SATURDAY AM: Sources tell me Mark Itkin, WMA’s unscripted television chief who was being wooed by CAA but now appears to be staying at the merged agency, may go on the WME board to fill the vacant Morris seat.
8PM UPDATE: I’ve just been told that WMA COO Irv Weintraub is next.
I’d heard speculation for at least 3 weeks that WMA CEO Jim Wiatt would be pushed out, and then it intensified starting last weekend as details of the plan started to emerge. It’s heated up since Wednesday. And then I informed my William Morris sources that I was going to post about Wiatt’s future, actually his lack of one, with the new WME Entertainment that was being formalized. (I was told to wait until this weekend, and I was begged not be brutal. Because they hoped to spin Variety today that this was all Wiatt’s idea.) According to my insiders, Wiatt, who was supposed to take over the merged company’s chairmanship, will be politely eased out with a statement that he made the decision to leave.
My information is that at least two WMA members of the new WME 9-person board (supposedly Peter Grosslight and John Fogelman and possibly others) are joining with the Endeavor members to ask Wiatt to jump before he was pushed in exchange for a meaningless title of “Emeritus”.
UPDATE: I’ve just heard that Jim’s close pals, Hollywood lawyer Skip Brittenham and former Viacom mogul Tom Freston, warned Wiatt, “You have to resign, or you’re going to be fired.”
No WME announcement is forthcoming today.
Let me make clear: this is not a mutiny. Rather, it’s a recognition that Wiatt had no place in the new company because of the leadership problems at William Morris that forced the venerable 111-year-old agency to seek out Endeavor in the first place. Nor did it help that Wiatt mishandled the negotiations and aftermath. As I reported on Wednesday, the WMA-Endeavor merger was looking increasingly like a takeover. Now it is obvious to everyone.
Whenever anyone outside the entertainment industry mentions talent agents, the conversation inevitably turns to Canon Drive. Yes, there really was a William Morris who in 1898 stopped selling ads for a garment-industry trade newspaper and started selling talent. The agency hearkens back to the early days of vaudeville, through flickers (silent movies) and talkies into the Golden Era of Radio and then the Golden Age of Television and then the nickel era of the Internet. But Morris’ greatest strength as an institution — its enduring constancy in the face of flux — would become the agency’s greatest weakness for decades. Close-knit to a fault, the group of elders who long ran the agency with one eye on the dotted line and the other on the bottom line viewed agenting not as a career but as a religion. For young agents, the feeling you were almost working for your parents was at times odd, even humorous, and stood in contrast to the cruel realities of show biz. It was assumed that the Morris elders would finish their careers at the Morris office and be carried out the door feet first.
Wiatt was brought in to shake up all that. With a father in the shmattah business, Wiatt was a Beverly Hills High brat who loved politics but never thought he’d make a good candidate. That’s why he believed he’d make a good agent because he never wanted to be the star. Wiatt rose at ICM to co-chairman because he could massage egos, put out fires, translate boss Jeff Berg “vision” into everyday concepts and, most importantly, get Sam Cohn on the telephone. But for years, Wiatt had lived the high life (literally) and, after two divorces and a third marriage, found himself deeply in debt to ICM. With reportedly over $1.5 million worth of loans outstanding, and most of his compensation tied up in company stock, Wiatt made no secret of the fact that he needed cold hard cash to keep his gilded lifestyle. After looking around, he jumped to Morris in a decision all about the money.
An argument could be made that Wiatt had a near-impossible task ahead of him to change the Beverly Hills agency from stuck-in-place-by-tradition to the cutting edge by effecting a generational transfer of power. A lot of egos were hurt, resulting in some surprising exits, when altercocker board members were pushed out to make way for fortysomethings. And then the board had to be configured again and again to make way for thirtysomethings and reward the most successful agents and departments, like Grosslight’s music.
But it was also under Wiatt’s watch that scripted television, once the cash cow at Morris, weakened to such an extent that the agency is more known now for its unscripted division. Sure, this coincided with the TV syndication market tanking, but WMA went from the undisputed No. 1 agency seller of scripted primetime TV shows to maybe 5th today. And the motion picture department, which Wiatt was specifically hired to strengthen, faltered even further.
The problems reached critical mass last October shortly after some layoffs inside the agency were rumored and then enacted. And then I wrote this posting: What’s Really Happening Inside Morris?. I was stunned by the overwhelmingly negative comments that began flooding in to DHD about the William Morris Agency. I wasn’t able to post 50% of them because they contained such unsavory allegations of personal and professional misconduct, including sexual harassment, hostile workplace, inter-office sexual liasons, bullying behavior, etc. Sure, the Morris office had always been dysfunctional. But this hate-spewing was far worse than anything I’d received about an agency previously and came from many different people inside and outside WMA. At its core was a huge schism between who was inside Wiatt’s, Irv Weintraub’s and Dave Wirtschafter’s cliques, and who wasn’t. This divide was based more on cronyism than merit. WMA was being run amok.
I suggested that Morris management take a long hard look at itself. I can now report that, soon after my post appeared, Wirtschafter, WMA’s president, organized several staff meetings where personnel were encouraged to air their grievances. The amount of angst, and the level of animosity, stunned the agency’s management. WMA realized its leadership under Wiatt had failed. A plan was conceived to make the TV and movie department start operating more like the very successfully led music department.
But that was backburnered when Ari Emanuel and Jim Wiatt began their merger talk. It didn’t help matters internally at Morris when I reported last month that Wiatt had inexplicably given worldwide head of scripted television Aaron Kaplan a no-mitigation, $11 million, 5-year contract even though Kaplan’s department had been so underperforming. This news became a source of consternation during the merger negotiations when it became clear that Wiatt was saving the jobs of his clique members to give him a power base in the company. Then, on Monday, 100 WMA people were laid off.
