Univision to Host Conference Call on July 29, 2010

NEW YORK–(Business Wire)–
Univision Communications Inc., the leading Spanish-language media company in the
U.S., will conduct a conference call to discuss its second quarter financial
results at 11:00 a.m. ET/8:00 a.m. PT on Thursday, July 29, 2010. A press
release summarizing its second quarter financial results will be available on
Univision`s website at http://ir.univision.net/ at the opening of business on
Thursday, July 29, 2010.

To participate in the conference call, please dial (800) 347-6109 fifteen
minutes prior to the start of the call and provide the following pass code:
4351889. A playback of the conference call will be available beginning at 2:00
p.m. ET, Thursday, July 29, 2010, through Thursday, August 5, 2010. To access
the playback, please dial (888) 203-1112 (within U.S.) or (719) 457-0820
(outside U.S.) and enter reservation number 4351889.

Univision Communications Inc. is the premier Spanish-language media company in
the United States. Its operations include Univision Network, the most-watched
Spanish-language broadcast television network in the U.S. reaching 95% of U.S.
Hispanic Households; TeleFutura Network, a general-interest Spanish-language
broadcast television network, which was launched in 2002 and now reaches 85% of
U.S. Hispanic Households; Galavisión, the country`s leading Spanish language
cable network; Univision Studios, which produces and co-produces telenovelas,
reality shows, dramatic series and other programming formats for all of the
Company`s platforms; Univision Television Group, which owns and operates 63
television stations in major U.S. Hispanic markets and Puerto Rico; Univision
Radio, the leading Spanish-language radio group which owns and/or operates 68
radio stations in 16 of the top 25 U.S. Hispanic markets and 5 stations in
Puerto Rico; and Univision Interactive Media, which includes
http://www.univision.com, the premier Spanish-language Internet destination in
the U.S., and Univision Móvil, the industry`s most comprehensive
Spanish-language suite of mobile offerings. Univision Communications also has a
50% interest in TuTv, a joint venture formed to broadcast Televisa`s pay
television channels in the U.S. Univision Communications has television network
operations in Miami and television and radio stations and sales offices in major
cities throughout the United States.

For more information, please visit www.univision.net.

Investor Contact:
Univision Communications Inc.
Andrew Hobson, 201-287-4306
or
Media Contact:
Sard Verbinnen & Co
Stephanie Pillersdorf/Brooke Gordon, 212-687-8080

Copyright Business Wire 2010

E! co-founder launches celebrity website

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – The co-founder of E! is launching a celebrity-focused online network complete with several programs in the hope of establishing a new brand in the entertainment programing space.

Alan Mruvka created E! (then called Movietime) 23 years ago with Larry Namer. Last week, he returned to his roots with the launch of the Look, a new site at thelooktv.com, which aims to blend fashion and celebrity programing with an e-commerce sales site.

“When I was pitching E!, I used to say that TV is like a newspaper; there’s headlines and sports, but there was no (entertainment) section,” Mruvka said. “Now TV is like a magazine stand, with golf and food and everything else — it’s narrowcasting. Well, the thickest magazines are fashion magazines; that’s where the money is. The Look is as if you were to take InStyle magazine and make a network out of it.”

Mruvka has been working on the Look for three years and is launching with about $10 million in self-raised investment capital. The Look isn’t aiming for linear cable network distribution — at least not yet.

“I don’t believe it’s still about launching a network and getting it on TV any way you can,” he said. “The convergence of the Internet and TV is closer than ever, and I want to be on the edge of that.”

Mruvka describes the Look as best resembling a hybrid of E! and its spinoff channel, the Style Network. “Our goal is to be the place to go to see what your favorite star is wearing and then buy it right then and there,” Mruvka said.

Actor claims USA stole his idea for “Royal Pains”

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Canadian actor Hayden Christensen, who played Anakin Skywalker in the “Star Wars” prequels, is suing USA Network over “Royal Pains,” saying the cable network ripped off his idea for a show about a concierge doctor in Malibu who makes house calls to the rich and famous.

Christensen, along with his brother Tove and their Forest Park Pictures production company, filed the lawsuit on Tuesday in New York District Court.

