Web Media Wire Daily
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At Bloomberg LP, Gas bags in bulk!

Published: Saturday, September 29, 2007

Was Mayor Bloomberg a corporate dick head when he was running his media company? Was he a woman/baby hater who punished his female employees for basically starting a family? Did he really ask a female employee if she was giving her boyfriend good oral sex? Is he giving his girlfriend Dianne Taylor good oral sex or vice versa? A lawsuit filed against the company the mayor founded, alleges the above. Well except the part where we asked if he is giving his girlfriend good oral sex of course.

According to the lawsuit filed against Bloomberg LP which the mayor swears he hasn't ran since 2001 but we all know he still secretly runs it through a network of yes-men, the company has a history of demoting or cutting the pay of its female employees who were out on maternity leave. Now this is not a lawsuit any company wants to deal with. So all you corporate dick heads out there, play your cards right and spear yourselves the embarrassment and bad press.
Neal Brickman, the lawyer who represented Ms. Garrison, said that he had handled at least 20 discrimination complaints against the company since 1997 and that the culture at Bloomberg L.P. condoned unequal treatment of women and other groups. Many of those complaints were settled out of court, he said.

Suit to Scrutinize Bloomberg Era at Firm [NYT]

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Flip Flopping Bertelsmann flips again

Published: Friday, September 28, 2007

First they merged their music business with Japan's Sony Corp, and then there was word that they wanted to sell their 50% stake in the company, and then they said they are sticking with the music business. Then they slaughtered a chunk of their Book marketing employees, and then merged it into their CD & DVD marketing business Columbia House. Then they took that and dumped it into its book publishing unit Random House. But before that, about a year ago they sold their music publishing unit to Universal Music, and now guess what? The media company that holds the platinum medal for most undecided is now looking to spend money to get back into the music publishing business.
The appeal of music publishing to Bertelsmann managers is that it generates a more stable revenue stream than music recording, the newspaper said. Music publishers manage recording artists' copyrights and charge advertisers, television and radio stations for using their songs. BMG Music Publishing was sold primarily to reduce debt, the newspaper said. Bertelsmann, owner of broadcaster RTL Group and publisher Gruner + Jahr, will not be able to start operations at the new unit before 2009 as it agreed with Universal to stay out of the business until that time as part of the sale of BMG Music Publishing.
Wow! Didn’t these so called managers know that before they sold out to Universal? You know what Bertie.... you make it too easy. Hopefully when Hart takes over he can get things in order. God knows Bertie needs it. Wonder how long until they sell Random House and then start another book publishing/marketing business?

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Note to Jeff Bewkes: Get a respected number two if and when you become the new Dick Parsons

Its said that if and when current Time Warner Prexy Jeff Bewkes does indeed gets upped to CEO at Time Warner in the coming months, he may not appoint a second in command. But we think that could be problematic for the lanky one time banker turned media big shot. Currently as Time Warner's second in command, all division heads report to him, while CEO Parsons focuses on the big picture and his vineyard. Bewkes may put too much pressure on himself if he tries to balance big picture duties and talking up Wall Street with day to day operations. Our verdict is that Bewkes should bring in a strong number two, an operations superstar who can keep the joints greased and running smoothly preferably from outside the Time Warner lines.

The individual doesn't have to be a media insider, he/she just has to be a strong business manager. Because who is Jeff kidding? He will need a co-captain to help man the ship so he can focus on how in the world he can beef up Time Warner's stunted stock price, while a retired Dick Parsons gets drunk on his own wine somewhere in Italy as Laura looks on with a "What the fuck?" expression on her face.

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What Time Warner is to America, Rogers is to Canada

If an American media mogul ever wanted to expand his control further around the world, we would suggest he/she kick the tires on one of Canada's biggest media/communications company, Rogers Communications. This company is like the Time Warner of Canada. They publish Maclean's which is Canada's version of Time Magazine among other fashion and business titles. Their business includes phone, cable & Internet services as well as broadcasting. What American media mogul in their right mind wouldn't want to control such a company? With revenues of about $7.48 billion (CAN) and operating income of $2.1 billion (CAN) this company is doing serious business. Here is a little info on the media giant:

Rogers is one of Canada's largest communications companies, particularly in the field of wireless communications and cable television, with additional telecommunications and mass media assets. Edward S. "Ted" Rogers is the company's well-known controlling shareholder and chief executive.