It’s ironic that Wiatt came to WMA for the money, and now will exit with a hefty payout. (I hear $25 million.) But it’s a high and humiliating price he’s paying for his behavior. He’s not a bad guy. He just wasn’t the right guy to lead WME.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.





Let the speculation begin. CAA is FROTHING over what agents they’ll be able to poach from this.
I hope he gets rolled- pushed out of there at 95mph only after the board takes back the money. Couldn’t happen to a nicer guy, what a loathsome, vile excuse for a human being he is. $50 to the first person who throws their Pepsi in his face as he sits on the floor at the next Lakers game.
good. push jim, kick irv..too little, too late.
Of all those leaving WMA and Endeavor, I wonder how many will end up joining other agencies, how many will strike out on their own and hang up their own shingle, and how many will decide they’ve had enough and leave the agent biz. Care to hazard a guess, Nikki?
Let’s hug it out!!!
Shocker…
Man, I grew up with Jimmy, everyone in town (his hometown of Beverly Hills) was amazed that he went this far but he sure had a great run. Bet Lizzy’s not at all happy about this!
Whatever. Its dumb. They’ve ruined it. WHERE ARE THE MIDGETS!?! SHOW YOURSELF BROKAW…ZIFKIN? They should bring back Haskell.
I think it is also time to look at peter grosslight- the succesfully run department is run by a bully- touring is at its height- not brilliant management skills
Not a bad guy? A man singlehandedly ruin’s the industry’s most venerable agency, then sells it down the toilet to enrich himself at the expense of 100 laid off staffers, many of whom gave years of their life to the agency and now will find it impossible to get hired? I would hate to see a real nbad guy.
He actually is a bad guy and not a very bright one either. Ari & thye gang did takeover WMA & for a song. The old WMA leadership (Roger Davis, Walt Zifkin, Norman Brokaw, Steve Kram, Jerry Katzman, Sam Haskell, Alan Kanoff, Lou Weiss, etc.) who brought in Sue Mengers, then Arnold Rifkin & then Wiatt perpetrated this disaster and started running the company into the ground after Stan Kamen died and Wiatt, Wirtschafter, Irv, fogelman & the rest merely finished the job and now the oldest company in the entertainment business will cease to exist.
Gasmer? Are they serious?
FANTASTIC. These guys really have no sense of their own miserable performance. After DZW’s dumb interview making clients flee, his buddies were actually calling around town saying other agencies were making calls trying to make dzw look bad.. He was doing a damn fine job himself.
And those that worked at wma know how horrible the leadership is/was. Promote gaby m when it is widely known what people think of her????
This all worked out well for Wiatt. He boasted about how he’d really be in charge of the new agency and now he’s being made to walk the plank. Good going Jim. Way to teach those pirates a lesson they’ll never forget about who’s really captain. Arrgghh.
The larger issue here that no one is speaking about is: What happens to Dave? Mr. no personality. Mr. I’ll give an interview and alienate all my clients Mr. I lost Spike Lee, Halle Berry, Jennifer Lopez and I still think I’m cool. It’s long been known that Wiatt was the only reason (at least logical reason) that Dave ascended to the throne. With Wiatt gone, I cannot imagine that Dave will sign up for the Ari show. Neither can I imagine, by the way, that Ari will sign up for the Dave show.
Dave has the personality of a drugged antelope. Pleasant. But you never really know if anyone is home. Besides, he much prefers New Zealand, and I’m sure he’s made a fortune off of Jim’s kindness.
They should make Wiatt stay and be Ari’s 2nd assistant! Better yet, send him to the mail room. Hand deliveries anyone
Wiatt was always the problem at ICM (contrary to popular belief) and he was always the problem at WMA.
Wiatt is probably having the WORST YEAR EVER — sheesh Wiatt, you really screwed up on this one, huh?
Kaplan is the stereotypical cartoonish agent that you imagine in your head…BUT he would always greet me in a genuine, decent way when he had no reason to acknowledge me at all, being a male floater asst.
team kaplan
Ari-
Can we please nominate you for the Nobel Peace Prize?
But you’re not done yet…there are 2 more W’s to go. Please see to it that they are also gone by May 31, with the same 2 weeks of severance.
JW has desperately wanted a studio head job for so so so long. He is so arrogant, so nasty, so fake, and now we know, a horrible business men. I just hope he doesn’t get booted with too much cash in hand.
….they come, they go, who called?
‘Support staff’ person here. Worked at WMA 18 years. Granted, the nature of the business is tenuous, but I always thought I’d have a job at William Morris. Now, I’m old, having whittled away too many years here working my ass off only to see my ‘perks’ dwindled year after year. Wiatt, I’m not weeping for you, and maybe you’ll take Mr. Charming Irv down with you. No crocodile tears there. These guys still don’t know my name, because I’ve never mattered to them, and I can’t imagine that I matter to Ari and Rick Rosen either.
I’m still surprised that Endeavor isn’t going to have to shed some fat over this whole merger… as much as we’re calling this “a takeover,” Endeavor needed them too, and not just for the piles of WMA cash we keep hearing about.
The feature lit dept needs some major overhauling, especially since Lesher is gone and none of his boys can handle actually signing any big names (or keeping any of the ones they already have). Right now they are a bunch of little boys… they need a Daddy.
Same came be said for Endeavor’s TV department. Yes they’re good…but can they be better, absolutely.
Nikki-
“Not a bad guy”??
He’s Jon Peters without the brains and class.