The brothers allegedly brought the idea for a concierge doctor show titled “Housecall” to USA and met with Alex Pepiol, who at the time was manager of original scripted series programing at the network. They say they also sent him materials including a treatment, character biographies and show ideas.

“It was understood that Plaintiffs were pitching those ideas with the object of persuading USA Network to purchase those ideas for commercial development, and/or to employ Plaintiffs in the production of those ideas,” reads the complaint, adding the brothers were never told of a similar series in the works.

“Royal Pains” supposedly misappropriated characters, concept and story lines from the “Housecall” treatment.

The plaintiffs aren’t suing for copyright infringement, though. Instead, they’re following others who have found success in making idea theft claims by asserting breach of implied contract, unfair competition and unjust enrichment. Christensen is demanding profits received from the “Royal Pains” concept and damages “believed to be in the millions of dollars,” according to the complaint.

USA declined to comment on the suit.

Cavaliers owner calls LeBron selfish for move to Miami

(Reuters) – The owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers called LeBron James selfish for his decision to seek a championship with the Miami Heat and promised the hard-luck city an NBA title before the six-time All-Star gets one.

In a letter to Cavaliers fans, the team’s majority owner Dan Gilbert said he was disappointed that James opted to join fellow All-Stars Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami and felt the nationally televised announcement was inappropriate.

“If you thought we were motivated before tonight to bring the hardware to Cleveland, I can tell you that this shameful display of selfishness and betrayal by one of our very own has shifted our ‘motivation’ to previously unknown and previously never experienced levels,” Gilbert wrote.

“I personally guarantee that the Cleveland Cavaliers will win an NBA championship before the self-titled former ‘King’ wins one … you can take it to the bank.”

James opted to deliver his decision during an hour-long program on cable network Thursday after weeks of speculation on whether he would stick with his hometown Cavaliers or jump to one of the other five teams who courted his services.

His decision dealt a major blow to a city that has not celebrated a professional sports championship since 1964 and has developed a widely known reputation for falling on tough times in key games.

Without James on the payroll, the Cavaliers can now look to bolster their roster by signing players from what is regarded as one of the deepest pools of free agents.

“I promise you that our energy, focus, capital, knowledge and experience will be directed at one thing and one thing only: delivering you the championship you have long deserved and is long overdue,” wrote Gilbert.

The Heat, which last celebrated an NBA title in 2006, were clearly in a much more upbeat mood as the team gets set to begin a new chapter.

“We are thrilled that LeBron James and Chris Bosh have decided to come to Miami to join forces with our truly great player, Dwyane Wade,” Heat coach Pat Riley said in a statement.

“We are looking forward to the opportunity of building something that our fans in Miami will be proud of for a long, long time. The journey is just beginning.”

(Writing by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Steve Ginsburg)

Cavaliers owner calls LeBron selfish for move to Miami

(Reuters) – The owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers called LeBron James selfish for his decision to seek a championship with the Miami Heat and promised the hard-luck city an NBA title before the six-time All-Star gets one.

In a letter to Cavaliers fans, the team’s majority owner Dan Gilbert said he was disappointed that James opted to join fellow All-Stars Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami and felt the nationally televised announcement was inappropriate.

“If you thought we were motivated before tonight to bring the hardware to Cleveland, I can tell you that this shameful display of selfishness and betrayal by one of our very own has shifted our ‘motivation’ to previously unknown and previously never experienced levels,” Gilbert wrote.

“I personally guarantee that the Cleveland Cavaliers will win an NBA championship before the self-titled former ‘King’ wins one … you can take it to the bank.”

James opted to deliver his decision during an hour-long program on cable network Thursday after weeks of speculation on whether he would stick with his hometown Cavaliers or jump to one of the other five teams who courted his services.

His decision dealt a major blow to a city that has not celebrated a professional sports championship since 1964 and has developed a widely known reputation for falling on tough times in key games.

Without James on the payroll, the Cavaliers can now look to bolster their roster by signing players from what is regarded as one of the deepest pools of free agents.

“I promise you that our energy, focus, capital, knowledge and experience will be directed at one thing and one thing only: delivering you the championship you have long deserved and is long overdue,” wrote Gilbert.

