Keep refreshing for updates on this breaking news story…
4:20PM: As my sources predicted (below), Adam Goodman (photo right) will replace John Lesher (photo above) as the new President of the Paramount Film Group reporting to studio boss Brad Grey. In October 2008, Goodman moved from head of production at DreamWorks SKG to Paramount Pictures as President of Production overseeing a creative staff managing current DreamWorks projects and creative relationships as well as new development for Paramount. I guess you could say that one of DreamWorks SKG’s legacies was leaving behind an executive to run its former parent company. During and after the 2006 acquisition of DreamWorks SKG by Paramount, he helped steer Transformers, I Love You Man, Hotel for Dogs, Norbit, Blades of Glory, Disturbia, Tropic Thunder and Eagle Eye.
“Adam has proven himself to be a terrific executive with a track record of having shepherded some incredibly successful films,” Brad Grey said later in a studio news release finally issued at 5:15PM as Paramount scrambled for hours after my story posted. “We have worked closely with Adam over the last few years and look forward to expanding his duties.” Officially now, Paramount is calling this shapeup a “streamlining”.
4:20PM: I just heard that Brad Grey asked Brad Weston (photo left) to also transition to a production deal on the lot. “Paramount wants him to be an active producer for them. They feel he has great talent relations and intend to give him projects so he can start making movies for the studio,” a Paramount insider tells me. ”Brad’s strong relationships with filmmakers, his creative instincts and hard work have been strong assets for our studio,” Grey said later in the official studio press release. “We look forward to entering into the next phase of our relationship with him.”
3:50PM UPDATE: I’ve just learned that my story today moved up Paramount’s timeline for the firing from “soon”, meaning in a couple of weeks, to this afternoon when Paramount finally told John Lesher that he’s out shortly after my story hit the Internet. I heard that Lesher received the bad news with dignity. (“Nikki Finke knew about it before I did,” he told a friend.) Now all their lawyers will negotiate a production deal at the studio for the fired exec. ”John has made great contributions to Paramount and has nurtured a series of powerful films which have had a true cultural impact,” Grey said later in the official studio news release. “We look forward to working with him in the future.”
2:50PM: The way Paramount rolls, it’s hard to keep things private at that studio. (Remember all those Paramount vs DreamWorks leaks?)
So rumors have been all over the studio lot for the past 6 months that Brad Grey and Rob Moore were unhappy with John Lesher’s performance as president of the Paramount Film Group. I asked my sources if it was possible that Lesher would be pressured to exit. I was told it was under discussion but a final decision was not imminent. Then, in the past two weeks, Lesher himself began telling his pals that he thought he was “on borrowed time” as Grey and Moore “were in the process of figuring out what to do exactly with himself and [Brad] Weston and [Adam] Goodman.] When I went to my sources about it, one summed up: “He’s concerned about his future and sharing that with people, and he may come to the same conclusions other people have about where he’s at. But from an urgency perspective you’re not talking tomorrow, next week or even next month.” Asked if he would resign amid all the pressure, Lesher told friends, “Why would I want to do that?” Now, I can confirm that Lesher will be losing his job “soon”.
Which begs the question: What went wrong after only 18 months?
It’s been an unusual situation at the studio with three executives in very senior but seemingly similar positions: Lesher, who had been promoted from specialty division Paramount Vantage, where he had full or joint custody on Oscar-accoladed An Inconvenient Truth, Babel, There Will Be Blood and No Country For Old Men, to No. 3 at big Paramount with creative and production control of all the studio’s film labels; Adam Goodman who in December moved from DreamWorks to Paramount Pictures as President of Production overseeing a creative staff managing current DreamWorks projects and creative relationships as well as new development now for Paramount; and Brad Weston who continued as President of Production for Paramount Pictures once Lesher was brought in above him.
I broke the story back on December 5th that Paramount boss Grey was about to promote Lesher. Though in reality Grey might not have made the decision so quickly had there not been an uncomfortable confrontation that morning, Lesher sped up the process by bursting into Weston’s office and delivering the news of his coming promotion and Weston’s demotion in a brutal manner. ”We want you around for the long haul,” Lesher told Weston. To which Weston responded, “I’m not stepping down and reporting to you.” It fell to Grey, who was in NYC at the time, to fly back to LA and sort everything out.
