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- <text id=93TT0254>
- <title>
- July 26, 1993: Attention TV Shoppers...
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 55
- Attention TV Shoppers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A merger of the two largest home-shopping channels signals a
- new phase in a fast-growing industry
- </p>
- <p>By THOMAS MCCARROLL
- </p>
- <p> Home shopping, the ultimate in couch-potato marketing, seemed,
- at its cable-TV debut a decade ago, to be the natural successor
- to the shopping mall. But years of selling such schlock as silver
- bracelets and cubic-zirconia rings, plus a series of scandals,
- mired the medium at the low end of the retail business, even
- as it grew to gross about $2.2 billion a year. Recently, though,
- home shopping has spiffed up its image, thanks in part to media
- mogul Barry Diller. Since joining QVC as chairman six months
- ago, Diller has buffed the industry's reputation by luring Saks
- Fifth Avenue and famous designers like Diane von Furstenberg
- to sell goods on television. And in a move that could further
- help clean up and expand the business, he proposed last week
- a $1.2 billion merger between QVC, the nation's largest video
- retailer, and the No. 2 operator, troubled Home Shopping Network.
- </p>
- <p> If completed, the deal will create a video-retailing powerhouse
- accounting for about 99% of the industry's current total revenues.
- Together, the two networks reach more than 60 million cable
- subscribers nationwide. Their merger is also designed to facilitate
- a settlement of charges stemming from alleged kickbacks, blackmail
- and bribery at HSN, which is under investigation by the Internal
- Revenue Service and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
- </p>
- <p> For Diller, the transaction will provide QVC with the financial
- strength to withstand an onslaught of new competition from big
- department stores like R.H. Macy and Nordstrom, all of which
- have announced plans to enter the home-shopping business. Combined,
- QVC and HSN will generate about $147 million in annual cash
- flow, which would come in handy to finance Diller's dream of
- taking TV shopping to its next evolutionary stage: making it
- interactive. An advanced interactive system would let viewers
- browse through a sort of "video catalog" of a store's merchandise
- and place orders on-line and on-screen. Says Diller: "This will
- allow us to bring the future closer and faster."
- </p>
- <p> The most talked-about prospect for the QVC-HSN merger is the
- creation of a fifth network on a par with ABC, CBS, NBC and
- Fox. A portion of the transaction gives QVC--which is partly
- owned by cable-TV visionary John Malone of Tele-Communications
- Inc.--the option to buy a controlling interest in HSN's TV
- spin-off, Silver King Communications, which owns 12 UHF stations,
- enough to form the core of a network.
- </p>
- <p> Many analysts speculate that the man who built Fox-TV will use
- such a network to combine shopping and entertainment. They envision
- the channel, dubbed Best TV by company executives, running,
- say, an hour of country-music videos featuring C.-and-W. stars
- like Clint Black and Garth Brooks, followed by a segment devoted
- to selling cowboy boots and other Western-style apparel. But
- Diller is not yet totally convinced that such synergy exists.
- "You won't see dancing and singing toasters."
- </p>
- <p> Still, TV retailers have recently turned over their studios
- to celebrities and fashion designers with surprising success.
- Talk-show host Joan Rivers, for instance, generated $30 million
- in sales when she appeared on QVC peddling her line of jewelry,
- while HSN brought in game-show star Vanna White to push her
- "Little Miss Vanna" cosmetic line.
- </p>
- <p> The prospect of a QVC-HSN merger appeals to many suppliers.
- Greg Renker, president of Guthy-Renker Corp., which sells some
- 20 products through home-shopping channels, says the deal "will
- double our window of opportunity." Before, Renker could sell
- items ranging from vitamins to sunglasses through either QVC
- or HSN, but not both. However, Kurt Barnard, publisher of Barnard's
- Retail Marketing Report, says, "This merger will reduce competition.
- Instead of two channels, there will be only one, and suppliers
- will no longer be able to play one channel against the other
- to negotiate a better price."
- </p>
- <p> The lack of competition may be only temporary. If the industry
- succeeds in shedding its snake-oil image, more up scale entrepreneurs
- are likely to rush in and take advantage by starting new channels.
- TV retailing won't make department stores obsolete just yet,
- but it might make a dent in the mall business.
- </p>
- <p>ALSO IN ZIRCONIA...
- </p>
- <p> Men: tired of taking a dress shirt out of the drawer only to
- discover that one of the buttons broke at the laundry? Joe Coors
- Jr. was. Yes, the beer Coors, who also founded Coors Ceramicon
- Designs Ltd., producers of a newfangled, heat-hardened shirt
- button called the Diamond Z. Folks, this is no ordinary button.
- Made from zirconia, that diamond-hard material used to make
- the jewelry you see sold on TV, this button "proved indestructible"
- in rigorous testing, says Coors, "amazing even skeptical laundries."
- But it ain't cheap. It will cost shirtmakers eight to 10 times
- what they pay for conventional buttons made from ground shells
- or plastic, or as much as $1 more a shirt.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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