The Heat, which last celebrated an NBA title in 2006, were clearly in a much more upbeat mood as the team gets set to begin a new chapter.

“We are thrilled that LeBron James and Chris Bosh have decided to come to Miami to join forces with our truly great player, Dwyane Wade,” Heat coach Pat Riley said in a statement.

“We are looking forward to the opportunity of building something that our fans in Miami will be proud of for a long, long time. The journey is just beginning.”

(Writing by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Steve Ginsburg)

Debbie Gibson and Tiffany brawl in Syfy monster movie

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Syfy has cast 1980s pop-star rivals Debbie Gibson and Tiffany in one of the network’s signature Saturday night original movies.

Television

The cable network promises an epic battle between the former teen pop stars, who will co-star in “Mega Python vs. Gatoroid.”

Gibson will play a fanatical animal-rights activist who frees illegally imported exotic snakes from pet stores, sending them into the Everglades, where they grow to mega sizes. Tiffany will play an overzealous park ranger who uses dangerous methods to save endangered alligators. In the script, the pair brawl at a party, then take matters outside into the swamp.

Both singers previously have been cast in Syfy originals, but never have appeared together.

The idea was hatched by Syfy’s creative team after Tiffany visited their office and said she always has wanted to work with Gibson, said Thomas Vitale, Syfy’s executive vp programing and original movies; the media often portrayed the duo as rivals during their MTV years. “They loved the idea of taking this perceived rivalry and having some fun with it,” Vitale said.

The project will begin shooting this month and air next year. Mary Lambert (“Pet Sematary”) will direct.

Syfy letting viewers create new movie

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Syfy is giving online fans a chance to write and design every aspect of an upcoming Saturday-night creature feature.

Television

The cable network is launching a production site, B Movie Mogul, where fans can vote and pitch ideas for the film, from title, creatures, wardrobe, dialogue and character deaths to promotional taglines. The resulting “script” will be shot as a two-hour Syfy original movie to be released next year.

“We constantly have fans e-mailing with compliments, complaints and questions about our movies, and this is a way of involving the fans in a new way,” said Thomas Vitale, executive vp programing and original movies. “This is where entertainment is going and just the start of many more things of this nature for Syfy.”

Syfy is teaming with entertainment site IGN on the site; the partnership will last 15 months and launch Friday. The first stage will have fans voting on one of three overall concepts for the movie: a 2010 apocalypse story, a Bermuda Triangle-set creature feature or a Roswell, N.M.-set alien movie.

But the venture raises the question: What if fans create a lousy movie? “When you have a lot of people working on something, good ideas will come out of it,” Vitale said. “We will have something that will be entertaining.”

TV producers bruised, but unbowed after battles

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Ann Biderman remembers exactly when she lost faith in NBC.

Television | Media

It was May 19, 2009, when the network announced it was turning the Monday-Friday 10 p.m. slot over to the ultimately ill-fated “Jay Leno Show.”

“That was the first clue that they didn’t know what they were doing,” says Biderman, who feared what the plan meant for “Southland,” her critically acclaimed series about the gritty lives of LAPD cops.

“We were promised that (moving to) 9 p.m. wouldn’t affect content,” she says. “But then, of course, they started worrying.”

So much so that, in early October, a mere three weeks before “Southland’s” Second 2 premiere, the network abruptly canceled the series.

“At first I thought it was a joke,” Biderman says of hearing the news from fellow executive producer John Wells. “Like, where’s the ‘Punk’d’ camera? We were devastated.”

Fortunately, executives at TNT were fans of “Southland” and by November 2 the cable network closed a deal for the show, which was recently picked up for a third season.

For producers like Biderman, the process of crafting quality drama can be every bit as dramatic as the story lines they create.

The challenges to the creative process can be relatively small (wardrobe, scheduling) or utterly vital to a show’s future (deciding the right time to kill a main character or when to kill a series).

For Graham Yost, creator/executive producer of FX’s “Justified,” the obstacle was a cowboy hat.

As worn by Timothy Olyphant, who plays U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens, the hat isn’t merely a wardrobe piece, but a symbol of rebellion against his criminal father.

