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- <text id=93TT1064>
- <title>
- Mar. 01, 1993: An Old Fox Learns New Tricks
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 52
- An Old Fox Learns New Tricks
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>He created a fourth network and mastered the Hollywood power
- game. Now Barry Diller is betting on TV's interactive future.
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN
- </p>
- <p> Barry Diller is sitting at his regular booth at the heart of
- the Four Seasons grillroom, basking in attention. Even in the
- headiest of Manhattan's power lunchrooms, Diller, with his bullethead
- and designer-mogul aura, manages to draw a crowd. Henry Kissinger
- nuzzles onto his banquette for a brief chat; other members of
- the business and media elite stop to pay homage. To each, Diller
- offers a greeting or a quip, then gets back to his enthusiasm
- of the moment. He is talking about home shopping.
- </p>
- <p> "It's a direct, honest way of selling goods and services," he
- says. "You can see the product, get a lot of information about
- it, and order it with no-nonsense swiftness. Compare that with
- going to a suburban mall. It's getting close to being no fun
- at all."
- </p>
- <p> Home shopping? Is this Barry Diller, the manic madman who has
- fascinated and frightened Hollywood for more than two decades?
- The charismatic celebrity addicted to power and partying with
- people who appear boldfaced in Women's Wear Daily social columns?
- And why is he spending three days a week in a sprawling office
- park in the exurbs of Philadelphia, surrounded by wildlife photos
- and a bank of nine video screens? "Home shopping is the very
- beginning of a whole new world," he says, as he bounds around
- his second-floor office while assistants teach him about things
- like product markups and order processing. "But it's interesting
- enough to me in its present borders. And I'm going to learn
- it down to the hubcaps."
- </p>
- <p> Barry Diller inspecting hubcaps: it's a sight strange enough
- to cause a pileup of rubberneckers on the Santa Monica Freeway.
- Last February he resigned from one of Hollywood's most powerful
- posts--chairman of 20th Century Fox and mastermind of the
- Fox network--because he wanted to run his own company rather
- than continue as a hired hand in Rupert Murdoch's media empire.
- Hollywood assumed he would return as the head of another studio
- or perhaps a network, and he did have some exploratory discussions
- about buying NBC. But when he announced his new venture in early
- December, it came as a shock. Joining forces with two cable-industry
- partners, Diller took over QVC, a cable home-shopping channel.
- </p>
- <p> The spin doctors could have been cruel: one of Hollywood's biggest,
- baddest power brokers resurfaces as head of a rinky-dink cable
- outfit that hawks kitchen knives and costume jewelry. Yet the
- move was hailed as a stroke of visionary genius. QVC, Diller
- announced, would be the basis for a multi media company poised
- to exploit all the new technology soon to transform TV: fiber
- optics and digital compression, which will multiply the number
- of channels available, and two-way capability, which will allow
- viewers to interact with the TV set. Home shopping, Diller promises,
- is just the first of a vast array of things people will be able
- to do over the TV of the future, from ordering programs to paying
- bills and calling up the morning newspaper. "It's coming, not
- 10 years from today but sooner. And what's going to help it
- along is someone who doesn't understand the technology and never
- will. I'm in the camp of people who can't work their VCRs."
- </p>
- <p> To industry gurus, it made sense: Diller, with his programming
- expertise, joining forces with some of cable's leading techies,
- most notably John Malone, head of Tele-Communications, Inc.,
- the country's largest cable operator. In one swoop, television's
- fuzzy dreams of an interactive future had acquired both immediacy
- and show-biz cachet. "I'm only surprised at how stupid the rest
- of us were not to see it," says Jeffrey Katzenberg, chairman
- of Walt Disney Studios. Jokes CBS president Howard Stringer:
- "Already he's scared the Sears catalog out of business."
- </p>
- <p> Diller's first task is to redesign the on-air look and schedule
- of QVC, which is currently seen in 45 million homes. (A second
- QVC-owned service, the Fashion Channel, is seen in 10.5 million.)
