Автор: Michael Wolff
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Биографии и Мемуары
isbn: 9780007395651
isbn:
And then, most of all, there was MTV.
Pittman either single-handedly invented the notion of a cable channel that would air (at no cost to itself) the promotional videos which had become popular for music acts, or he did not.
This has become like the scholarly wrangle that surrounds certain not-precisely-authenticated works of art. The dispute does not so much discredit Pittman as put him at the exact center, even if its details are disputed, of the most brilliant media development in postmodern memory.
After MTV was bought and Pittman exited, he founded the kind of enterprise that would become popular later: a no-company company, or a no-function company. Its product was Bob Pittman. We have Bob Pittman and you come to us with opportunities for Bob Pittman. It was like a Mafia thing. People lined up outside the door of Bob Pittman’s Quantum Media and were granted audiences with Pittman and, if he agreed to cooperate, then various terms were discussed wherein Bob Pittman lent you his approval.
You were then in business with Bob Pittman—or with Bob Pittman’s cachet.
Pittman’s model, his rabbi, his godfather, was Warner Communications’ Steve Ross. Pittman was to be the next-gen Ross, an entertainment executive with charisma (that is, salesmanship) and vision (that is, a sense of the next step, the next move, the audacious opportunity).
After MTV, and his brief, independent career, Ross brought him back into Warner, where he came to run the theme parks, and where, in a more controllable world, he might have succeeded Ross. The merger of Time and Warner in 1990 complicated that (the fight between the Ivy League-ish Time side and the unreconstructed Warner side would still be a company theme until the AOL merger) but made it a bigger prize—which Pittman might still have gotten, had not Ross died, of prostate cancer, in 1992.
With Ross gone, Pittman was a homeless gun.
He became the CEO of Century 21, the national real estate firm, intending, perhaps, to show that he was a manager for all seasons—all products, all services, all functions. (This is really a manager’s holy grail, to be able to manage anything at all.) But really, he had a country club air of underemployment.
Indeed, going to AOL in 1996 did not seem really any more directed than going into the residential real estate business—it was just Pittman casting about.
And yet suddenly, almost within weeks of his arrival, Pittman turned on the gas that would inflate and then explode the Internet bubble.
He took AOL from an hourly charge to a fixed-fee basis (i.e., from three-something an hour to $19.95 and all you can eat a month). This became the most significant engine of Internet growth. Instead of being on the meter, America was suddenly on an unlimited ride.
The fact that what was created here was largely an illusion—that the company had gone from a proven, profitable pay-as-you-use scheme to an unproven new vision of infinite more-customers-more-advertising-and-direct-selling scalability—was, as yet, unrecognized.
It may have been Pittman who recognized it first.
Hence, by engineering the millennial sale of Time Warner to AOL, at precisely the highest reach of the market, he was able to accomplish the most difficult but most elemental feat of modern business: He turned vast theoretical paper money into incredible real dough. (Viacom’s Sumner Redstone, more streetwise than TW CEO Jerry Levin, said that when he had been approached about merging with AOL, he’d told Mr. Pittman, “I really don’t trust your currency.”)
Pittman and AOL’s detached founder Steve Case were following that most basic (if never publicly stated) business principle: You only make money, real money, off people who are stupider than you, and the stupider they are, the more money you can make.
They knew (and Pittman, who went back to the Time and Warner wars, knew as well as anyone) that since Jerry Levin had made being smart the raison d’être of his moguldom—he was the mandarin mogul—it was even more unlikely that anyone would say to him about the AOL deal, “Don’t be stupid.”
It wasn’t just Levin who was stupid. The entire Time Warner board appeared know-nothings too. In a sense, their collective view was as simple as, technology is the future, so let’s do something technological—even though they knew precious little about technology.
It was just a perfect moment of pervasive and confident know-nothingness at which Pittman and Case struck. The buyer (and in truth Time Warner was the buyer) was caught unaware.
Then, 18 months later, in a fascinating paroxysm of elemental capitalist blame (where there is profit, there is loss), as the summer of 2002 began in earnest, and as what had happened became clearer and clearer (that Pittman had really taken Time Warner to the cleaners), Bob Pittman was ripped apart by the crowd (i.e., the media).
I suppose it is a kind of ultimate character note, the ultimate cool—slick, fast, and coifed—that having done what he did to Time Warner, having become fabulously rich while great numbers of Time Warner people (including Jerry Levin) got much of their net worth wiped out, he still thought he could hang around, even become the CEO. (It didn’t help matters when Pittman took to telling people that he too had lost a lot of money—that he wasn’t even a billionaire anymore.) He, quite possibly, figured he’d be held in awe for pulling off the greatest bait-and-switch in business history.
Here’s what happened: Within a few months of the merger, it was clear AOL couldn’t make its advertising numbers and that its subscription growth had seriously slowed (within weeks of the merger announcement the Internet bubble was obviously bursting; by the time the merger closed, it was a wrecked economy); what’s more, Time Warner’s own broadband service, Road Runner, was becoming a significant competitor to AOL. And yet AOL’s lightning rod, Bob Pittman, was taking over the combined company. Then too, the AOL guys were talking about spinning out the Time Warner cable business—Jerry Levin’s baby.
This was the elemental dish: It had become the two former allies, Pittman and Levin, the two guys most associated with the AOL deal, against each other. Each of them trying to grab the company, each of them trying to shift the greater blame onto the other (actually, each of them trying to grab the company before the blame crushed them).
There was even a proxy war: It was Levin’s PR guy, Ed Adler, in New York, against Pittman’s PR guy, Ken Lerer, in Dulles, Virginia. The first pitched battle was over the spring 2001 Pittman cover story in BusinessWeek, which had a crystal-clear subtext: Levin doesn’t count; Parsons doesn’t count; I am the heir apparent. Levin fired back with a story in Time Inc.’s own Fortune and one in the New Yorker by mogul Boswell Ken Auletta about the triumph of Jerry Levin. (Then there was a second story in Fortune—this one including Levin on the cover as one of the most brilliant thinkers of the age.)
At the same time, there were other rumors out of the rumor-mad Time Warner camp (never many rumors out of the AOL side): Levin couldn’t get the support of an ambivalent board to buy AT&T’s cable system (which would have made AOL TW the national media monopoly); Levin was having trouble getting that same ambivalent board to extend his contract. Levin’s people were pushing Levin, and Pittman’s people were pushing Levin.
Here is the Talented Mr. Ripley theory about Jerry Levin: He seems harmless enough until he kills you. The weapon of choice against Bob Pittman was Levin’s СКАЧАТЬ