Rogers Media owns Canada's largest publishing company, Rogers Publishing Limited, which has more than 70 consumer and business publications, 51 radio stations, television broadcasting with OMNI and the Sportsnet network, The Shopping Channel which is Canada's home shopping service, the Toronto Blue Jays and the team's home stadium, the Rogers Centre.





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Who are the people that make up Conde Nast's phantom management team? Help us unmask them

Published: Thursday, September 27, 2007

We have always wondered about the people with the fancy titles that make up Conde Nast’s executive team, but we could never come up with a photo or even a bio. Other than an occasional photo of CEO Chuck Townsend, the Conde Nast management team has remained under the radar. Well we want to change that. We are offering $100 for anyone who can get us a picture of individuals in top management at Si's magazine kingdom. Why is it that Conde Nast doesn't have a corporate page listing the bios of these execs and at least a photo? Is this intentional or are they not aware that sometimes people like to see the faces behind the day to day doings at a company? Then again Time Inc which dubs itself the biggest and baddest doesn’t have a website at all, but we digress. Come on folks $100. We know it's not much but you can buy two Lattes for you and a friend at Starbucks! We basically know most of the faces of editors and publishers, but we want current images of the suits who call Chuck Townsend master. Send your submissions to Tellus@mediawiredaily.com

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Will Mel Karmazin ever get his "I Did It" cover?

Sirius Satellite boss Mel Karmazin may have to go back on his "Why Sirius & XM should merge" tour because someone at the FCC wasn't sold on the idea. However Mel isn't the only one who has to convince this someone at the FCC. It looks like Sam Zell may have to do some convincing regarding his Tribune Co take over as well.


FCC Commissioner Michael Copps, one of two Democrats on the five-member commission, said it would be a "steep climb" for him to cast a favorable vote on either deal because he has serious concerns about consolidation in the U.S. media.

"Somebody's going to have to make a pretty powerful and potent demonstration that it serves the public interest," Copps said, referring to the XM-Sirius deal.

FCC official voices doubts on Tribune and Sirius deals [Reuters]

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Old man Sumner Redstone's famous phrase still relevant, even in this here digital media era

Well at least they are big enough to admit it. It’s not all about a pretty website with videos and graphics and all that. Apparently it seems that is what the digital media folks at MSO thought was the key to killer traffic to their site. However they are now slowly seeing the light and realizing that it’s all about the content first, then you can slap on all the pretty shit later on. Old man Sumner Redstone said it best when he coined the phrase "Content is King" especially if the users control it.

Executives at Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia took great pains earlier this year to make certain the company's redesigned Web site looked flawless before rolling it out to the public. After all, this is a media company whose magazines, books, products and programs feature ideas about attractive and tasteful lifestyles. Why not a beautiful Web site?

"That was a big mistake," Wenda Harris Millard, the company's president of media, said this week during a panel discussion at Advertising Week. "We put beauty before utility."

Execs admit plenty of missteps in new media world [Reuters]

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NO. An air strike on the Time Warner Center will not be necessary to eliminate the threat

The U.S. Army has reportedly blocked some Time Warner owned websites that are potentially harmful to army computers. Apparently there was some kind of breach related to emails and some websites, which prompted the pentagon to block them resulting in no internet access for some of our men and women in uniform. On a related note, we hear Jeff Bewkes has been moved to an undisclosed location. While Dick Parsons works his diplomatic skills on our military brass.

According to Gordon VanVleet, a public affairs officer for Network Enterprise Technology Command in Arizona, the Army's block will remain in place until the Army can guarantee the network is secure.Jeff Unaitis, spokesman for Time Warner in Syracuse, said the block went into effect last Tuesday, but he didn't learn about it until a week later.

