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- <text id=94TT0888>
- <title>
- Jul. 11, 1994: Business:The Barry and Larry Show
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 11, 1994 From Russia, With Venom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 48
- The Barry and Larry Show
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Tisch's CBS plans a merger with Diller's QVC, and everybody's
- happy--especially the other media giants that may seize the
- chance to bid for the network
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--Reported by Massimo Calabresi and Thomas McCarroll/New York
- and Jeffrey Ressner/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> At a Manhattan dinner party three weeks ago, Barry Diller was
- constantly asked what he was going to do next. The flinty mogul,
- whose QVC cable network had lost an expensive bid to buy Paramount
- Communications, would say only, "I'm onto something." Late in
- the evening, he stood at the door chatting with Don Hewitt,
- executive producer of CBS's 60 Minutes, and Hewitt's wife, TV
- newswoman Marilyn Berger. "Barry," Berger said nonchalantly,
- "you really should come around the show more often." Diller,
- twinkling and almost winking, replied, "Oh, I'll be around."
- </p>
- <p> Around? Diller is never just around. And he is always onto something--usually on top. In the '70s he successfully ran Paramount's
- empire of movies. In the '80s, at Fox, he achieved the impossible:
- launching a fourth network and making it flower. In 1992 he
- became a partner in the home-shopping channel QVC, a roadside
- fruit stand on the new information superhighway. Instead of
- instantly upgrading the network's programming, Diller used QVC
- as a piggy bank for the hostile raid on Paramount. For once,
- he was vanquished, by Viacom Inc., and when the battle was over
- Diller issued this statement, as prophetic as it was sardonic:
- "They won. We lost. Next."
- </p>
- <p> Next, it turns out, was CBS. Last week Diller and CBS chairman
- Laurence Tisch announced that the Eye network would acquire
- QVC. CBS shareholders would own about 53% of the company, QVC
- shareholders the rest. If the deal goes through, Tisch will
- be chairman of the merged companies, and Diller will be president,
- CEO and chairman of the executive committee. QVC will designate
- five of the 12 members of the board of directors, including
- Diller. Tisch will own about 10% of the combined company (through
- his family-held company, Loews Corp., he owns 20% of the current
- CBS), but, he declared, "Barry will be the boss."
- </p>
- <p> Wall Street wasn't sure who would be boss, but it responded
- emphatically. The day the merger was announced, the stock of
- both CBS and QVC rocketed 19%. It pumped up a QVC stock value
- that had been cut sharply after the Paramount sortie. And it
- brought Tisch's company almost back to its May level, before
- CBS got a black eye by losing eight of its affiliate stations
- to Fox. CBS had also suffered wounds from an earlier affiliate
- raid by Rupert Murdoch, owner of the News Corp. (which includes
- the Fox network), and Revlon magnate Ronald Perelman. "CBS had
- to do something to break out of the doldrums," says Christopher
- Dixon, media analyst with PaineWebber. "With this move they
- enter the modern age--albeit laughing, kicking, struggling
- and crying. They are now where they need to be to be able to
- compete in the rapidly developing broadcast world of the '90s."
- </p>
- <p> Media mavens were quick to applaud the mix of CBS and the tough,
- widely respected Diller. "He's probably the one executive,"
- says analyst Larry Gerbrandt of Paul Kagan Associates, "that
- just about everybody in the industry would salute." Diller,
- a high-profile schmoozer to whom networking is both a pleasure
- and a job description, was quickly at ease in the company he
- hopes will be his big new home. The day the deal was announced,
- he called Evening News co-anchor Dan Rather for a chat and was
- escorted around the network's New York City broadcast center
- on 57th Street by Howard Stringer, CBS's Broadcast Group president.
- Tisch said Stringer would stay on in the new regime. And Diller,
- who has often castigated the bigger networks as boring and bloated,
- promised that there would be no ticker-tape parade of pink slips.
