HOUSE OVERSIGHT 024253 Top-Tier Media Stocks Walt Disney The Walt Disney Co. (DIS) is one of the strongest brands in the world. It also possesses multiple revenue streams and pricing power. Q1 EPS jumped 23% year over year based on record revenue. When a company delivers record revenue, that trend doesn't make a sudden U-turn. If there's going to be a turnaround for the worse, it will take time to play out, giving you time to exit your position. (For related reading, see: This Company Is No Mickey Mouse Operation.) CBS CBS Corp.'s (CBS) Q4 revenue increased 3% and diluted EPS improved 8%. CBS also announced a $1 billion share buyback in the first quarter. This will significantly reduce the share count, which should improve earnings. CBS will once again have Thursday Night Football, and it will be the home of Super Bowl 50. It's also home to regular-season NFL games, March Madness and The Masters. However, its reach goes well beyond sports. Comcast FY2014 revenue at Comcast Corp. (CMCSA) increased 6.4%. Operating cash flow and EPS improved 6.9% and 25%, respectively. Comcast also increased its dividend 11% and announced that $4.25 billion of its $10 billion share buyback program would take place in 2015. (For more, see: This Company is as Unavoidable as it is Unloved.) Twenty-First Century Fox Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc.'s (FOXA) Q2 operating income before depreciation and amortization increased 12%. Fox studios enjoyed 24 Academy Award nominations in 2015, making it the industry leader. Twenty-First Century Fox also recently created the Europe's leading pay TV business. Google Google Inc. (GOOGL) is known as more of a technology company than a media company, but its YouTube segment consumes approximately 15% of all broadband traffic in the United States and Canada (only Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) is higher at 35%). Google also makes this list because of its $62.63 billion in cash, which means it can enter any business it pleases. If it choose