- "If you're looking for sweaters," he says, "you need to be able
- to find sweaters." He wants to upgrade the product line--more
- high-end electronics, less cubic zirconium--and eventually
- to introduce self-contained programs. He has been contacted
- by everyone from top designers like Donna Karan and Calvin Klein
- to Roseanne Barr (who wants to market a line of large-size
- women's clothing). They would join such current QVC pitchpeople
- as Diane Von Furstenberg, a close friend of Diller's, and Joan
- Rivers, a famous enemy. (Rivers was publicly furious at Diller
- for canceling her late-night talk show on Fox in 1987. The two
- have since made up. When Diller called her in London to tell
- her that he had bought QVC, his first words after breaking the
- news were, "Are you laughing?")
- </p>
- <p> Diller, 51, is a tough, frequently rude, sometimes imperious
- executive. "He's the most confrontational man I know," says
- HBO chairman Michael Fuchs. "He is fearless. He will ask anybody
- anything." A micromanager, he is obsessed with everything from
- program budgets to office design. Fox staff members in Manhattan
- recall secretaries scurrying around before one Diller visit,
- trying to replace the red poinsettias with the white ones Diller
- prefers. His outbursts of temper are legendary. During an argument
- with Stephen Chao, the former head of production for Fox's owned
- stations (later fired by Murdoch for hiring a nude male model
- to illustrate a lecture on censorship), Diller threw a videocassette
- so hard it broke a hole in the wall. Chao put a frame around
- it.
- </p>
- <p> Diller seems mellower these days, his steely gaze softened more
- often by a gap-toothed smile. Still, there is the cool, peremptory
- air of a man who has experienced power, and likes it. He talks
- in precise, carefully judged sentences and demands the same
- in return. Interviews are interrupted by phone calls that give
- piquant glimpses of the fabled "killer Diller." (After hearing
- about some new, unwanted contract language: "Tell him if he
- does not remove it, he can take the agreement and flush it in
- the river. If this is a manipulation, nobody's playing.")
- </p>
- <p> Diller shuttles on his Gulfstream jet between coasts and half
- a dozen offices and residences, including a beach house near
- Malibu, another home 20 miles away in Beverly Hills and a suite
- at New York's Waldorf-Astoria. "I am business-orphaned," he
- laments. He skis in Utah, sails in the Bahamas and shows up
- regularly on the A-list party circuit. On his recent social
- calendar: a birthday party for Yoko Ono thrown by Rolling Stone's
- Jann Wenner and a Manhattan gala hosted by gossipmeister Liz
- Smith. For more down-to-earth recreation, Diller enjoys hiking
- in the woods around Furstenberg's Connecticut country home and
- devouring "cheesy novels," which he claims he is able to read
- without his Hollywood hat on. "It will only dawn on me later,
- `Why didn't I think of this as a movie?' I really can suspend
- my disbelief."
- </p>
- <p> The son of a Los Angeles builder, Diller grew up in Beverly
- Hills and worked in the mail room at the William Morris Agency
- before landing a job at ABC-TV. While still in his 20s, he was
- negotiating for theatrical movies with studio moguls more than
- twice his age. "These were guys who had generically tortured
- the TV people they had dealt with, who were frightened of them,"
- says Diller. "Of the people I'm frightened of, they weren't
- among them."
- </p>
- <p> Diller's great innovation at ABC was the Movie of the Week,
- the first network series of weekly made-for-TV movies. It also
- was one of Diller's formative dealmaking experiences. ABC asked
- Universal to produce the 90-minute films, but the studio was
- being difficult. It proposed that it make the movies exclusively
- and--what really galled Diller--retain rights to the concept
- forever. Diller's bosses were ready to comply, but the young
- executive went to the top of the company with his objections.
- He got ABC to propose a compromise--a deal granting one-year
- exclusivity--knowing that Lew Wasserman, Universal's stubborn
- chief, wouldn't give an inch. He didn't, and ABC walked away
- from the deal. Diller was then put in charge of making the films
- with various studios. He smiles at the memory of Universal's
- belated efforts to get the network's business. "They laid siege
- to ABC," he recalls. "They totally folded, which was sweet to
- watch."