Feedback: Army Blocks Some Time Warner E-mails & Web Sites Over Security Breach [7News]

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Congress continues to put all the blame on Hip Hop for stupid teenagers and their lackluster parents

Published: Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Hip Hop has always been under attack from some fat cats on capitol hill. But some media/music heavy weights are coming out swinging in its defense. Viacom's Phil Dauman to Universal Music Group boss Doug Morris and rapper Master P. among others were on the hill to back off some of the bad impression clueless folks may have about the music and culture. What we don't understand is why is it that Hip Hop music is the only form of entertainment being attacked. Why aren't people like Harvey Weinstein, Ron Meyer and Brad Grey on the stand defending the sick violence in the films they release? Reps for watchdog groups like The Parents Television Council (PTC), said it best. Imagery and tone can be just as powerful.
Rappers testifying were split in their opinions on the situation. Master P apologized for his past use of offensive lyrics, while David Banner said hip-hop was misunderstood and the subject of unfair scrutiny."Hip-hop is sick because America is sick," he said.

CONGRESS RAPS RAPPERS, HIP-HOP [NYP]

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Morning Wire: Les Moonves to spend Sumner Redstone's money getting into a business he is already in

When Viacom and CBS split, It was said that Les Moonves believed the Paramount Pictures unit should have fallen under his rule being that he already had the television business and the two just went well together. But unfortunately for him the film business went to the since canned Tom Freston. But that didn't kill Les's dreams of being in the movie business. See Les doesn't mind gambling Sumner Redstone's money getting into new businesses. He re-launched CBS Records which hasn't even registered as a blip on any radar, and now he is about to gamble even bigger by building a movie studio from scratch. To show how serious CBS is about getting into the film business, Moonves already tapped a CEO in former Columbia Pictures production exec Amy Baer. We hope the film unit makes more noise than the record label.


In an interview, Mr. Moonves said he had been eager to get back into the movie business, but that he did not view his film unit as replacing Showtime’s supply of movies from Paramount — or from M.G.M. or Lionsgate, whose output deals expire next year.

“These four to six movies we’re doing are certainly not going to fill the pipeline,” he said.
“I like the idea of owning more and more content, as you see what these libraries are worth, and the possibilities of what we can do with this company,” Mr. Moonves said.
Moonves Picks Chief for Film Unit Under CBS [NYT]

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Wenner Media to raise Us Weekly's cover price to cover Janice Minn's salary

Published: Tuesday, September 25, 2007

We thought that in the Perezhilton Popsugar era celeb gossip mags like Us Weekly would be looking to lower their newsstand prices. But apparently we were mistaken. Your ride home will get even more expensive when Wenner Media ups the price on Us with the Oct. 12 issue even though sites like Perezhilton muscle in on their readership. Is this a sign of confidence that gossip heads will continue to take a big chunk of their doses via print?
An Us Weekly increase was not unexpected, as several of its competitors have been moving up in cover price in recent months. Northern & Shell kicked off the increases this year when it raised the price of its U.S. edition of OK! by $1, to $2.99. Time Inc.’s People magazine went to $3.99 from $3.49 with the Sept. 10 issue, from $3.49. And Bauer Publishing this fall is raising the prices of In Touch and Life & Style weeklies, both the low-priced leaders at $1.99, by $1.

Following the trend we guess!

Wenner's Us Weekly to Up Cover Price [Mediaweek]

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The douche-isms of Bill O'Reilly

We have to admit, we have a love hate thing for gas bag newsman Bill O'Reilly. He sometimes speaks the truth which most of us can't handle. But most times Bill tends to cross the line with his misinformed,ignorant, shallow, and narrow minded comments. By now you know what he said recently about having dinner in Harlem with Al Sharpton so we won't get into it. We do have to admit again that we laughed or asses off because poor Billy knows no better. He can't help it if he was born a super douche.

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So Tom Freston joined the board of Dreamworks Animation...Big deal!

OK so we're happy that former Viacom CEO Tom Freston got a gig as a member of the board of directors at Dreamworks Animation but we think publications like Variety are making more out of it than it really is. Tom will have no daily say so in the company, he is just another guy who has to vote on big hires, acquisitions etc... This in no way will make Sumner Redstone cut his naked morning swim short. Now if Freston was named Executive Chairman or something like that, we would make a big deal about it. Nevertheless, we are sure Freston's big third break isn't too far out.


In a pointed move, Jeffrey Katzenberg-led DreamWorks Animation on Monday named Tom Freston to its board of directors. Announcement is a clear act of defiance against Viacom, from which Freston was famously fired as CEO by Sumner Redstone last fall. DreamWorks Animation pics are distribbed by Viacom-owned Paramount under a deal that extends through 2013.

