By Peter Bart
11.04.2020 - 05:07 / deadline.com
By Patrick Hipes
Executive Managing Editor
Cinemark CEO Mark Zoradi, who exhibition chain like the rest of the industry is shut down due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, earned $6.3 million in total compensation for 2019, up from $5.2 million the year before, the company said Friday in its annual proxy statement filed with the SEC.
The year-over-year gain stemmed from a $100,000 boost in base salary to $1.1 million and a cash bonus of $1.9 million – up by almost a $1 million from 2018.
By Peter Bart
Gov. Andrew Cuomo has been receiving praise for his statesmanlike leadership and his demeanour during his daily press briefings as the state of New York continues to be hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic.
By Jill Goldsmith
By Jill Goldsmith
By Audrey Cleo Yap
Andy Grammer is dealing with a lot at the moment.
By Anthony D'Alessandro
By Todd Spangler
Dr. Jane Goodall has a warning for the world.
TSR Politics: Potentially presidential nominee Joe Biden is not being coy about who he would like to have as his running mate during the presidential race. In a new interview, he says he would have no hesitation picking our Forever First Lady Michelle Obama to sit in that VP spot.
Tom Cruise expected to spend his summer in Italy, hanging onto the sides of planes, dodging bullets and engaging in elaborate car chases. The arrival of COVID-19 spoiled those plans, indefinitely postponing the shooting of “Mission: Impossible 7,” the latest installment of the globe-trotting espionage franchise.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have made a lot of changes in 2020, but their main goal is still “to change lives for the better,” a source reveals exclusively in the new issue of Us Weekly.
By Jill Goldsmith
Demi Lovato and her new boyfriend Max Ehrich have been doing a lot of bonding during the coronavirus quarantine — but are they already prepared for the bonds of holy matrimony?
By Jill Goldsmith
By Jill Goldsmith, Anthony D'Alessandro
By Jill Goldsmith, Anthony D'Alessandro
Cinemark CEO Mark Zoradi on Wednesday predicted it will take up to four months for shuttered cinema screens to fully reopen as the COVID-19 crisis recedes, likely starting July 1. "A return to normalcy may span multiple months driven by staggered theater openings due to government limits, reduced operating hours, lingering social distancing and a ramp-up of consumer comfort with public gatherings," Zoradi said on a morning call to update Wall Street analysts.