Tag: Sam Zell

  • Eli Broad still mulls saving newspapers

    Is Eli Broad considering another run at the Los Angeles Times?

    The billionaire philanthropist told a New York gathering Monday that he’d still like to rescue the paper, owned by the bankrupt Tribune Company.

    Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

    Click to activate this MucketyMap

    Click to activate interactive map
    (requires Java)
    MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.

    “We can’t afford to lose good newspaper journalism, investigative reporting,” the 75-year-old business maven said during a lecture on business and philanthropy at the 92nd Street Y, according to Reuters..

    Back in 2007, Broad had expressed interest in buying the Los Angeles paper – before real-estate magnate Sam Zell took the entire company private in an $8-billion deal that loaded the company with debt.

    “I’ve regained my sanity since then,” Broad joked, but added: “I would like to see our foundation and others join together to own the LA Times.”

    Like most American newspapers, the Los Angeles Times has struggled with steep advertising declines and a migration of readers to the Internet. Since its parent company filed for bankruptcy several months ago, the paper has made ever more draconian cuts.

    Broad’s background is in home building and insurance. He sold SunAmerica, a provider of retirement products, to AIG in 1999 for $18 billion. In recent years, he and his wife have devoted themselves to philanthropy, including revitalizing downtown Los Angeles, bankrolling modern art collections and improving K-12 public education.

    Recently, they pledged $100 million to create a new medical institute dedicated to human genome research, to be run by Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    Still, Broad said he didn’t pretend to know how to make the Times profitable again. “No one has figured out a good business model as of yet,” he said.

    Reducing profit expectations might be one solution, he said. “Newspapers ought to be owned by foundations, not look for great financial returns.”

    And he suggested that while the Times might not survive as a national newspaper, it could partner with other papers like the Washington Post to produce national stories.

    Broad pointed to Britain’s Guardian as one business model. That paper is owned by the Scott Trust Limited, a nonprofit foundation which was created in 1936 to protect the legacy of longstanding editor and former owner, C.P. Scott.

    “If several foundations are involved, there is likely to be journalistic freedom,” Broad said.

    Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter




    Follow Muckety on Twitter


    Muckety's Facebook page


     Read related stories: Newspapers · Recent Stories  

    0 Comments

    • There are no comments yet, be the first by filling in the form below.

    Leave a Comment


    • Harvard Law ensconced at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

      March 12, 2009 at 11:55am

      To save on travel expenses, the Harvard Law School Class of 1991 might as well have its reunion this year at the White House.

    • Randy Michaels built a radio empire, but does he have a plan for newspapers?

      What might Tribune Company COO Randy Michaels be thinking?

      Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

      MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.

      The latest wave of departures among Tribune top brass – Los Angeles Times Publisher David Hiller and longtime Chicago Tribune Editor Ann Marie Lipinski resigned this week – cast a pall over already-demoralized newsrooms, in part because they were not about anyone falling on their swords.

      Hiller had just signed off on 250 layoffs at the Los Angeles Times, but appears to have been tossed under the bus despite his willingness to do the dirty work. Lipinski, who has been handing out dozens of pink slips herself at the Chicago Tribune, reportedly made her own choice to leave. “This position is not the fit it once was,” she told staff.

      So where is all this heading? Does the brash Michaels have any vision of where he is taking the company – beyond bailing as fast as he can to stave off potential bankruptcy in the face of a $13-billion debt incurred by Sam Zell’s purchase last year?

      Considered a genius by his admirers and a madman by critics, Michaels is a former radio executive and shock jock (who reportedly resorted to farting on air and fake-pureeing a frog to boost ratings), who was handpicked to run the Tribune by its new owner Sam Zell.

      Like his boss, Michaels affects a profane, tough-guy style. He announced the arrival of the new regime to Newsday staff last January by saying, “The difference between then and now is we’re not having another meeting. . . . We’re Actually Fucking Doing It.”

      Zell, nicknamed the “grave dancer” for his knack for pulling value from dying businesses, has been a true believer in Michaels since buying a string of radio stations called Jacor Communications in 1993, then headed by Michaels.

      Michaels impressed Zell as an empire builder, riding the wave of government deregulation to make tons of money for Jacor and then, San Antonio-based Clear Channel Communications Inc. He took Jacor from 13 stations to 230 in five years, and helped engineer a merger with Clear Channel in 1999, according to a profile in Chicago Business. At Clear Channel, he led a strategy that made the company the biggest radio operator in history.

      But despite his financial success, Michaels “became the poster child for what people didn’t like about corporate radio,” Sean Ross of Edison Media Research told TVNewsday.

      Among his innovations was “voice tracking” in which ‘local’ radio shows were produced hundreds of miles away, eliminating the need for many jobs and homogenizing play lists across the nation.

      And then there were stories about his pranks, like the day he roamed the halls at Jacor wearing a rubber penis around his neck, accosting female employees, according to allegations aired on ABC’s “20/20,” by former Florida disc jockey Liz Richards who sued the company, including Michaels, for sex discrimination. Richards’ suit was settled out of court in 1995, and the terms were never disclosed.