Dreamworks Animation adds Freston [Variety]

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Are old media guys really looking to drop their old media assets?

Paul La Monica at CNNmoney.com asks "Will major media conglomerates soon unload some of their biggest assets?" We think the answer is a definite yes because media execs are constantly battling to become and/or remain relevant in the media business and to be relevant today is to be heavily invested in digital media. Some of them are even buying up web businesses with blind folds on praying that it works out in the long run and for some it does.

Among the questions raised at Merrill Lynch’s media conference in California and Goldman Sachs’ Communacopia in New York: Will Barry Diller’s IAC (IACI) unload its struggling Home Shopping Network division? Will CBS (CBS) spin off its thriving outdoor advertising business? And if so, would it package in its slower-growth radio unit as well? Will News Corp. (NWS) sell off any more assets once its $5 billion purchase of Dow Jones closes? News Corp. disclosed plans earlier this summer to sell some local Fox TV stations and an international billboard business.

Big media enters the spin zone [MediaBiz via CNNmoney.com]

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What happened to Mary Berner?

Is it just us, or has former Fairchild boss turned Reader's Digest ruler Mary Berner gained some weight since her Conde days? We didn't notice it at first but when we finally! got our copy of Folio magazine last week with Berner on the cover we noticed something different. Gone were the semi sharp features and perfectly groomed hair. Now Berner, at least on her Folio cover looks like the typical suburban stay at home mommy who doesn't have the time to spruce up.

We are big Berner fans no doubt, but her recent Folio Magazine cover shocked us. Berner's hair looks finger combed, what looks like a double chin is now present and her smile seems to be hiding stress. Who at RD if anyone allowed this photo to be used for the cover? You should be canned for not making sure they caught our Mary on her good side, on a good day. Oh well, it is what it is! We love you Mary.

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Today in start a rumor spike your stock: Google to swallow Sirius?

Published: Monday, September 24, 2007

Apparently there is a rumor this morning which is sure to stick around for the whole week that Google is kicking the tires on Sirius Satellite Radio which is still trying to wrap up a merger with XM. This is probably the 5th company Google is said to be kicking the tires on. Like everyone else we don't know how true this is but a company like Sirius, with their not so hot stock price could benefit from such a rumor due to Google's golden status and greedy investors who would eat up more shares in Sirius.

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Morning Wire: And now some of this morning's worthy media news


  • Starbucks and Apple team up to give away free music you may have already downloaded from iTunes to your iPod, iPod Touch... whatever! [NYP]
  • Americans may hate this little bastard, but the media sure loves them some Mahmoud Ahmadinejad [Results]
  • Disney puts up with it because they have bigger things to worry about [NYT]
  • You know what we don't understand, why in the world an ad company thinks we really give a shit about getting ads sent to our cellphones. Dudes, we ignore them, put your money somewhere else [NYT]
  • Those Google guys just get richer and richer don't they? Maybe now either Larry or Sergey will go buy their own jet instead of sharing one, then again its not like they couldn't before. [Marketwatch]

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Viacom slowly ruining yet another relationship

Published: Friday, September 21, 2007

Lately it seems like Viacom doesn't know how to preserve relationships. If it isn't old man Sumner yapping way over the line about someone, its CEO Phil Dauman. Dauman reportedly may have pissed off director Steven Spielberg by implying that Viacom and Dreamworks would continue to be successful without Spielberg's imput. You would think that a CEO would know how to choose his words more carefully. Now poor little Brad Grey has to step in and play the calmer while trying to avoid calling his boss a dick head.

Speaking by telephone on Thursday, Brad Grey, Paramount’s chairman, was eager to calm the waters stirred up by one of his bosses. “I have the greatest respect for the creativity of Steven Spielberg and the entire DreamWorks team, as well as the immense entrepreneurial business skills of David Geffen,” he said.

Mr. Grey added, “On behalf of Viacom and Paramount, I hope we’re all in business for a very long time.”

