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Things go better with Coke’s Super Bowl commercial

What could anyone who loves America find offensive about Americans singing one of the nation’s unofficial national anthems, “America the Beautiful?” Well, Coca-Cola, the consumer...

WWE set to launch own 24/7 network in February

WWE is moving outside the ring to mesh the best of Hulk Hogan, The Rock and John Cena all in one place — its...

Number of Black-owned TV stations plummets to zero

(NNPA)--We just experienced a shameful milestone in the history of U.S. media – and barely anyone noticed. There are now zero Black-owned and operated full-power...

2013 brought surprises, good and bad, to viewers

NEW YORK (AP) — Even after all these years, TV in 2013 continued to surprise us. What a fine surprise was "The Returned," a French-language...

'Duck Dynasty' fans react to Robertson's hiatus

LOS ANGELES (AP) — When the A&E network suspended "Duck Dynasty" patriarch Phil Robertson for disparaging gay people, it may have followed a time-honored...

Pittsburgh news pioneer Florence Sando Manson dies in NYC

NEW YORK (AP) — Florence Sando Manson, a pioneering newscaster in radio and the early years of television journalism, has died at age 95. Manson...

Cover to Cover: ‘Sister Betty says I Do’

The “Save the Date!” notices went out months before. You had the hall you wanted, the dress made you look like an angel and the...

Daytime soap ‘All My Children’ canceled again, actress tweets

'All My Children' star Debbi Morgan (Photo: Dario Cantatore/Invision/AP) by Alan Duke LOS ANGELES (CNN) -- Daytime soap "All My Children" may have finally reached the end of its run, according to an actress on the show. The iconic drama, which moved from television to the Internet after ABC canceled it, will not return for a second online season, Debbi Morgan tweeted this week.

AP Essay: For boomers, JFK death ripples still

A bust of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy sits on the desk of Gov. Chris Gregoire near a photo of Gregoire and...

’60 Minutes’ apologizes for flawed Benghazi report

In this Jan. 12, 2013 file photo, "60 Minutes" reporter Lara Logan takes part in a panel discussion at the Showtime Winter TCA Tour in Pasadena, Calif. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, File) by David BauderAP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) — CBS' "60 Minutes" apologized on Sunday's broadcast for a flawed story on the 2012 attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, and for the discredited source who claimed to have been at the scene. During brief remarks at the end of the hour correspondent Lara Logan said "60 Minutes" was misled and made a mistake in its reporting. Logan is the correspondent responsible for the Oct. 27 story. She had interviewed former security contractor Dylan Davies, who claimed he took part in fighting at the mission. But Davies' account unraveled last week, forcing CBS News on Friday to admit its error in running the story. It then announced it would address the flawed story on Sunday's telecast.

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