on June 1, 1980, only for skeptics to deride it as the “Chicken Noodle Network.” He hired talent like Lou Dobbs, Wolf Blitzer and Bernard Shaw and kept the money-losing channel afloat with profits from WTBS, but CNN went from red ink to black in 1985 and became a household name with its unmatched coverage of the Persian Gulf War. (Months earlier, after Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, Turner quickly spent $35 million to establish facilities in the Gulf region.)

“Hostilities began on the evening of Jan. 16, 1991,” Turner reminisced in his 2008 autobiography, Call Me Ted Turner. “I was in Los Angeles watching CNN at Jane Fonda’s house and I’ll never forget it. Bernie, Peter Arnett and John Holliman delivered gripping coverage as the bombs began to fall. For the first time in history, a war was being televised live from behind the scenes.

“I grabbed the remote. While CNN’s team provided riveting coverage and our lead anchor compared being in Baghdad to experiencing ‘the center of hell,’ CBS’ Dan Rather was sitting at his desk in New York talking about the attack. When I flipped to ABC, Peter Jennings was also behind a desk, talking. NBC and Tom Brokaw? Same thing. Turning back to our live coverage, I smiled. CNN scored the journalistic scoop of the century.”

Time magazine made Turner its “Man of the Year,” and the success of CNN has spawned such notable competitors as MSNBC and the Fox News Channel.

In 1986, Turner paid more than $1 billion for the film library of MGM/United Artists, which also included Warner Bros. movies and Looney Tunes cartoons, and used his windfall of classic films to launch TNT and TCM.

Five years later, he paid $320 million for Hanna-Barbera — home of The Flintstones, Yogi Bear, The Jetsons and Scooby-Doo — and those characters, along with Bugs, Porky Pig, Daffy Duck and the Road Runner, became the core of Cartoon Network, which bowed in 1992.

Turner sold his media empire to Time Warner in 1995 for $6.5 billion and joined the conglomerate as its vice chair and president of Turner Broadcasting. Shortly after AOL purchased Time Warner, Turner’s friend Gerald Levin, the CEO of the merged company at the time, forced him out.

“It’s pretty hard to love someone who fired you, particularly from a job you really liked,” Turner told THR in the 2012 story. “But I don’t hate Jerry.”

Turner’s personal life seemed almost as frenetic as his professional one. In the 1980s, some saw him as a modern-day Rhett Butler, and he never discouraged the comparison. He even played a Confederate officer in Gods and Generals, a Civil War movie he produced in 2003.

By 2012, he had been married and divorced three times and was shuffling four girlfriends simultaneously, an arrangement he acknowledged was not ideal. But he was never under the microscope more than when he was married to Fonda.

Turner met the actress while she was still married to Tom Hayden and was smitten, so he phoned her after she divorced the liberal politician. She thought it was too soon to date and told him to call her again in six months, and so he did, to the day. They married in 1991 and divorced 10 years later.

It was widely reported at the time that Fonda’s decision to leave him was fueled by her becoming a Christian, though in his autobiography he refutes the reporting, and Fonda told THR she divorced Turner because she was tired of “being defined as so-and-so’s wife.”

“She’s as opinionated as me, if not more,” Turner said. “What am I supposed to do, sit down and cry? I did for six months … after that, you gotta go on.”

The graduate of a Christian, military prep school (where he was a debate champion), Turner considered himself politically conservative for many years before becoming staunchly liberal. A trip to Cuba in 1982 to meet then-dictator Fidel Castro and a friendship with President Jimmy Carter nudged him leftward, and striking up a relationship with Jacques Cousteau helped him to define his environmentalism, he said in his autobiography.

In 1999, Turner toyed with the idea of running for president against George W. Bush either as a Democrat or Independent.

On his list of “11 Voluntary Initiatives” that he carried in his wallet was the vow, “I promise to care for Planet Earth and all living things thereon, especially my fellow beings.”

The outspoken father of five predicted that overpopulation would cause food shortages and that global warming would lead to cannibalism, and he put his money where his mouth was in order to avoid such calamities. He founded the Turner Foundation in 1990 to raise money for environmental causes, and he had given an estimated $200 million to charity in addition to the $1 billion he gifted to the U.N. in 1997, which came at the rate of $100 million annually and was earmarked for initiatives involving population control and the environment.

At one time, Turner owned as much as 5 percent of the land in New Mexico, though several years before his death he began to periodically give large chunks to Native Americans.

In his autobiography, Turner mused of his own death, writing: “I’ve often considered and joked about what I might want written on my tombstone. At one point, when I felt like I couldn’t get out of the way of the press, ‘You Can’t Interview Me Here’ was a leading candidate. In the middle of my career I considered, ‘Here Lies Ted Turner. He Never Owned a Broadcast Network.’ These days, I’m leaning toward, ‘I Have Nothing More to Say.'”