Viacom Chief’s Remark on Spielberg Stirs a Furor [NYT]

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Meet Rupert Murdoch's barber

Published: Thursday, September 20, 2007

Ever wondered where Rupert Murdoch goes to keep the hair on his had as sharp as his business sense? Yeah we haven’t either. But if you have, look no further than underneath the St. Regis Hotel in New York City, and there you will find Salon Fodera. Fortune magazine profiles the man who brings high voltage moguls like Murdoch to a calm. Joseph Ancona seems to have a way with the moguls who visit him for their $65 cuts.


"Somehow they relax in my chair," he says.

As for Murdoch, the chairman first happened into the salon more than a decade ago while staying at the St. Regis, says Ancona, and now stops in for a trim every two weeks when he's in town.

"He's a gentleman," Ancona says; while Murdoch is sometimes a little tardy, Ancona says he always apologizes profusely. "Every time, I see him in the corridor, running," he says.
There is no doubt that if Rupert Murdoch or one of Joe Ancona's other high profile clients ever got in some trouble, he would be one of the first to be subpoenaed under the assumption that he may know things that no one else knows about the business dealings of people like Murdoch.


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A slimmed down Primedia may disappear if it turns sideways

Since we can remember Primedia has been trying to unload its magazines, and finally they were able to pull it off. First they unloaded their outdoor titles for over $100 million and more recently they unloaded about over 70 titles including Motor Trend to the Ron Burkle controlled Source Interlink Companies. Now Primedia, once a mighty mighty consumer magazine publisher has slimmed down to a publisher and distributor of free print and online consumer guides for the apartment, auto and home industries…Yawn!

The company has clearly gone through a rebirth, with a fresh new corporate website listing the outskirts of Atlanta as its corporate home. Its two sold magazine groups have since gone on to morph into new companies. The outdoor titles make up a new company by the name of Intermedia Outdoors and the enthusiast group is now a division of Source Interlink under the name Enthusiast Media, or so we hear. How soon now until Primedia is no more? How profitable are the remaining products that the company now does business around with sites like Craig’s list and other more dominant competitors? For now we will add the new Primedia to our watch list.

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The media industry's nice guy begins his looong goodbye tour

Published: Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Time Warner CEO Dick Parsons has officially begun his loooong goodbye tour. Dubbed as the media industry's diplomat, or the media industry's nice guy (OK we made that one up) The big bear of a media exec is packing it in as soon as the board says so. He has been talking up Jeff Bewkes as the best person to take over, as if he really needs to do that, and that he will be leaving the company in good shape. However Parsons does have his critics but that isn't going to stop the man who survived a merger disaster, lawsuits, Carl Icahn, his CFO's expensive taste in female companions and many other obstacles he faced from going out on a good note.


“We’re in the passing lane right now, Jeff and I,” Parsons said. “The exact timing is up to our board to decide. But I’m running hard and Mr. Bewkes is running hard.”
Parsons Prepares to Pass Baton to Bewkes [MCN]

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Rupert Murdoch beefing up his new business network for attack on CNBC

Published: Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Rupert Murdoch is building up the troop levels at his Fox Business Network for an all out invasion of CNBC's territory. The soon to be launched network under the command of long time Murdoch, general Roger Ailes has been somewhat under the radar during preparations leaving its competitors guessing and wondering when and where the attack will come from. Its probably kinda like the way Saddam felt the days leading up to the start of the Iraq war. No? Well we're sure NBC Universal Chief Jeff Zucker is bracing himself.

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Op-Ed columnists and more break free at NYtimes.com

The powers that be at The New York Times finally set its Op-Ed columnists and others free to be seen and read by all. We have to say that it was a total pain in the ass especially if its an article we were itching to read. We almost paid for the frigging thing one day and caught ourselves because we believed that the day would come. We guess freedom is contagious because now there is word that The Wall Street Journal's soon to be owner Rupert Murdoch is thinking about busting out the WSJ.com website as well. Lets see if the Financial Times will follow.

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Speculations about a Bewkes lead Time Warner getting stronger and stronger

CFO Wayne Pace will have more time on his hands for his other interests!

At the world's biggest media company, what has come to be known as the Bewkes era is almost here and many are wondering what Time Warner will look like under the CEOing of Jeff Bewkes. Some believe he will continue to carry out current CEO Dick Parsons' vision while others believe he is just playing nice guy for now until Parsons' steps off and will seek to break up the behemoth. So far one almost definite thing is that Bewkes will not opt for a second in command. This could be a sign of a hands-on style management or a sign that Bewkes wants to make the first and final call on all things across the company. There is also word that the company is already looking for a new money man to replace current CFO Wayne Pace, who is getting into retirement mode. Bottom line, only Jeff Bewkes knows what the hell Jeff Bewkes will do with Time Warner when he becomes CEO. Then again we forgot to mention the few who thinks he shouldn't be CEO.