Grey’s special relationship with Lesher dates back to Brad’s Brillstein-Grey days when the Harvard grad who speaks Mandarin dazzled Grey with his overall smarts. The boss had grown even more comfortable with Lesher at Paramount Vantage where the two had developed Babel with Grey’s former client Brad Pitt. (On the night that Babel won the Golden Globe for Best Picture, Lesher gave up his seat mid-dinner so Grey could sit next to Pitt for the win.) Even before the promotion, Grey had been giving Lesher additional Paramount Pictures duties like handing him scripts to read and bringing him into greenlighting meetings. Because Brad liked how Lesher, a former United Talent and Endeavor motion picture lit agent, could talk the language of bigtime film directors which Grey, primarily a TV guy, could not. Brad’s thinking was that Lesher could bring quality, originality and talent relationships to a big studio slate. It was a gamble to be sure. Lesher’s naysayers warned at the time that John’s taste was too sophisticated for mainstream moviegoers.
But, by all accounts, that didn’t prove to be the source of Lesher’s problems in the new job. It was his style of management, or rather lack of it. Specifically, I’m told Lesher fell down in two areas: not greenlighting enough movies, and not behaving appropriately for the position. Paramount now finds itself with just a handful of non-DreamWorks pics in the pipeline and only 4 that Lesher can really claim credit for greenlighting: M Night Shyamalan’s The Last Airbender, the Martin Scorsese/Leonardo DiCaprio Shutter Island (considered a no-brainer since Scorsese has his deal there and Lesher used to rep him at Endeavor), Gore Verbinski’s animated pic with Johnny Depp Rango (an obvious go, but also Lesher has close ties to Depp’s agent Tracy Jacobs), and JJ Abrams-produced Morning Glory (another situation where Abrams has a deal with the studio). Lesher was told there wasn’t enough in the pipeline. But he didn’t pick up the pace.
In turn, he wasted a lot of time trying to develop a Beverly Hills Cop 4 with Eddie Murphy starring and Brett Ratner directing. When the project was announced, Lesher found himself the target of derision. As an insider told me back then, “Brad put him in the job because of his relationships with interesting filmmakers. Not to hire Brett Ratner.” Lesher also became bogged down in negotiations with Skip Brittenham and Jim Wiatt over Eddie’s deal. Murphy’s reps wanted a full-freight $25M against 20% of first-dollar gross. Lesher told them it was “past a reasonable starting point” in this declining DVD market. Yet Variety announced the project in May 2008 for a 2009 production start and a summer 2010 release. A few months later, Murphy’s Meet Dave tanked. Then Lesher wanted to see how video would shake out by the end of year. When those numbers plunged, BHC4 was dead by December. “It feels like the wrong moment,” Lesher told pals. “There’s no universe where we’re paying Eddie his full fee.” He wasn’t wrong. But there was nothing big in the works to fill the spot and even now Paramount’s slate has a huge gap between releases.
The problem for the Paramount bosses was not that the movie’s development died. But it was emblematic of a curious change in Lesher’s management style. “To defend John, putting movies together is incredibly hard. And he’s been in the business exactly when DVD peaked to when the movie biz got even harder,” a source tells me. “But at Vantage, he’d become known for aggressively supporting projects and people. But now people are feeling that he was not moving projects forward. There’s been frustations in the town and with talent that John [in the new job] has shown a lack of passion to champion projects and to get to see them get made.”
That disappointment came hand in hand with unprofessional behavior. “John is complicated” is the mantra repeated by even by his pals. (“John is complicated to figure out.” “John is a complicated dude in a million ways, and that’s not a secret to anyone – least of all Brad and Rob.”) Lesher has privately and repeatedly denied rumors about his personal life even during his Endeavor days. As one of my source confided, “Ari used to say that John was more work than any client they ever had. The servicing of John was epic.”)