Author Elmore Leonard, who also serves as an executive producer on the drama, felt strongly about which hat Olyphant should wear. He thought it was a given that the lawman would sport the same well-worn, small-brimmed businessman-style Stetson his character did “Fire in the Hole,” Leonard’s short story in which Givens first appeared.

But a test run on Olyphant left Yost underwhelmed.

“It just didn’t fit right with Tim’s head and face,” he says. “It needed to be bigger.”

Like one of his own tell-it-like-it-is characters, the 84-year-old author stood his ground.

Yost tried to compromise and e-mailed Leonard pictures of Olyphant in numerous hats during the course of the next month. He found himself torn between selecting the right wardrobe for the story and pleasing the man whose books and short stories he’d long admired.

Shortly before production began on the pilot in California, Yost decided to go with a large, crisp cowboy hat he loved.

Leonard still isn’t thrilled. (Lucky for Yost though, the author loves the show. He’s even been inspired to write another Raylan Givens novella.)

The breakneck pace of creating television leaves as little time for wardrobe debates as it does for international casting crises.

Neal Baer discovered this the hard way in 2006 when he offered a guest role on “Law & Order: SVU” to French actress Leslie Caron too close to the start date for her to easily get a work visa.

“We had to go to the late Sen. Kennedy to have his office expedite things,” Baer recalls.

Eager to avoid a similar scenario again last season, the showrunner began courting French movie star Isabelle Huppert in February with an eye toward casting her in the May 11 season finale.

He handcrafted for her the meaty role of a grieving and unstable mother. An impressed Huppert eagerly signed on.

The visa was secured. All was well.

Then, on April 12, as Huppert was preparing to fly from Paris to New York, where “SVU” shoots, the Icelandic volcano erupted and grounded thousands of European flights.

Baer was left scrambling, again.

“‘Can we drive her to Madrid?’ ” he wondered at the time. “Some planes were getting out of there.”

Ultimately, forming a contingency plan was moot. At the last minute, Huppert escaped Paris on an overnight flight and went straight to the New York set.

The actress told Baer she felt “like she did three movies in five days.”

“To have her in the show was thrilling,” he says. “What we went through … it was certainly worth it.”

For “Dexter” executive producer Sara Colleton, Season 4 of her Showtime hit revolved around one pivotal question: Could the drama’s central character — a blood-splatter analyst, husband, new father and serial killer — really have it all?

The most dramatically satisfying answer, of course, was no.

In mapping out the season’s arc, Colleton and her stable of writers decided that Dexter (Michael C. Hall) would need to pay for his hubris, and the price would be steep.

“It had to be what mattered most to him,” Colleton says. “It came to feel inevitable.”

That inevitability became the series’ most shocking moment.

In the finale, having finally disposed of the Trinity Killer (John Lithgow), Dexter returns home to a gruesome scene: His lovely blonde wife Rita (Julie Benz), Trinity’s final victim, lay dead in the bathtub with his baby son Harrison sitting on the floor in a pool of his mother’s blood.

Filming Benz’s death scene was “very emotional,” she says. “The night on set was also respectful, and quiet. Everyone there understood how important that moment was.”

Following through with her creative vision proved more difficult than she anticipated. Colleton calls killing Rita and, as a result, letting go of a series regular she loved, her “toughest decision” of the entire series.

“I hope I never to have to do something like that again on this show,” she says. “I can’t handle it. For me, it was like a death in the family.”

Killing a main character is one thing. Asking network executives to end your series while it’s still Nielsen gold is nearly as wild a notion as a show about an island inhabited by polar bears and a smoke monster.

Luckily, wild notions work well for Carlton Cuse.

During “Lost’s” third season in 2007, the executive producer and his co-showrunner Damon Lindelof thought hard about their drama’s future.

“The audience was recognizing that we’d slowed our narrative storytelling to a crawl,” Cuse says. “But we were really fearful of burning through story fuel too fast because we didn’t know how long the mythology had to last — two years or nine.”

Announcing an end date would reassure fans they had a master plan for the complex ABC drama and hopefully keep them invested, but also save “Lost” from what they saw as a fate worse than brevity.

“We didn’t want an ‘X-Files’ trajectory,” Cuse says. “If Chris Carter had been able to end that show earlier, there would be a vastly different perception of it now. It’s terrible that the end seasons negate the incredible accomplishment of the first ones.”

