Plaza de la Raza's board of directors have set July 20 as the date for the annual meeting of the cultural organization's more than 160 voting members, a Plaza spokesperson said Tuesday.
While releases from movie studios still dominate ticket sales, the number of films released by the majors continues to drop and independent film distribution is on the rise, according to Daily Variety.
Public television broadcasters and cable system operators are at odds over the new "must carry" laws that force cable systems to carry certain amounts of public television programming.
The charges are already flying in Sonny Bono's campaign for mayor of Palm Springs.
Look for art museums--especially Southern Californian ones--to take steps to protect their treasures from earthquakes.
"Hour Magazine" will feature a weekly segment on AIDS beginning May 8.
Movie theater-quality sound is coming into the home.
Five Broadway theaters deemed "endangered" by producers because of the high cost of mounting shows are experimenting with the notion of "discount theater."
Live from New York . . . and Moscow!
Like some celebrities, Hollywood seems to be playing a little fast and loose with the facts on its age, reports Daily Variety.
South America has become a big bucks concert stop for top rock groups, despite incidents of violence with audiences.
Soon to be a Los Angeles attraction?
Digital technology is coming to radio.
The Soviet Union's most famous cultural institution is being driven apart by a bitter row over the implications of Mikhail S.
It's not exactly pocket-size, but videocassette recorders shrunk a size Wednesday in New York with Sony's introduction of its new portable VCR.
A street scene painted by Vincent van Gogh goes up for auction today at Christie's in London, and while auctioneers and art experts don't expect the kind of sums the artist's "Sunflowers" attracted three months ago, Christie's expects the bidding to soar past the $10-million mark.
Japanese conglomerates Sony and Nippon Telegraph & Telephone have developed a tiny picture-telephone at a price they think would-be tube-talkers can afford.
The 63 finalists for the 13th annual People's Choice Award, the Hollywood award chosen by the public, are to be announced today at the Beverly Hills Hotel.
The producer of last year's Geraldo Rivera-Al Capone vaults TV fiasco and a Texas oil man are teaming to broadcast an expedition raising artifacts from the Titanic, now resting 12,000 feet under the Atlantic.
Hit theatrical films are being resurrected as television projects by networks and program suppliers looking for ways to reduce their soaring production costs.