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Viacom's Acquisition of Mel Karmazin
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If there's anything odd about the just-announced merger between Viacom and
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CBS, it's that it seems utterly quaint to worry about whether the concentration
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of so many cable, radio, network TV, and Internet assets in one company is the
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best thing for the free flow of information in a democracy. FCC regulations may
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require the new Viacom to sell a few of its TV stations--because there's a rule
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saying one company can't own stations that serve more than 35 percent of the
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United States--and to either spin off or fold in the still-struggling UPN. But
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for all intents and purposes, the $35 billion deal is done.
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When you think about whether it should have been done, you end up
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confronting again a central paradox of the media business today: The more
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fragmented audiences and consumer markets become, the more important scale
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appears to be. That's true both because the larger you are, the easier it is
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for you to re-purpose content across many different platforms (how's that for a
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jargon-laden clause) and the easier it is for you to promote that content in
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many different places. In the end, the ability to distribute content (and
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advertising) is probably as important as the ability to produce content, and
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even though in the age of the Internet and 95-channel cable systems you'd think
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anyone can get a message out there, successful distribution is still basically
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all about aggregating lots of people. In the old days, CBS could do that just
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by broadcasting All in the Family . Today, it has to use its radio
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stations, its billboards, its TV stations, and its broadcasts. But the fact
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that it can use all those different outlets is essential.
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Now, you could think of this as synergy. And certainly Sumner Redstone, CEO
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of Viacom, likes that idea, as evidenced by things like Simon & Schuster's
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selling MTV books, Paramount's releasing The Rugrats movie, and so on.
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But in a way Redstone's "content is king" refrain seems a bit old-school next
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to the "distribution is king" refrain of Mel Karmazin, who is head of CBS and
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will be the operational head of the new Viacom. Redstone has done an excellent
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job of managing Viacom in the past couple of years, selling off assets, paying
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down debt, and generally focusing the company on its core operations. But it's
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Karmazin, who will be president and chief operating officer of the new company,
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who's really essential to Viacom's future, because it's Karmazin who recognizes
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that no matter what you make, if people don't see it or hear it, it doesn't
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matter.
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Karmazin's relentless focus on shareholder value and his essential frugality
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as an executive have long distinguished him from the media moguls--like
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Redstone--who spent much of the '80s and early '90s borrowing huge sums of
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money to make questionable acquisitions and engage in hostile takeover battles.
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Karmazin came to CBS from radio chain Infinity Broadcasting (which CBS still
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owns), and brought to CBS a measure of economic rigor that for a long time was
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hard to find in the media business. When you listen to Karmazin, you get the
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feeling you're listening to someone who thinks that media companies should be
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judged by the same economic and business standards as other companies, as
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opposed to someone who thinks that media companies should be valued by the
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grandiosity of their dreams. Needless to say, this is a good thing.
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The irony, though, is that while Karmazin is the new-model media exec
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("mogul" being a word that doesn't fit), one of his greatest strengths is his
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ability to recognize the value of the seemingly mundane. Radio and outdoor
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advertising, for instance, are incredibly un-glamorous. But they're also
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fast-growing markets (unlike, for example, television or even the movies), and
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Karmazin has ensured that CBS has reaped great benefits from them. Local TV
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stations are similarly boring, but while they are not the cash cows they once
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were, they're still very profitable, and Karmazin has agitated (successfully)
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for a relaxation of federal regulations to allow CBS to own more than one
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station in a given market. Cable is not a booming business--though it may be in
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the future once we all go to digital cable--but it is a profitable one, and
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this deal gives Karmazin a host of cable networks to play with. All mergers
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should, given the historical record, be greeted with skepticism. But in
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acquiring the rights to Karmazin's services and CBS's assets, Sumner Redstone
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may have made the best decision of his business career.
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