Although confident in their decision, Cuse felt “high anxiety” when he and Lindelof made their pitch to Stephen McPherson, president of ABC Entertainment Group, and Mark Pedowitz, then the president of ABC Studios.

They were prepared to quit if the execs balked.

But to their immense relief, McPherson and Pedowitz agreed to wrap “Lost” after a total of six seasons, and Cuse and Lindelof signed lucrative deals keeping them at the helm for the extent of the drama’s run.

Today, having secured “Lost’s” legacy as one of the most respected and influential shows in TV history, Cuse is grateful he and Lindelof stuck to their guns.

“Getting the end date was the most significant moment in the history of the show,” he says. “We told the story we wanted to tell and we stand by it.”

Edward Asner joins CMT comedy pilot

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Edward Asner has signed on for CMT’s comedy pilot “Regular Joe,” playing the gruff father of Tom Arnold’s title character.

Television

Asner’s character has recently returned to dating after separating from his wife of many years. The cable network also has cast Liza Snyder (“Yes, Dear”) as Arnold’s smart wife.

If greenlighted, the pilot will represent a return for Asner to the medium that made him a household name in the 1970s with his Emmy-winning work in “Mary Tyler Moore” and its “Lou Grant” spinoff. The 80-year-old actor was in movie theaters last year as the voice of the lead, airborne character.

“Regular Joe” is part of CMT’s scripted series push; the country music-oriented network ordered four comedy pilots this year.

Telecommunication Infrastructure Company of I.R.Iran (TIC) and Gulf Bridge International Agree to land GBI’s submarine cable in Iran

DOHA, Qatar–(Business Wire)–
Gulf Bridge International (GBI), the newly established submarine cable operator
in the region, and TIC in the Islamic Republic of Iran, have agreed to land
GBI’s submarine telecom cable in Iran and signed the Landing Party Agreement on
21st of April 2010.

GBI’s plan to land its telecom submarine cable in Iran aligns with the strategic
plans of TIC of Iran. In addition, this agreement will facilitate onward
connectivity to many central Asian countries including Pakistan, Afghanistan,
Turkmenistan, Azarbaijan, Armenia and Turkey.

The Gulf Bridge International Cable Network is planned to connect Iran with the
Gulf region and the rest of the world, via a reliable, high capacity submarine
fiber optic cable linking the region to India and the Far East via the East
Route and to Europe via the West Route.

Commenting on the landing of GBI’s cable in Iran, Mr. Hamad Almannai, GBI’s
Executive Vice Chairman said “Landing our cable in Iran is part of GBI’s plan
and full commitment toward connecting the Gulf to the whole world with a
reliable cable infrastructure.

Commenting on the landing of GBICS with TIC in Iran, Mr. Mahmoud Khosravi, TIC
Managing Director and member of the Board said “TIC is happy to land GBICS in
Iran which will be a great addition and expansion to Iran`s international
connectivity”.

Designed to operate for 25 years and enter service during 2011, GBI`s cable will
exploit the commercial opportunity provided by the increasing demand for
reliable high-speed telecommunications capacity in the Gulf region. In order to
achieve this, GBI`s cable is designed to meet all current and anticipated future
capacity demands across the Gulf Region, incorporating a design capacity of 5
Terabits per second on certain cable sections.

*Source: ME NewsWire

View this release online: http://www.me-newswire.com/news/1751

About Gulf Bridge International

Gulf Bridge International (GBI) is a private company dedicated to connecting all
the nations of the Gulf region to one another and to the rest of the world,
using the latest fiber optic technologies. The GBI cable will be developed and
owned by GCC investors who are building this strategic infrastructure to serve
the entire region.

For more information visit www.GBIinc.Com

About TIC

TIC is the sole provider of Telecommunication infrastructure to all private and
public operators in the Islamic Republic of Iran. TIC is also the sole
responsible party for all international gateways and IP capacity and
connectivity services in the country.