By all accounts, Lesher was “more efficient and in a better place” back when he was at Paramount Vantage. But after his promotion, the stress of the new job showed. The result has been negative buzz about Lesher ever since he got the new job. To be fair, some of this can be attributed to jealousy, especially by agents. But also to his own brazen arrogance and unprofessional behavior. Like telling a screenwriter I know, “You must not be any good if I haven’t heard of you,” even though the scripter had credits with $1.5 billion worth of box office. And like the time, soon after taking over at Paramount Filmed Group, Lesher disappeared for 4 days in New York after appearing at the Toy Fair looking ”incredibly disheveled”. Agents and managers began complaining about Lesher’s long and unexplained absences. “He vanishes after 1 PM and doesn’t return calls,” they told Paramount.
Lesher drew notice for looking “whacked out and shit-faced and falling down drunk” during the studio’s big Benjamin Buttons and Sweeney Todd screening parties. He’s been known to nod off in front of directors during their discussions. He’s been seen dozing on his office couch in the afternoons. That may be because he’s been up at 3 AM often making “incoherent and rambling and emotional” communications with his Paramount colleagues. For instance, Lesher’s bizarre wee-hour emails to Adam Goodman are now the stuff of legend. Even more famous is Lesher’s sobbing ”I’m sorry” phone call to Nick Meyer back in December after Lesher pushed him out of Paramount Vantage. (As Lesher explained to pals later, ”I was very upset for my friend. He has family. I put him in that job. I take things personally.”)
I know that, six months ago, Brad Grey was alarmed after being given an earful about Lesher and began considering who might fill the job. But there’s still not a short list, although some point to Adam Goodman as a logical successor.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.


Couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.
please please please can Weston’s ass follow him out the door as well?!?
That place is an utter mess.
The agencies began complaining… he doesn’t return calls,” tenpercenters told Paramount.
I’m sorry – an agent bitching his call aren’t returned. Thats laughable! There’s the ultimate double freaking standard of Hollywood right there.
Obviously Weston has to go- He didn’t support the first Transformers, he back stabbed his ‘friend” Ali Shearmur, he pushed for Imagine That (at full freight btw) and he greenlit coming BOMB GI Joe based on his dad creating the toy or some crap. Lesher wasn’t doing anything so that’s fine. Goodman is the single most disrespected executive in town… that would certify the end of Paramount as we know it. Grey would have to be a chimpanzee to promote Goodman. Spielberg and Snyder pushed him off THEIR ship.
What Grey needs is a person passionate about filmmaking who can run the shop.
Offer every dime in the shop to Mike Deluca. Try Cassian Elwes with great talent connections. Better yet lose Grey and get Bill Mechanic.
But whatever you do, get rid of Marc Evans. He’s so useless and arrogant he wouldn’t even know he was fired for eight weeks!
Yea, it was obvious Lesher would go…he likes good movies…
Nikki, is that his facebook photo?
Ironically, “Whacked Out and Shit-Faced and Falling Down Drunk” is the announced title for Warners’ “Hangover” follow-up.
NO COUNTRY, BABEL, INTO THE WILD, THERE WILL BE BLOOD… classics and all due to Lesher’s passion and creativity which are unmatched in the exec ranks both in and out of p’mount. Keep this track record in mind before jumping on the deadline assassination train.
I think that might be the first time I’ve ever heard anyone saying anything bad about Marc Evans.
They were smart enought to dump Gerry Rich.
Lesher and Weston refused to greenlight David Fincher’s new film starring MATT DAMON. – this after 13 Oscar nods. Good riddance.
Par has relied on DreamWorks – now their gone. Now they rely on Lorenzo – at this point, that guy IS Paramount. But he makes more $ as a producer and who’d want to have to bend down to Grey everyday? As for Lesher, if he’s really a drunk, I hope he finds AA and gets it together. This town has little love for outright addicts anymore. Remember WMA in the 90s? Yeah, that’s over…
Nikki,
I swear, I’m going to have to stop reading your blog and it’s not your reporting…I just cannot hear anymore of these stories. It’s so depressing. How is it possible that somebody who falls around drunk and who disappears for days without explanation has any kind of leadership position? Why is Hollywood like that? What is it with these Ben Silverman types who get these amazing job , then lose bags of money for the companies they work for without any consequences?