- </p>
- <p> In 1974, when he was just 32, Diller became chairman of Paramount
- Pictures after another snazzy bit of negotiating, this time
- with Charles Bluhdorn, chairman of Paramount's parent company.
- Bluhdorn took Diller to lunch and offered him the job as No.
- 2 executive to the studio's chief, the difficult Frank Yablans.
- Diller's response: "I would rather have the job of that waiter
- than work for Frank Yablans." Two hours later, Bluhdorn called
- back. "I'm making you chairman of Paramount," he told Diller.
- "Yablans works for you."
- </p>
- <p> Diller guided Paramount through some of its most successful
- years, with hits like Saturday Night Fever, Raiders of the Lost
- Ark and Flashdance. But after 10 years, he jumped to 20th Century
- Fox, soon to become one of Murdoch's media holdings. There Diller
- became the prime architect of the Fox network. He rewrote the
- rules, operating with a lean staff, a fraction of the size of
- the Big Three, and experimenting with offbeat shows like America's
- Most Wanted and The Simpsons.
- </p>
- <p> He also drove employees slightly crazy with his mania for details.
- Chao recalls having to re-edit a promotional spot for the series
- Cops 15 times before Diller was satisfied. His combative style
- was stimulating to some, debilitating to others. "It's the yell-in-your-face
- school of management," says an ex-staffer. But for Diller, passionate
- argument is not just a matter of temperament; it is a management
- philosophy. "Arguing out of conviction and belief is positive
- to the creative process," he says. "Years ago I started to worry,
- How do you keep your instincts clean? How do you get to what
- you really think, rather than just repeating the morning line?
- To make the fewest mistakes, you've got to find out where the
- real opinion or passion lies. And that only comes alive in argument."
- </p>
- <p> Diller's fans--of whom there are many, at least on the record--attribute his success also to his business acumen and showman's
- instincts. "He is the least cynical man I know," says Peter
- Chernin, now head of Fox's film division. "He has antennae for
- the kind of cynicism that says, `We don't like this, but the
- idiots out there will.' " Says Michael Ovitz, head of the Creative
- Artists Agency: "In this business there are good analytical,
- practical and creative minds, but very few who combine all three.
- Barry can read a balance sheet, read a script, and forward-think."
- </p>
- <p> Murdoch was most impressed with Diller's attention to detail
- and tight hand on the purse strings. "He was a very conservative
- manager," says Murdoch. "He would arm-wrestle movie producers
- for months." But after Murdoch moved to Los Angeles and started
- taking a more active role in his entertainment company, Diller
- began to chafe. "I never really felt I worked for Rupert Murdoch,"
- he says. "I made decisions as if I owned the place." A turning
- point came at a News Corp. board meeting in the summer of 1991,
- when Diller made some suggestions that seemed to be ignored.
- "I had the feeling I was an unwantedvoice chiming in," he says.
- "I thought, `My God, I really am an employee.' " Diller asked
- if Murdoch could create a principal ownership role for him in
- the company. When Murdoch said no, Diller decided to leave.
- </p>
- <p> He spent much of his interregnum visiting computer, cable and
- other high-tech firms, trying to scope out who would have the
- upper hand in the new information age. He also tried some restorative
- time off. In June he set out on a cross-country drive, renting
- a Chrysler convertible in Miami and wending his way along the
- Gulf Coast through towns like Pensacola and Biloxi. But the
- summer heat and stale motel air left him dehydrated, and by
- the time he reached Little Rock, he was running a 100 degrees
- fever.
- </p>
- <p> Little Rock? When Barry Diller wanders the country, even unemployed,
- he doesn't touch base with just the common folk. Though his
- fever put a damper on his private dinner with Bill and Hillary
- Clinton, Diller still mustered some typical words of advice
- for the future President. The primaries were over, but Ross
- Perot's popularity was starting to worry the Clinton camp. "I
- told him, `You've won. Act like it.'" It's one piece of advice
- Barry Diller will never need. Winner or not, he always acts
- like it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-