For more information visit www.TIC.IR

Cohn & Wolfe Public Relations, Doha, Qatar
Krikor Khatchikian, + 974 576 3965
Krikor.Khatchikian@cohnwolfeqatar.com
Media@GBIinc.Com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

ESPN’s Allen Iverson documentary holds few surprises

AUSTIN, Texas (Hollywood Reporter) – A decade and a half after “Hoop Dreams,” Steve James examines a dream that was nearly denied in “No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson,” looking at a basketball star whose career was almost ended before it started by a racially charged court case.

Entertainment | Television | People | Media

Produced for ESPN, the documentary will premiere in the sports cable network’s “30 for 30″ series on Tuesday, and is most appropriate for that venue.

While still in high school, NBA star-to-be Allen Iverson was accused of assault after a bowling-alley brawl that allegedly started when some white classmates called someone “n—er.” Though he claimed to have left the scene without hitting anyone, Iverson was one of four young men — all black — convicted as adults and sentenced to jail terms.

They were released by an outgoing governor after the controversy reached Sports Illustrated and NBC, but not before the prosecution inflamed tensions in a town, Hampton, Virginia, whose dark place in the history of slavery was unknown to most residents — including James, who grew up there himself.

Lacking any substantial new discoveries about the case — most participants, including Iverson, refused to give interviews — James is forced to paint it from the margins, speaking mostly to journalists, those who knew Iverson as a youth, and community activists who protested the conviction.

While he convincingly depicts the young athlete’s disadvantages — Iverson often missed school to care for an infant sibling, and was sometimes forced to buy drugs for his mother, who was 15 when he was born — he can say nothing definitive about Iverson’s guilt or innocence in the fight; he concludes only that prosecutors sought much harsher punishment than usual because the already-famous Iverson was a high-profile defendant.

In the annals of sports-related crime, the Iverson case is small potatoes. James tries to lend interest to his film by playing up his mostly insignificant connection to the subject: He grew up in Hampton too, played basketball there, and once made a film about his sports-obsessed father.

While the connection yields a moment or two of interest (the only reason the former police chief consents to an interview is because James’s mother “browbeats” him), it fails to add meaning to the already established facts. In the end, the strategy comes off as an inoffensive but unsuccessful attempt to spin the humble material into something profound.

Broadband test centre opened

The first three retail service providers for the National Broadband Newtwork in Tasmania have been announced today.

Primus, Internode and iiNet will offer internet access through the Federal Government’s fibre-optic cable network.

The three companies will test their services at a new proof-of-concept centre opened in Hobart today by the Federal Communications Minister, Stephen Conroy.

Senator Conroy says it is an exciting milestone in the delivery of the network to the state.

“This is where all of the new concepts are being tested before they’re delivered in just three months to the Tasmanians who are part of the stage one roll-out,” he said.

“So today’s a very exciting milestone for the Tasmanain National Broadband Network.”

But it is not yet known how much the new internet services will cost consumers – the ISPs are yet to finalise their pricing structures.

Stanford Business School Honors Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes with Excellence in Leadership Award

STANFORD, Calif.–(Business Wire)–
The Stanford Graduate School of Business honored Time Warner Chairman and CEO
Jeff Bewkes, who has played a pivotal role in reshaping the entertainment
industry, with the School`s 2009 Excellence in Leadership Award.

Bewkes, 56, who earned an MBA at the School in 1977, received the leadership
award at an April 14 event at the Rainbow Room in New York.

Each year, the Business School marks the importance of leadership in management
by recognizing a graduate who has made significant contributions to the
corporate world and the community.

“This award spotlights achievements of alumni who have exhibited the leadership
and integrity that we hope all our students demonstrate throughout their
careers,” said Robert L. Joss, the Philip H. Knight Professor and Dean of the
Stanford Graduate School of Business. “Jeff aspired early to be part of the
entertainment industry. His passion for the field has taken him into management
roles through which he is innovating the future of content distribution in a
rapidly changing industry.”

Bewkes planned to be a television reporter when he graduated from college, and
one of his first jobs was at NBC, where he worked as a researcher. He left to
work briefly at Citibank before joining HBO, a unit of Time Warner, as a junior
finance executive in 1979, when only 10 percent of the country had cable TV. In
a speech on leadership at the Business School in 2004, he recalled that he had
just wanted to get his foot in the door of the fledgling cable network. What
attracted him enough to take a significant cut in pay was that HBO was on a
mission to invent a new kind of television. “You know what HBO is now,” he said
in 2004, “but you have to remember that back then, we didn’t know. We had to
make it up.”