- </p>
- <p> But before Diller can make policy, he must make the deal. He
- must help sell it to the boards and shareholders of both companies,
- and help keep it from enticing other companies avid for a big
- buy. Diller may even have to convince himself that Tisch--a proud man, stung by accusations that he is a timid blunderer
- in the high-speed world of entertainment commerce--is not
- using the Diller name to entice a corporate behemoth with a
- fatter wallet.
- </p>
- <p> If the CBS-QVC merger were a TV series, then everything up to
- now would be just the pilot. Consider the potential plot twists.
- For a start, the CBS and QVC boards do not convene (separately)
- to discuss the merger until July 13. "It's not like the board
- is coming in tomorrow ratifying to do it," says a TV industry
- executive who is close to both Diller and Tisch. "It's not coming
- in for another 10 days! You got the July Fourth weekend--what
- do you think is going to happen over that time? A lot of meetings.
- You can name 10 possible suitors for CBS: all the studios that
- could afford to pick up a 5 or 6 billion dollar tab, telephone
- companies, how many is that right there?"
- </p>
- <p> Tisch insists that "this company will not be shopped. This deal
- will not be shopped. We are not selling. We are simply merging
- two companies, and it's a genuine merger." But many on Wall
- Street do not believe him. "CBS is clearly in play," says Bruce
- Thorp, an analyst for PNC Bank. "This deal implies that it's
- open to all comers." Some analysts insist that CBS is worth
- $6.4 billion, or $400 a share--nearly $100 more than last
- week's closing price. CBS must look mighty fetching to companies
- (like Disney and other studios) with an itch for a takeover
- and the stamina to endure the inevitable court battles and regulatory
- disputes. Billionaire oilman Marvin Davis, said to be interested
- in acquiring NBC, could find a CBS deal seductive, though Tisch
- last week reportedly said he would never sell his stock to Davis.
- </p>
- <p> If the deal does hold, most industry analysts see it as a smart
- move toward the future by CBS, a conservative outfit with a
- maturing lineup of shows in that old fogey of the video market,
- network television. "Diller will create synergy," says Bishop
- Cheen, a Kagan analyst, "by wearing three hats. Number one,
- the network hat, and there's he's a Hall of Famer. Two, the
- programming hat: he will create good and cheap programming.
- And third, merchandiser--a hat that has never been worn at
- CBS with any great authority. He'll merge two favorite American
- pastimes: shopping and watching TV."
- </p>
- <p> The favorite pastime on Wall Street is watching megamergers
- come together--and then, sometimes, picking them apart. In
- this one, the prime mover was Daniel R. Tisch, second son of
- Larry Tisch and general partner of the risk and arbitrage investment
- firm Mentor Partners. Says Danny, who encouraged Tisch to buy
- CBS stock in 1985: "My father has four very smart sons--or
- three very smart sons and myself--and my basic business is
- trading in securities and investing in securities and takeovers
- and in mergers and acquisitions. So I do have a fairly good
- idea of any of the issues that might arise in any merger. And
- I guess he just opted at this point to turn to me for some advice."
- </p>
- <p> In February, as Diller's Paramount proposal waxed, waned and
- went under, Daniel Tisch first broached the CBS-QVC deal to
- takeover lawyer Martin Lipton, one of whose clients was Diller.
- The chat with Lipton, says Danny Tisch, "wasn't done with Larry
- Tisch's okaying or not okaying. It was just saying, gee, if
- the Paramount-QVC transaction looks good, think about what a
- CBS-QVC fit would look like. Lots of sex appeal in it."
- </p>
- <p> In late May, Fox sideswiped CBS, stealing eight affiliates to
- bolster its station roster. For Larry Tisch, 71, this was a
- humbling, sapping loss. After huddling with family members,
- he put out the word that he was ready to consider any good offer
- seriously. In marched Diller, 52 and still hungry.
