home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT3306>
- <link 90TT3447>
- <link 89TT2600>
- <link 89TT2270>
- <title>
- Dec. 10, 1990: Let Us Entertain You
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 10, 1990 What War Would Be Like
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 68
- Let Us Entertain You
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Matsushita rattles American nerves by paying $6.1 billion for
- a Hollywood dream machine, but the giant MCA is likely to be
- stronger as a result
- </p>
- <p>By JANICE CASTRO--Reported by Barry Hillenbrand/Tokyo, Thomas
- McCarroll/New York and Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> All that was missing was a small boy to tug at Lew
- Wasserman's sleeve and plead, "Say it ain't so, Lew."
- </p>
- <p> Central Casting could not have supplied a better chorus of
- worriers than the screenwriters, politicians and just plain
- citizens who weighed in last week after MCA chairman Wasserman
- announced that he was selling Universal Pictures and the rest
- of the MCA entertainment giant to Matsushita Electric
- Industrial for $6.1 billion. How could he, they asked, sell to
- foreigners the studio that made To Kill a Mockingbird, Jaws,
- E.T., Born on the Fourth of July and Back to the Future? The
- home of TV heroes Magnum, Columbo, Jim Rockford, Sonny Crockett
- and even the Beaver? The company that runs the lodgings and
- jitneys in Yosemite Park? In Hollywood, some moviemakers
- wondered whether industrialists in Osaka would now censor
- Hollywood's ideas. Even the Bush Administration raised some
- objections to the deal.
- </p>
- <p> Some business strategists were puzzled by the fuss. Overseas
- investors, after all, already own more than $400 billion worth
- of U.S. businesses and real estate. And Matsushita doesn't make
- a very convincing villain. The world's largest consumer
- electronics firm (fiscal 1990 revenues: $38 billion), it
- manufactures some of America's favorite brands of video and
- audio gear: Panasonic, Quasar and Technics.
- </p>
- <p> But Hollywood is close to America's heart, if not its
- heartland. After last year's deal in which Sony paid $3.4
- billion for Columbia Pictures, many Americans began to fear
- that the country's cultural heritage was being auctioned off,
- bit by bit. Universal is the fourth of Hollywood's seven major
- studios to be acquired by foreign companies: 20th Century Fox
- is owned by Rupert Murdoch's Australia-based News Corp., and
- MGM/UA was taken over earlier last month by Italian financier
- Giancarlo Parretti. That leaves only three major studios in
- American hands: Disney, Paramount and Warner Bros.
- </p>
- <p> Entertainment is one of the last businesses in which America
- clearly dominates the world market. Every year consumers around
- the world buy $300 billion worth of movie tickets, compact
- discs, videotapes and other American entertainment products.
- One-fourth of those sales are overseas. No other country's film
- industry creates such universally popular entertainment. In
- Europe, American films capture at least half the box office.
- The top-grossing film in Japan last year, Indiana Jones and the
- Last Crusade, earned $32 million in theaters, twice as much as
- the most popular Japanese film. Of the 27 movies currently
- showing in Rio's cinemas, 21 are American. Overseas fans say
- they are drawn to the American spirit of independence and
- optimism. Says Roberto Fernandez Blanco, an Argentine
- businessman: "When you see an American work of art, you feel
- a breeze of freedom of expression." Thus the MCA deal strikes
- some Americans as another example of selling the goose instead
- of the golden eggs.
- </p>
- <p> This time around, even Secretary of the Interior Manuel
- Lujan jumped into the fray. Citing hundreds of angry letters
- and calls from citizens, Lujan said he wanted to keep the
- Yosemite Park and Curry concessionaire in the hands of
- Americans. MCA will be given a year to find an American buyer.
- </p>
- <p> Some Hollywood insiders as well as political critics are
- worried that foreign owners might change the fundamental nature
- of American movies and television shows, subtly shifting their
- tone and content. Those concerns were heightened last week at
- the press conference Matsushita president Akio Tanii conducted
- by satellite video hookup after the deal was announced. In
- answer to an American reporter's hypothetical question about
- what Tanii would do if Universal wanted to make a Japan-bashing
- film or one that criticized the late Emperor Hirohito, Tanii
- responded ambiguously, "Something like that shouldn't emerge.
- Filmmakers must create films that are inspirational, that will
- be enjoyable for everybody." Many interpreted his answer as a
- chilling assertion that future Universal film projects must meet
- home-office approval. Said a startled George Kirgo, president
- of the Writers Guild of America, West: "What does that mean,
- `inspirational'? To be told that there are going to be
- restrictions for writers is appalling." Two days later, though,
- Tanii, who apparently had been caught off guard, clarified his
- response: "There should be no misunderstanding of Matsushita's
- position in this important area. Creative decisions for MCA
- will be made by MCA management."
- </p>
- <p> For Matsushita (pronounced Mat-soosh-ta), the MCA purchase
- is a way of ensuring an immensely valuable supply of so-called
- software: the movies, records and films that can be played on
- the machines Matsushita sells. Says Donald Richie, a leading
- arts critic and longtime resident of Japan: "There's no reason
- for a Yellow Peril scare. The Japanese just want to milk the
- cows and pull in the profits that they know these studios
- create." Matsushita hopes to put half a century's worth of MCA
- creative output into new CDs, videotapes, laser discs and other
- formats. Besides producing movies and TV shows, MCA makes
- records by such heavy hitters as Elton John, Bobby Brown, Tom
- Petty and Fine Young Cannibals.
