The Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist Ann Telnaes has quit The Washington Post after her editors rejected a cartoon depicting billionaires genuflecting to President-elect Trump. Telnaes says it was the first time since she began her work at the newspaper in 2008 that she had a cartoon killed because of who or what she chose to aim her pen at.
Cartoonist Ann Telnaes has resigned from the Washington Post after it refused to publish a cartoon satirizing its owner, Jeff Bezos.
Amazon MGM Studios confirmed to NBC News that Amazon Prime Video has licensed a documentary about the incoming first lady.
As Silicon Valley rushes to make overtures to the president-elect, the future first lady just scored a massive pay day
Axios reporter Alex Thompson said Monday that the Washington Post was in "disarray" after a cartoonist quit over claims of censorship and amid a staff exodus from the paper.
Among the corporate chiefs depicted by Ann Telnaes was Amazon founder and Post owner Jeff Bezos. The episode follows Bezos' decision in October to block publication of a planned endorsement of ...
As Trump’s inauguration draws near, the financial oligarchy is more openly asserting its control over all aspects of society, including the so-called “free press.”
The Amazon founder has accumulated a massive fortune ... cartoon created by longtime employee and Pulitzer Prize winner Ann Telnaes, which depicted Bezos and other CEOs kneeling in front of ...
Ann Telnaes posted a message Friday on the online ... including Post owner and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Telnaes said that she's never before had a cartoon rejected because of its inherent ...
Subscribers and star journalists have fled the Post in its first year under CEO and Publisher Will Lewis. Now staff have signed a petition asking owner Jeff Bezos to intervene.
Subscribers and star journalists have fled the Post in its first year under CEO and Publisher Will Lewis. Now staff have signed a petition asking owner Jeff Bezos to intervene.
In light of the large contributions made by people like Meta's Mark Zuckerberg and The Washington Post/Amazon's Jeff Bezos to the inauguration fund for incoming president Donald Trump, it was really no surprise at all that Meta announced the end of its fact-checking project in the U.