- </p>
- <p> According to several sources, QVC's subsequent offer included
- a cash buyout of CBS, a move CBS declined. Then Diller, with
- Lipton and Herbert Allen of Allen & Co., whom Danny Tisch calls
- "the real financial architects of this transaction," rejiggered
- the proposal as a merger between equal parties. "Around June
- 10," recalls Danny, "we sat down--my father, my brother Jimmy,
- who is executive vice president at Loews, and I--with Marty
- Lipton. We didn't really come up with any negatives."
- </p>
- <p> In the past year, the network that Larry Tisch is credited with
- turning around has experienced positives and negatives in equal
- measure. CBS had become the first network to lead the ratings
- in daytime (with hot soap operas like The Young and the Restless),
- prime time (with aging but still potent shows like 60 Minutes
- and Murphy Brown) and late night (with the boffo debut of David
- Letterman). But its triumphs on the air were clouded by fiascos
- in the conference rooms. Losing the affiliates to Fox was only
- part of it. The Eye web had fumbled its rights to N.F.L. games,
- a CBS staple since 1956, and allowed Fox to pick them up. CBS
- also looked inept when, unlike ABC, NBC and Fox, it did not
- demand that cable systems commit to accept some jerry-built
- CBS cable channel in return for retransmission rights to the
- network's programming. "CBS could have gotten a cable channel
- for almost nothing," says the TV-industry executive. "They would
- just have to have invested some start-up money. But to Tisch
- it didn't mean anything because he doesn't feel it in his gut,
- like a Murdoch or a Diller does. He walked away from every deal
- he was presented! He has no vision about what the mass-media
- business is going to be, no feeling for where the future is."
- </p>
- <p> Two of CBS's largest institutional investors expressed unhappiness
- over these events. They saw Tisch as a shopkeeper and not the
- right kind of dreamer. "It's that vision thing," says Harold
- Vogel of Merrill Lynch. "His idea of a vision is another year
- of winning the ratings war, and that's it. That's not the way
- you grow a network." The only thing that was growing at this
- network was the list of jokes about it. Rush Limbaugh recently
- referred to "the three major networks--four, if you count
- CBS."
- </p>
- <p> You would have to count a lot higher before you got to QVC.
- It is one of cable's quieter moneymakers: lots of cash, little
- cachet. In Diller's first year at QVC, its revenues rose 14%.
- John Malone, the zillionaire head of Tele-Communications, Inc.,
- had lured Diller to the home-shopping network at the end of
- 1992, shortly after he left Fox. Perhaps there had been a dispute
- with Murdoch, his boss, over a Diller request for equity in
- the company; perhaps he was just tired, as he said, of working
- for other people.
- </p>
- <p> The son of a Beverly Hills builder, Diller joined ABC in 1966.
- This was a young man in a hurry. Diller was soon developing
- two important formats: the mini-series (QB VII) and the made-for-TV
- movie (such as Duel, Steven Spielberg's debut feature). In 1974
- he moved to Paramount, where he, Michael Eisner, Jeffrey Katzenberg,
- Frank Mancuso and some other sharp people spurred a renaissance
- of the studio, with such hits as Saturday Night Fever, Grease,
- Raiders of the Lost Ark, Flashdance and Terms of Endearment.
- </p>
- <p> In 1984 Diller tangled with Martin Davis, chairman of Gulf &
- Western, which owned Paramount, and left the studio to become
- chairman of Fox. (The same year, Eisner and Katzenberg went
- to Disney; Mancuso stayed to run Paramount.) Murdoch, who bought
- the studio a year later, gave Diller the mandate to create a
- fourth prime-time network. That he did, with his patented management
- style: creative listening. "What Barry does," says Garth Ancier,
- Fox's TV programming chief under Diller, "is assemble teams
- of people and then bring them into the room to debate different
- ideas. He obviously ran the whole thing, but he really acts
- as an editor. And he's a very good editor."