Bewkes fed his penchant for creating something new as he worked his way up the
ranks to become CEO at HBO in 1995. He focused on creating original content and
programming, including hits such as Sex and the City, The Sopranos, Six Feet
Under, and Curb Your Enthusiasm. In 2005, he was named chief operating officer
of Time Warner.

Since rising to CEO of Time Warner in January 2008, Bewkes has had to cope with
continuing fallout from an earlier Time Warner-AOL merger. He has restructured
the company to focus on content and to develop the company`s major programming
brands including TNT, HBO, CNN, TBS, Warner Brothers, Time, People, and Sports
Illustrated.

Under his leadership, Time Warner is evolving from what was once a company of
cable distribution systems to a primarily content-driven company. Bewkes` vision
has been to deliver original Time Warner brand content via several distribution
systems, such as online, mobile, television, and cinema as well as cable. As
COO, Bewkes also had overseen the sale of Time Warner’s music subsidiary and the
company’s book publishing unit.

Bewkes is a trustee of Yale University and a member of the Stanford Graduate
School of Business Advisory Council. He is a member of the boards of the
American Museum of Natural History, the Creative Coalition, and the Paley Center
for Media. He earned his BA at Yale.

The Stanford Graduate School of Business
Barbara Buell, 650-723-1771
buell_barbara@gsb.stanford.edu

Copyright Business Wire 2009

Bitter pill: Showtime passes on Tim Robbins drama

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – And then there were none.

In a surprising move, Showtime on Friday passed on Tim Robbins’ well-regarded pharmaceutical-drama pilot “Possible Side Effects.”

That makes it 0-4 for the premium cable network, which originally ordered four pilots in this go-round, including “Side Effects.”

In the past week, Showtime passed on the other three pilots, the “L Word” spin-off starring Leisha Hailey, the Matthew Perry/Peter Tolan comedy “The End of Steve” and the comedy “Ronna and Beverly.”

The dismissal of “Side Effects” is noteworthy because the project was penned and directed by Oscar winner Robbins and attracted top talent, including Ellen Burstyn, Josh Lucas and Tim Blake Nelson.

It is said to have tested very highly, and with the other three pilots out of contention, it was considered a shoo-in for a series order.

Industry observers on Friday were scratching their heads over Showtime’s decision, with some pointing to the show’s subject matter as a potential reason.

“Side Effect” takes a scathing look at the pharmaceutical drug industry, focusing on a dysfunctional family behind a major drug concern.

As a premium cable network, Showtime does not rely on advertisers, but its parent company CBS Corp. does, and pharmaceutical companies are among the top TV advertisers.

Like several other pilots rejected by Showtime, “Side Effects” might be shopped elsewhere.

(Editing by Dean Gooodman at Reuters)

(please visit our entertainment blog via www.reuters.com or on blogs.reuters.com/fanfare/)

Taliban accepts ‘partial’ cable broadcast in Swat

Peshawar, Apr. 8 (ANI): Taliban has accepted the cable TV operators demand to allow a partial broadcast of cable TV in Swat on the condition that only local news channels and Islamic channels would be broadcast.

“We have been allowed to resume cable TV service by Taliban leaders with certain conditions,” the Daily Times quoted a cable operator from Mingora city.

Around 500,000 Mingora residents were denied access to information through news channels for eight months after the Taliban banned the service and bombed a local cable network.

The decision to allow the broadcast was taken on Sunday after a delegation of cable operators met an influential Swat-Taliban leader, Maulana Shah Dauran.

Around 500,000 Mingora residents were denied access to information through news channels for eight months after the Taliban banned the service and bombed a local cable network.

According to cable operators, the new arrangement allows for the broadcast of 17 channels.

These channels are all either Pakistani news or Islamic channels, and no western news or entertainment channels have been allowed.

“The infrastructure of the service was damaged during the militancy and we have to provide cable and boosters again, which requires technical expertise from Peshawar,” a cable operators said.

While residents of Mingora have welcomed the move several cable operators are unsure about resuming their business the Taliban could change their mind at any time.

“These people are quite moody,” he said. (ANI)