Have people lost their mind? There are so many hard working & smart people around, I see them everywhere yet somehow they never end up in those positions. Is snorting coke, screwing whores and getting drunk some kind of secret skill you have to have to get into the club?
“Grey was dazzled with Lesher’s Mandarin skills?”
This would be so funny if it wouldn’t be so sad. I speak four languages fluent and I never went into a meeting with the head of a studio to dazzle them with my language skills. Thought it wasn’t about that, I guess I stand corrected.
As for Adam Goodman, he might not be as big of a screw up, but I have not met one fellow director/writer who doesn’t hate his guts. We call him Scrooge.
Oh I get it, the drunk is supposed to have relationships with talent and Scrooge is supposed to do the real work.
Here is an idea, fire them both and hire a woman, at least she won’t be able to get away with half of that stuff.
He’ll be better in a producing deal.
Ah yes, the old “Producing Deal.”
The place is rife with do nothing gasbags, and bozos. Clean it out and start over again. Lesher is a cancer, Weston is a zero, and Evans can talk, and talk, and talk, and talk, and….no movies get made. Has he ever been on a film set?
Clean it out, and start over.
It’s a bit unbelievable how many rats continue to exist at Paramount. If I were Brad Gray I’d be more concerned about the person that continues to leak all this inside information to you. Lesher is a peach compared to that person. I’ll be sad to see John go.
oh no!! what happens to Adam Kassan?
This sounds like a similar story… remember when they dismantled MTV/NICK and Aversano got a production deal and then they didn’t let him do anything with it? I wonder how long before Weston and Lesher are just dead weight around the lot as well?
You think Goodman (if he takes over) is actually going to want to utilize Weston and Lesher as producers? Do you actually believe Weston and Goodman have a good relationship? Dream on. The producer deal on lot is just to save face and that’s it.
More free time to hang with Eddie Murphy…Imagine That
Does this mean Lesher can now produce Paul Thomas Anderson movies full time? If so, great news!
Do you feel any guilt that what could have been a “couple weeks” more work according to your own reporting became no weeks because of your reporting, Nikki? Just curious.
Nowhere in the world is the Peter Principle better defined than in Hollywood. Agree with Ugh. There is no fucking way that any woman would get away with this shit for one hour, much less one minute. But then again, we don’t have an old boy Jewish network to promote us and protect us, only to bring us down later. This business sucks ass for women.
So sad…he wont get to see his passion projects come to the screen at the studio…”The Marc Pease Experience” and “The Goods: Live Hard Sell Hard” in August, and the much anticipated “Carriers” in September.
On a positive note, does give him more free time to work with Eddie Murphy…Imagine That?.
The dysfunctional soap opera that is “5555 Melrose” continues.
Can’t say that this is shocking. Can’t at all, but seriously, Adam? The guy once screwed a deal we were working by offering four-figures for rights. Four. Figures. Like less than the cost of the Prada shoes I wore to the meeting to pitch the project. I couldn’t believe it. I lost to a rival producer, with a rival studio who’d offered six-figures and called me to laugh at me. Talk about backing the wrong dog in a fight.
Fantastic news for Adam Goodman!! I’m very proud (and Adam is probably tired of hearing this from me) but a long time ago in another galaxy I was working on the movie “Backdraft” in Chicago as the Key 2nd Assistant Director. An 18 year old kid ( you know where this is going) comes to our production office during prep looking for a job as a PA on set. I had hired all the PA’s already but I wanted to help this kid so i offered him the job of interning on the set liasing between Robert De Niro’s trailer and the set. 3 weeks after filming started he was doing such a great job we decided to put him on payroll. That was 19 years ago folks, that kid was Adam Goodman. I still have that great Backdraft jacket you bought for me Adam. All the best my friend.