- </p>
- <p> Some would say he was also a very good predator. Stories of
- Diller's temper and hauteur still raise hackles around many
- a Hollywood campfire. It's said that Diller, furious at Fox
- programmer Stephen Chao, threw a videotape past Chao, making
- a dent in the wall; Chao framed the dent. Thus does Diller,
- whose stare can go through you like a power drill, inspire passions
- and animosities. Says a studio executive: "People who have worked
- for Barry and then escaped have a secret handshake. They consider
- themselves lucky survivors, like the Schindler Jews."
- </p>
- <p> That harsh phrase has been used before about Diller, and all
- it does is add the glamour of menace to his mystique. No question
- that this hard-driving entrepreneur has an intimidating manner
- and visage ("He looks like his head is meant only to cover his
- brain," says one former Fox executive). But he wouldn't have
- succeeded just by being a slick shark among the entertainment
- industry's countless barracudas. He made his reputation by making
- movies and TV shows, by making things happen, by making money
- for men with more money.
- </p>
- <p> But after moving from broadcast TV to cable, Diller never quite
- answered one question posed by the ordinary viewers: Can you
- turn QVC's programming into something approaching mainstream
- entertainment? After two years--about the time it took for
- Diller to start up Fox's first night of network programming--QVC was still an electronic flea market, selling flashy bracelets
- one moment and beanbag chairs the next. Clearly, most of Diller's
- creative energies were directed elsewhere. "When Barry went
- to QVC," says a business colleague, "he saw this mainly as the
- platform to do a big, transforming acquisition."
- </p>
- <p> Now Diller is close to it, and that could create some rancor
- among QVC shareholders. As the business colleague notes, "They
- could say, `Hey, you worked on this for a year and a half, and
- all you did was get me five bucks over what it was worth when
- you came in, and this half of what it was worth a year ago.'"
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the obstacles, the CBS-QVC merger could be a quick,
- happy fix for two media barons under pressure. Diller gets to
- make a network grow into a giant of cable, broadcasting and
- only he knows what else (theatrical movies? video games? TV
- serials for home shoppers?). And CBS gets Diller. In essence,
- to secure an heir, Tisch bought a company. And a legacy. "Larry
- gets to walk out," says the TV-industry executive, "not as a
- failure, but as someone who took the company and turned it around.
- Now he's a winner: he's probably $400 million ahead of his original
- investment, and he's still got 10% of the new entity." Merril
- Lynch's Vogel sees the merger as "Tisch's exit strategy. He
- was having a problem chasing out. This is one way of solving
- that problem."
- </p>
- <p> On its face, at least, the merger solves so many problems. Says
- the TV exec: "Here you put together two companies that seemingly
- were in trouble. QVC is basically a single great executive with
- an asset that has no future. CBS is a great asset with a great
- future but an executive that has no vision. So it was a perfect
- marriage."
- </p>
- <p> A perfect marriage it may be, but the wedding day is far off,
- and rival swains are surely on the prowl. Right now CBS looks
- like a pretty blond in a lowcut dress who goes to a singles
- bar to announce her engagement. The leaking of the news so far
- in advance of the board meeting suggests at least that Tisch
- intends to consider other offers, which would further inflate
- the stock. One CBS executive admitted that Tisch went public
- with the merger news because "he fervently believes in doing
- a deal that makes the best sense for the shareholder. If the
- shareholders end up determining that there's a better deal,
- then..." Then the shareholders make a bundle. And who is
- CBS's largest shareholder? Larry Tisch.
- </p>
- <p> To those with a taste for both melodrama and irony, it would
- be appealing if Tisch--widely considered the duller of the
- two men--were cunning enough to use Diller as bait for an
- even more robust suitor. Why, it would be the stuff of network
- television. Greed! Lust! Power! Infighting! Backbiting! The
- Barry and Larry Show, with a few mystery guest stars, could
- be CBS's hottest program this summer.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-