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Mary Berner and company on the hunt for new meat at Reader's Digest

Published: Monday, September 17, 2007


Reader's Digest CEO Mary Berner is still trying to fill some open slots. Clearly Berner's team is still in the process of building the team. For an industry which saw the closings of many print and online publications this year, there sure are a lot of job openings.

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Fallen HBO head, Chris Albrecht lands a new gig at Hollywood talent agency

Compared to his old gig as head of big shot cable network HBO, former CEO Chris Albrecht will take a new job a step down the ladder as head of talent agency IMG's media business. What, did you think the alleged domestic incident would have stopped this man in his tracks? Even Sara Jessica Parker is a big Albrecht fan. We still think he was going to be pulled up the corporate ladder at Time Warner when Jeff Bewkes takes over

Despite the scandals, Mr. Albrecht was sought after by Hollywood studios and financiers. In recent months it had become a bit of a parlor game in the television industry about where (and perhaps whether) he would land.

“It’s a town of second, third and fourth chances,” said Sarah Jessica Parker, who starred in “Sex in the City” and now has a production deal with HBO. “I would never be reluctant to work with him again. Maybe I’m being Pollyanna-ish, but people want to work with people who have been successful.”

After Scandal, HBO’s Former Leader Lands at IMG [NYT]

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Hearst buys website that tries to convince old people that they are still young

In a move to further fluff up their digital offerings and ad dollars, Hearst has snatched up consumer-health media company Realage.com. Hearst Magazines queen Cathy Black is very pleased with this one especially because she can milk drug advertisers for her rulers at the top of the Hearst Tower. But we have to say...good catch Cathy, good catch. Now make it work.

“Over the last eight years, RealAge has succeeded in establishing itself as a credible brand in the health space and has built a sizeable consumer and advertiser following,” said Cathleen P. Black, president, Hearst Magazines. “By acquiring RealAge, Hearst will gain immediate entry into the growing health and wellness categories and will do so with a solid customer base and strong ties to highly profitable online pharmaceutical advertisers.”

Hearst Magazines to Acquire RealAge, Inc. [Marketwire via Yahoo Finance]

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The rise of NBC's pot smoking wonder kid, Ben Silverman

Published: Saturday, September 15, 2007

Ben Silverman is probably Hollywood's most powerful young exec as Co-Chair of NBC Entertainment. He slid into the job with much press and no doubt more vagina than any man could handle. He hints that he still smokes pot with his buddies and has already gotten down to the business of making NBC Universal boss Jeff Zucker and his boss GE CEO Jeff Immelt happy by green lighting new programs that may or may not dig NBC out of the dark hole it has been in for some time now. W Magazine's Gabriel Snyder observed Silverman and wrote all about it in their latest issue and by the sound of things, Ben Silverman just may be able to balance his partying ways and his new high power gig.

When a network head sits for his corporate portrait, it’s normally a tedious exercise: a balding guy in a drab suit and serious tie posing awkwardly for 10 minutes before he’s got to be somewhere—anywhere—else. But Ben Silverman is not your typical television executive. Five days into his new job as cochair of NBC Entertainment, the 37-year-old agent-turned-producer-turned-broadcast boss is not ashamed to be standing in his drawers (washboard abs proudly displayed) on the set of his NBC photo shoot. Following the photographer’s directives—“Lean forward! That’s cool!”—Silverman, after changing into a charcoal suit sans tie, ends up contorted into a coy little ball, his chin resting on his knees. Suddenly a cell phone begins to bleat, its ring tone a refrain from one-hit rapper Mims: “This is why I’m hot. This is why I’m hot.” The crew members eye each other nervously—Who forgot to silence his phone?—until Silverman languidly slips out of his kitten pose and answers his mobile.

CONTINUE...