      “Looking for classy radio programming?” wrote Eric Boehlert in a withering 2001 Salon profile. “Don’t look here. The company is known for allowing animals to be killed live on the air, severing longstanding ties with community and charity events, laying off thousands of workers, homogenizing play lists and a corporate culture in which dirty tricks are a way of life.”

      Michaels has always insisted such criticisms were unfair, attributing them to resistance to change in a rapidly consolidating industry.

      Regardless, the reception he got from Tribune employees earlier this year was hopeful in many quarters, especially when he seemed so emphatic that the solution to the industry’s woes was not further cost-cutting, but creating entirely new streams of revenue. “You think Amazon is worrying about selling ads? You think eBay is worried about selling ads?” he said in his remarks at Newsday. “In the interactive world, that’s the icing on the cake. Media companies have their head where it doesn’t smell good.”

      Except that it hasn’t worked out that way. However paltry those advertising revenues may have seemed then, they have nose-dived since. And with new income streams yet to materialize, the company’s steep debt payments began to seem more and more onerous.

      Despite Zell’s insistence that he planned to keep intact the company’s 11 newspapers and nearly two dozen television stations, the company sold off Newsday, one of its most profitable papers, borrowed $300 million against future earnings and began exploring the sale or lease of the landmark properties owned by the Chicago and Los Angeles papers.

      By June, Michaels was assuring worried investors: “We are actively pursuing a program to right-size our newspapers.”

      The definition of ‘right-sizing – was not spelled out.

      “Sounds better than ‘panicking,’” suggested media consultant Ken Doctor on his blog. “To describe the current round of staff cuts, though, there’s a better word: Frightsizing.”

      Another tip-off to the future was suggested earlier this week by Lipinski’s successor at the Chicago Tribune, Gerould W. Kern, who was the one who introduced metrics to measure reporters’ productivity. In an interview with his own paper, Kern said he planned to work closely with Los Angeles Times Editor Russ Stanton to see where resources could be shared.

      The scope of that sharing was not spelled out, but that too might signal a page out of Michael’s playbook at Clear Channel.

      “If Randy repeats what he’s done in radio, we’ll see a lot of newsrooms eliminated,” media consultant John Gorman told Chicago Business. Gorman, who remembered hearing a Clear channel DJ mispronounce the name of the Cleveland suburb from which he was purporting to broadcast, predicted a scenario in which local TV newscasts would be ‘video-tracked’ from a central studio to save money.

      To be fair, no one else has hit on the solution to print media’s declining fortunes either. Nor has anyone else beat their chest in quite the same way as Michaels or Zell.

      “The dearth of decent ideas designed to save newspapers – or reinvent them for the digital age in ways that preserve their crucial democratic functions – is curious and depressing,” wrote Eric Alterman in The Nation. “It’s curious because some of the smartest, most ambitious and most civic-minded people in America are deeply engaged with the problem. It is depressing because the only ones with the self-confidence to undertake radical measures appear to be completely off their respective rockers.”

      As Michaels himself promised Tribune employees in January: It’s going to be a wild ride.

      Click here to sign up for the Muckety Newsletter


    • Will the Tribune Company sell Newsday?

      Tribune Company owner Sam Zell may be entertaining bids for Newsday, the company’s Long Island paper, amid mounting financial pressures.

      Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map 

      MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.

      Citing an unnamed newspaper industry insider, Crain’s New York Business reported today that News Corp. owner Rupert Murdoch “is believed to have set his sights on Newsday.” Murdoch was reportedly interested in a joint operating agreement between Newsday and his New York Post last year. But the idea went nowhere when Sam Zell took Tribune private in a deal worth $8.2 billion.

      Others expressing interest in buying the tabloid are said to include Mortimer B. Zuckerman, the real-estate developer and publisher who owns the New York Daily News, and James Dolan, whose family controls Cablevision, the cable television operator, the New York Times reported.

      Talk of the possible sale of Newsday surfaced today as Tribune reported a fourth-quarter loss of $79 million. The company acknowledged it may have to sell assets as it struggles past a highly-leveraged December deal that took the company private.

      The dismal results come three months after chairman and CEO Zell, a real estate mogul with no experience in the newspaper business, led a buyout of the struggling company, which owns the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune and the Baltimore Sun, among other newspapers, local television stations and the Chicago Cubs baseball team.

      At the time, Zell said he planned to sell the Cubs and related assets, but wanted to keep most of the rest of the company intact. He also said that additional downsizing was not the answer to historic changes in the newspaper industry. But in the three months since, he has cut jobs, citing falling advertising revenue and a tanking economy.

      Tribune said today it has “begun a strategic review of certain Tribune assets to determine whether capital can be more effectively redeployed into our core operations or toward reducing our outstanding leverage.”

      Related Stories on Muckety

      This post is tagged with: , , , , , , , , , , ,

       Read related stories: Business · Media · Newspapers  

      0 Comments

      • There are no comments yet, be the first by filling in the form below.

      Leave a Comment