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Amy Baer was hired in September 2007 as president and CEO for CBS Films. [2] With CBS retaining ownership of Showtime and Viacom deciding to launch Epix in 2009 with Paramount films, this division was created to make content for the channel. [3] On November 17, 2009, CBS signed with Sony Pictures for a three-year deal for international ...
Syrinthia Studer to Succeed Amy Baer as WIF Board President in 2025 Women in Film, Los Angeles has announced that industry veteran Syrinthia Studer will take the helm in 2025 as the new WIF Board ...
MRC Film has launched Landline Pictures, a new label targeting audiences over 50. Veteran producer Amy Baer has been tapped to lead the new venture. According to a release announcing the news ...
The film is based on Alex Flinn's 2007 supernatural romance novel Beastly, and has been in production since CBS Films bought the rights in December 2007. In February 2009, it was announced by Amy Baer, President and CEO of CBS Films, that Daniel Barnz would direct the film and write the screenplay.
CBS Films bought the feature rights to Beastly. This was the first project to be developed by the new film arm of CBS Corporation, with the option of the Harper Teen book announced in December 2007. [9] Amy Baer, president and chief executive officer of CBS Films, announced that Daniel Barnz would be directing the movie project. "Daniel's fresh ...
The stage at the 17th Annual Women in Film Oscar Nominees was scarcely big enough for the impressive show of sisterhood on display. ... WIF’s board of directors president Amy Baer emphasized her ...
The following is a list of presidents of the entertainment division for the CBS television network. Frank Stanton, who served as the president of CBS between 1946 and 1971 and then as vice chairman until 1973, reorganized CBS into various divisions, including separate divisions for television and radio; the following executives served under him, CBS founder William S. Paley and later chairmen.
Foundas calls the film a clone of The Hangover and praises Mary Steenburgen for her performance but says "The rest of the movie rarely if ever rises to Steenburgen's level." [12] Ignatiy Vishnevetsky of The A.V. Club gave the film a grade D− and wrote: "The high point of Last Vegas is also arguably the low point of Robert De Niro's career." [13]