Roll your eyes if you must, but this is what Holly-wood success looks like today. Ratings are what players like Silverman get paid for—not gravitas or modesty. Even so, when NBC tapped Silverman to be its cochairman (he shares the title with Marc Graboff, a buttoned-down veteran of the network’s business operations), many in the TV business were surprised to see an open-collared, Jaguar XKR–driving, party-hopping producer ascend to one of the industry’s most powerful posts. Silverman, however, is quite confident that he’s up to the task. “I think I am the audience, you know what I mean? I viscerally respond. I am conceptual and a dealmaker,” he says, sitting in his new office at NBC. (The place is undecorated but overflowing with congratulatory gifts that include a T-shirt declaring I’M A GENIUS!) “Those are things that usually don’t all come in the same package. I am the perfect storm for making a television executive.”

Some would argue that it will take a perfect storm to land NBC back on top. The network, after all, is in a serious funk, having finished last in prime-time ratings for the third year in a row. But if nothing else, the appointment has people talking about the peacock again—well, at least gossiping. During the three-week interim between the announcement of Silverman’s hiring and his first day on the job, a story began circulating that the delay was due to GE’s corporate drug-testing policy. The party boy, it was said, needed time to get the marijuana out of his system.

Silverman denies the rumor, but only to a point. “No, no, no. I did not quit smoking pot to take this job,” he says. “I’m still single, and I go out with my friends, but it was a nonissue for me. I think it blew out of proportion because I have nice Lucien [Pellat-Finet] sweaters with pot-leaf embroidery and I have some hemp sneakers. The day my deal was done, I said, ‘I want to get this freakin’ piss test out of the way.’ All these people are, like, accusing me of s---.”

Silverman grew up in Manhattan with his mom, Mary, a television executive with the BBC, and his dad, Stanley, a composer. He set his sights on the industry in junior high after reading a profile of Brandon Tartikoff, NBC’s legendary head programmer in the 1980s, in New York magazine. While majoring in history at Tufts, Silverman spent three summers interning for Warner Bros. and, upon graduation, photocopied his mom’s Rolodex and headed for Los Angeles. He crashed at a friend’s place while looking for work and, because the AC was busted in his car, took to driving to job interviews in his underwear and getting dressed in parking lots.

Barbara Corday, a former CBS executive who was starting her own TV production company, eventually hired him to be her assistant. “He was extremely young and enthusiastic and very charming,” she says. “All the things you read about him now, he was then, only more like a puppy. And who can resist a puppy?”
His very first day on the job she decided Silverman was “too good” to be her assistant. So she gave him the title of manager of development. Later that day, she decided director of development had a better ring. “I was 22,” says Silverman, giving one of his signature smiles, with his eyes open wide and his bushy eyebrows arched high, “and I was basically promoted three times over the course of a day.”

When Corday was hired as president of New World Television in 1993, she took her protégé with her, and when she was pushed out a year later to make way for the aforementioned Tartikoff, Silverman stayed on, becoming what he describes as his onetime idol’s “go-to guy.” In 1995 he jumped to the William Morris Agency, setting up shop in the London office and making his first big splash by putting together deals to adapt European shows like Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, Survivor and The Weakest Link for the American market. “I basically established a monopoly,” he says. “If it had an accent, I was involved in selling it.”

Having built a reputation as one of reality TV’s driving forces, he set up his own production company, Reveille, in 2002, which scored hits like The Biggest Loser. He also used his importing skills to translate The Office (originally a UK smash) and Ugly Betty (based on a Colombian soap opera) for Stateside audiences. Altogether, Silverman-produced shows (the latter two and The Tudors) received 24 Emmy nominations this year.

Word of Silverman’s move to NBC first hit Hollywood on the Friday before Memorial Day in a manner that is emblematic of the new media forces that have the networks scrambling. Just before 10 a.m., an e-mail from someone calling himself “theanontipster” arrived on the BlackBerries of reporters, bloggers and industry insiders. It read simply, “Ben Silverman has been offered the job replacing Kevin Reilly.” It was the first that Reilly, who was on the distribution list, had heard of his ouster.

The news flash turned out to be a tad premature. NBC Universal chief executive Jeff Zucker and Silverman had been in talks for a week and a half but had yet to hammer out an agreement. Silverman admits the mysterious e-mail “accelerated our negotiations,” but he says he had nothing to do with the leak. “Oh, God no,” he says. “It ruined my weekend.” He was spending the holiday at the Montage, a resort in Laguna Beach that was crowded with Hollywood types. “People were all over me, shooting me e-mails, circling me. I literally had to go in my room and pace on the phone the entire time.”

