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Topic - Robert Greenwald

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  • Fox News Channel chief Roger Ailes shrugs off the idea that, at age 71, he may have mellowed. "When there is an occasion, I will do what I have to do, and I will win. Is that mellowing? I tend to see it more as picking my battles a little better than I used to." (Associated Press)

    After first 15 years, Fox News Channel chief proves tough as Ailes

    As the most powerful man in the universe, or one of them anyway, Roger Ailes can look back on the first 15 years of his crowning achievement, Fox News Channel, with satisfaction. And he does.

  • Katie Holmes stars as first lady Jacqueline Kennedy in the eight-part miniseries. Would-be advertisers have been hesitant to buy in. (www.reelzchannel.com)

    'Kennedys' miniseries finds new TV home

    Before ReelzChannel CEO Stan Hubbard bought the broadcast rights to the political hot potato known as "The Kennedys," he watched all eight installments of the miniseries to settle the questions he needed to have answered.

  • FILE - Documentary filmmaker Robert Greenwald reacts during a news conference, in this July 12, 2004 file photo taken in New York. Greenwald was behind a petition drive to get the History Channel to not air a controversial miniseries it produced about the Kennedy family. "We have concluded this dramatic interpretation is not a fit for the History brand," the network said in a statement late Friday Jan. 7, 2011. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

    History network pulls plug on Kennedy project

    A controversial miniseries on the Kennedy family will not air on the History Channel because the completed multimillion dollar project does not fit the "History brand," the network said.

  • Producers pitching Kennedy project elsewhere

    After the History channel said it would not air a controversial miniseries on the Kennedy family, producers were already seeking another television home.

  • History network pulls plug on Kennedy project

    The History Channel will not air a controversial miniseries it produced about the Kennedy family, saying the multimillion project that had become the network's most expensive on record did not fit the "History brand."

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