"Richard Greenfield" was an American publisher.

"Ricky" Greenfield owned and published the Jewish Ledger from 1994 until 2013. He bought the original stake in 1992, and the entire ownership stake in 1994. He sold the paper to Henry M. Zachs in June of 2013.

The Jewish Ledger is headquartered in Hartford, Connecticut and has a weekly circulation of approximately 35,000.

Greenfield was known as an "objective and free thinker and a staunch supporter of Israel."

Greenfield died while visiting his grandchildren in San Francisco, California on April 16, 2014.

More Richard Greenfield on Wikipedia.

The strength of the AOL cash flow and billed subscribers were better than investors were expecting and an increase in full-year guidance is clearly a good sign.

Don't confuse a recovery with growth. The question for investors is not how does Disney fare for this quarter. The question is next year -- and the growth rate is not sustainable.

Online search is an area where advertisers are moving. Big media companies need to be there. They must have a more significant presence or they risk out losing on a big growth opportunity.

Whether you see it next week or the next couple of months, it's important that they do it.

Makes sense strategically, because it gives a cable component to what investors are viewing as the boring, unexciting growth side of the post-split company.

(W)e are more interested in whether a broader industry trend is developing.

Every media company should be thinking long and hard about whether search is just a two-horse race or if they could potentially create a third horse.

Clearly if cable is regaining market share without cutting prices, that is a positive.

Here is an asset that investors have very much given up on.