The e-mail leak, Silverman gripes, foiled his publicity plan. “I wanted it to be the cover of The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal,” he says with characteristic immodesty. And, he adds, he would have liked to be the one to break the news to Reilly. “I love Kevin and wanted to, at the right moment, tell him about it firsthand.”

Despite such statements of goodwill—and despite the fact that Reilly soon landed at Fox to take over its top-rated prime-time schedule—the whole affair has left a bad taste in the mouths of Reilly loyalists. One of the most outspoken has been ABC entertainment head Steve McPherson, a college buddy of Reilly’s, who blasted Silverman at an ABC press conference in July for pretending he had nothing to do with Reilly’s dismissal. “Was he living in a cave?” he said. “When someone stabs your best friend in the back, you don’t buy it.”

Silverman, of course, doesn’t need the admiration of the competition to succeed in his new role. It might help, however, if he and his boss agreed on a definition of success. Says Zucker, “The goal for Ben is to move NBC Entertainment forward in terms of its viewership and in terms of the number of successful programs he can bring to air.” Silverman, however, puts his own spin on it—with less of an emphasis on ratings: “What we are in is the business of television, not the rankings of television. It’s going to be hard for broadcast television to sustain its ratings when there are 500 networks and a million competing entertainment options.”

Either way, Silverman has been busy during his first few months looking for ways to kick-start the turnaround, whether by announcing that Jerry Seinfeld would return to prime time as a guest star on 30 Rock or adding former Grey’s Anatomy star Isaiah Washington to the cast of Bionic Woman. Silverman is also importing another Colombian hit telenovela, whose title translates to Without Breasts There Is No Paradise, about a flat-chested girl who becomes a prostitute to pay for a boob job. On the reality side, he’s greenlighted a seventh edition of Donald Trump’s The Apprentice, given the Joey Fatone–hosted The Singing Bee a slot on the fall schedule and announced Phenomenon, a version of the Israeli show hosted by spoon-bending mentalist Uri Geller. “I like quality with noise,” Silverman says. “Big, big, bold hits, you know, but that also have elements of profound engagement.”

Whether they fail or flourish, network entertainment heads tend to have short tenures—Reilly held the job for three years before getting fired; before him, Zucker did the job for four years before being promoted up the corporate ladder—and Silverman isn’t planning to spend the rest of his life at NBC. A donor to such Democratic candidates as Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, he says he wants to eventually “devote myself to public service.

“I may run for office,” he tosses off with trademark confidence, “but I also think America needs a chief marketing officer.” —GABRIEL SNYDER

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XM Satellite Radio: We don't need a merger, but we would like one

XM Satellite Radio bosses Nate Davis and Gary Parsons in a Q&A with the New York Times said that a merger with Sirius would be great but if it doesn't happen, that would be great as well. As both companies wait for the final word on whether or not they can merge. The boys at XM are all about business as usual.


Q. It is said that the darkest part of the night is just before the dawn. Do you ever wake up fearing that this merger will not happen?

PARSONS: No, I actually don’t. We have said that we do not need the merger to go forward. Candidly, it’s pedal to the metal from the beginning to the very end. The most extraordinary thing has been the visceral nature with which the N.A.B. jihad has progressed against the merger.

The Future for XM, With or Without a Sirius Merger [NYT]

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Time Inc hunts for a digital ad czar. Still has no corporate website

Published: Thursday, September 13, 2007

Time Inc is looking for a stiff to oversee its print and digital business in an effort to drive ad revenue across its brands within its new FortuneMoney Group. Lets hope Time Inc boss lady Anne Moore lands herself a winner, so she can go out on top.

Time Inc is creating an executive position that will be responsible for all print and digital ad revenue in the group, which includes Fortune and Money magazines, the Fortune Small Business magazines and the CNNMoney.com Web site.
On another note. Why does one of the world's biggest magazine publishers lack a corporate website? You want to milk the digital ad business but you don't even have a website to showcase your brands and the people behind them. Let’s go Time Inc. Launch an official Timeinc.com website.

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