EXCLUSIVE: MGM made a major management re-shuffle this morning as Harry Sloan is pushed aside as CEO but retains his chairman title. Now there’s an “Office Of The CEO” filled by three people: Mary Parent, still chairperson of the worldwide motion picture group; Bedi Singh, CFO and president of finance and administration; and Stephen F Cooper, vice chairman and restructure specialist who’s the partner of Zolfo Cooper. It’s about time: Sloan, who was named to the CEO post in October 2005, was a disaster after inheriting MGM’s killer $3.7B debt and couldn’t tell the truth about how bad the studio’s situation really was. I hear he was naturally upset about being fired as CEO “but has come to terms with his removal”. Meanwhile, MGM’s owners “went and hired one of the best in the world — Stephen Cooper — who’s committed to strengthening MGM’s capital structure and figuring out how this company survives”. Parent and Singh, meanwhile, have kept MGM afloat by making a slate of movies with financial partners. I hear Mary Parent could have had walked out the door with her contract paid off. But she decided to stay and keeo her fingers crossed. “Everyone’s linked arms and we’re full steam ahead,” an MGM insider tells me. ”We’ve got a fighting chance.”
UPDATE: Here’s the official announcement:
LOS ANGELES, CA, August 18, 2009 – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. (MGM) today announced the formation of the Office of the CEO. Mary Parent, Chairperson for Worldwide Motion Picture Group, and Bedi A. Singh, President, Finance and Administration & Chief Financial Officer, have been named members of the Office of the CEO. Ms. Parent and Mr. Singh are joined by Stephen F. Cooper, who has been appointed Vice Chairman and member of the Office of the CEO. The Office of the CEO will report to the Board of Directors.
MGM also announced that Harry E. Sloan, current Chairman of the Board and CEO, will continue with the company as Chairman.
The Board of Directors said, “Both Mary and Bedi have demonstrated strong leadership during their respective tenures at MGM, and we are confident in their ability to ensure the company continues to aggressively pursue its business objectives. We welcome Steve, who brings unique expertise working with a wide variety of companies to improve their financial position. This leadership team offers MGM the ideal combination of talent to best position the company for the long term: industry experience, management continuity and the addition of a proven professional with expertise in strengthening capital structures. We look forward to working together to maximize MGM’s long-term value.”
The Board continued, “Since he joined MGM in October 2005, Harry has been responsible for substantially growing MGM’s existing businesses and leading its expansion into new areas. He has driven important initiatives such as developing our distribution relationship with Fox, reinvigorating MGM’s movie production efforts, launching Epix together with Viacom and Lions Gate Entertainment, relaunching the United Artists brand with new films, rebuilding MGM’s worldwide television distribution, and building other ancillary growth businesses. We are pleased that Harry will serve as Chairman and that MGM will continue to benefit from his contributions.”
Mr. Sloan said, “We have made important progress building MGM’s operations and executing significant growth initiatives over the last four years. MGM can now draw from the excellent team we have assembled and attract top talent such as Steve Cooper to help lead the company through its next phase. As an investor, I firmly believe that the team will work to bolster MGM’s operational and financial strengths during this challenging macroenvironment.”
Ms. Parent was appointed Chairperson of MGM’s Worldwide Motion Picture Group in March 2008 and has driven MGM’s reinvigorated production efforts. Mr. Singh, who joined MGM in May 2008, has extensive worldwide entertainment industry and financial management experience. In addition to their responsibilities as members of the Office of CEO, Ms. Parent and Mr. Singh will continue to perform the duties expected of them in their current roles.
Mr. Cooper has more than 30 years of experience and a demonstrated track record of working with companies’ key stakeholders to preserve and build value. His primary responsibility as Vice Chairman and member of the Office of the CEO will be to lead MGM’s efforts to evaluate alternatives to improve its balance sheet.
