Remove Beverly Hills Remove Content Remove Entertainment Remove Sites
article thumbnail

Myspace Sets Entertainment Head

socalTECH

Beverly Hills-based Myspace , the online social entertainment site now owned by Specific Media, said this morning that it has named Roger Mincheff as President of Myspace Entertainment. READ MORE>>.

article thumbnail

Bing Focuses On Entertainment With New Features

socalTECH

Microsoft's search engine, Bing , is enhancing its searches for an area of interest to lots of Southern California firms--entertainment and media content. According to Bing, it has released a new version of its site which focuses on music, gaming, movies, and TV.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

MySpace Debuts New Site, Logo Plans

socalTECH

Beverly Hills-based MySpace , the online social networking site, is set to debut a new new site design and logo, the firm said late last night. As part of the redesign, MySpace has changed over its logo, and will center its web site on "bubbling up" fresh content of interest to users. READ MORE>>.

Sites 124
article thumbnail

William Morris Invests in Mobile Development Firm

socalTECH

Beverly Hills-based talent agency and entertainment giant William Morris Endeavor looks to be busy with investments this week. The investment is the second major investment in a company by WME so far this week; the firm was one of the investors announced yesterday for online, live education video entertainment site creativeLive.

article thumbnail

Myspace Racks Up Registrations

socalTECH

Beverly Hills-based > Myspace is claiming growth in its users, saying that it has added over 1 million new signups to the service, after it launched a new Myspace Music Player.

article thumbnail

Tech Titans Peter Thiel, Matt Jacobson, Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, Mich Mathews, Elon Musk Buy Homes in Los Angeles

SoCal Delicious

In growing numbers, Silicon Valley executives—long based in tech strongholds like Santa Clara and Palo Alto—are buying homes in Los Angeles, as the lines between the technology and entertainment businesses grow blurrier. the entertainment industry. million for a 12,000-square-foot home in Holmby Hills in March.