- </p>
- <p> Rather than hobble American pop culture, foreign ownership
- of U.S. entertainment companies seems likely to increase its
- exposure around the world. Already, Dallas boasts loyal viewers
- from Jerusalem to San Jose. As the global audience for
- U.S.-produced entertainment has grown, producers and directors
- have aimed for broader, cross-cultural appeal. Arnold
- Schwarzenegger is one of the biggest box-office stars in the
- world. Twenty years ago, no actor with a heavy German accent,
- no matter how gifted, would have topped Hollywood's talent
- ladder.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, pop culture reaching America may become
- more diverse as the country becomes a crossroads for new
- entertainment. In the past year or so, Americans have been
- treated to such unlikely musical stars as the Gipsy Kings, a
- popular French-flamenco band, and the Bulgarian State Radio and
- Television Female Vocal Choir.
- </p>
- <p> Matsushita is cautious but forward looking. The company has
- never had Sony's cosmopolitan polish, yet it was Matsushita's
- subsidiary JVC that developed the original VHS video technology
- in 1976. Tanii, then the youthful chief of Matsushita's
- fledgling VCR division, convinced his superiors that consumers
- would choose VHS over Sony's Betamax if they could also buy
- compatible videotaped entertainment.
- </p>
- <p> Matsushita spends generously for R. and D. as well. In the
- current fiscal year, development costs are $3 billion, or 6.2%
- of sales, almost double that of most U.S. companies. The
- 72-year-old firm that started out as a manufacturer of
- electrical plugs is now a leading global purveyor of goods
- ranging from semiconductors to refrigerators.
- </p>
- <p> For his part, Wasserman saw the deal as a necessary step in
- beefing up MCA's ability to compete globally. Long known
- affectionately in Hollywood as the Godfather, Wasserman, 77,
- has run MCA for 44 years. When he joined the Music Corporation
- of America, as it was then known, at age 22, it was a talent
- agency specializing in booking bands into nightclubs. As it
- grew, MCA picked up the nickname the Octopus for controlling
- more than half the top stars in the business, including Clark
- Gable, Marilyn Monroe, Jimmy Stewart and Bette Davis. Wasserman
- became MCA's top agent. As president of the company in 1949,
- Wasserman began producing television shows. In 1962 he bought
- Decca Records, which owned Universal Pictures, and dropped the
- agency business.
- </p>
- <p> During the past few years, however, as one media giant after
- another merged with a powerful partner, Wasserman apparently
- became convinced that MCA needed to make a strategic alliance
- to gain King Kong-like size and access to hoards of cash.
- Capital Cities bought ABC, General Electric acquired NBC,
- Murdoch bought Fox, and Time Inc. acquired Warner
- Communications. As Wasserman reportedly told an MCA shareholder
- last year, "We're a 200-lb. gorilla in a game with 1,000-lb.
- gorillas. We've got to become a 1,000-lb. gorilla or get out
- of the game."
- </p>
- <p> King Kong was roaring after last week's announcement.
- Matsushita has some $16 billion in cash but plans to borrow
- much of the MCA purchase cost, which leaves the company with
- cash to buy up more properties at distressed prices. Said David
- Geffen, the music mogul whose 10 million shares of MCA stock
- were suddenly worth some $660 million, nearly twice their value
- three months ago: "This will be the most acquisition-minded
- company in the world."
- </p>
- <p> Other global entertainment deals are being done almost
- daily. Last week the Japanese electronics maker Pioneer bought
- the Japanese rights to all Carolco films, which include the
- Rambo series and Total Recall. Yet control of the remaining
- three U.S.-owned studios seems likely to remain in American
- hands. To reduce its $11 billion debt load, Time Warner is
- looking abroad for partners to take minority stakes in some of
- its entertainment subsidiaries. "We agree with Matsushita's
- concept [of globalization], but we disagree with the execution,"
- says Time Warner chairman Steven Ross. "Parent companies
- should keep their national identities."
- </p>
- <p> Disney too is probably off limits. Says Paul Marsh, who
- follows media firms for the Los Angeles investment firm Bateman
- Eichler, Hill Richards: "The Mickey Mouse trademark is a bit
- like the Statue of Liberty. I don't think it's for sale."
- Paramount, valued at about $5 billion, seems more interested
- in buying than in being bought.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, while Americans may gripe about the foreign
- takeovers of Hollywood's dream machines, none of the buyouts
- have been hostile. Far from sneaking into Hollywood, both Sony
- and Matsushita were squired around by superagent Michael Ovitz,
- the homegrown power broker. All of which brings to mind a scene
- in the 1978 film Heaven Can Wait in which the fictional owner
- of the Los Angeles Rams decries the abrupt takeover of the team
- by a fancy-pants financier. "The s.o.b. got my team," he moans.
- But how did the sneaky businessman do it? Says the team owner:
- "I asked for $67 million. And he said O.K." Last week
- Matsushita said O.K. Does that make American culture a victim?
- Hardly. If anything, a company that invests $6.1 billion in a
- venture is likely to treat its new possession like the rarest
- of gems.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-