The new leadership team looks forward to completing MGM’s new production slate, which includes the upcoming release of Fame on September 25, as well as The Cabin In The Woods on February 5, 2010; Hot Tub Time Machine on February 26, 2010; Red Dawn on September 24, 2010; The Zookeeper starring Kevin James on October 8, 2010; and Poltergeist on November 24, 2010. The new iteration of the long-running television franchise Stargate Universe launches on the Syfy Channel on October 2. MGM co-owns and will co-produce The Hobbit with executive producers Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh and New Line Cinema. MGM will also release the next installment of the James Bond series, which will be produced by Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli of EON Productions Ltd.






Mary Parent’s idol must be Captain Edward Smith.
Thank God Sloan is gone – he’s the guy to trashed New World Entertainment almost 20 years ago.
Great News for everyone in the film business. Mary Parent has the cajones of Sally Ride and the loyalty gene the soldiers had while storming the beach at Normandie. With the ground not falling out beneath her
she has a fighting chance to make MGM a powerhouse.
The advisors that arranged this change please help her and let her do her job. Please.
Robbie Goldstein
Location Manager
Heard about this happening at Party 43 two weeks ago. Definitely about time – good riddance.
Okay, Harry, time to checklist the ol’ golden parachute…make sure to check your support tapes and suspension lines. These are the lines usually gathered through cloth loops or metal connector links at the ends of several strong straps called risers. The risers in turn are attached to the harness.
It’s gonna be a loooong drop!
Blah blah blah blah blah. Wait, new Bond film!
It’s about time! Sloan shouldn’t have been hired in the first place. MGM shouldn’t even keep him as Chairman. What a joke.
First and foremost MGM needs hits. And if they can’t make a couple of the projects on their upcoming slate 2009 solid grossers at the very least then all is lost.
I’d have thought that FAME, The Zookeeper and then Red Dawn all have solid chances at doing quite well. MGM need to show that they can successfully market and open their movies if they are to really pull themselves together.
But having read Cabin In The Woods and seen the trailer for Hot Tub Time Machine (the worst studio trailer I have seen in at least five years) I’d say that they are destined for DVD bargain bins in small ‘mom & pop’ gas stations.
Personally, despite having a new Bond and some rights to The Hobbit in the future I still think that MGM is doing nothing more than rearranging chairs on the deck of the Titanic.
Whatever happened to UA? With Xenu on their side, I thought they would have put out 20 movies by now…
What are the specific ways in which this will impact UA? Does anybody know?
MGM needs a complete restructuring of its business model. It’s library provides a good income, but it looks like it’s only just enough to keep the creditors at bay, and the company barely afloat. Something really needs to be done about that debt if the company is going to become anything substantial again.
MGM should sell the Bond Franchise to Disney for $1.5 billion which would help restructure their debt. Disney needs an adult action Franchise to fill out its release schedule and to diversify its slate. Its experiment to release 6 movies a year failed – the distribution system is too costly (an valuabl) for that.
what is the harry sloan story? is he good at making money? hiring? he’s not the creative guy, he’s not an insider, like a Medavoy, he’s the money guy? he’s always seemed like such a non-event but maybe wall street listens to him or has in the past. can someone please explain why he gets a job like this? is he a fraud?
This company is dying a slower death than I did.
006 you should be ashamed of yourself.
Wow. “Hot Tub Time Machine” trailer is stunningly bad. Cusack seems to be wearing more make-up than Bill O’Reilly.
007, was that double entendre intended? If so, smart! And funny.
I worked at MGM, then MGM/UA, then MGM again (I lose track) from 1980-87 when we were paid off/terminated. I wanted to be part of a team that would transform MGM into the “little engine that could”. Obviously I was thinking like Dorothy. My regime had a few hits, but remember these gems…Until September, Garbo Talks (we called it shits), Yes Giorgio, Jinxed!, Exposed, Electric Dreams, Mrs. Soffel, O.C. & Stiggs. This was 22 years ago!! Please let MGM just die a natural death instead of keeping it alive just to keep gasping for air…
Is it Weekend at Bernie’s 3?
All of you talking smack about H Sloan, know NOTHING about the man. He is a widely accepted business success. Ask your self this, What do you really know about the man and the business he conducts? I have the answer: you know nothing, because you are nothing. All you know is what you hear, and what you hear is based on crap! Why don’t you go look up H. Sloan’s bio. When was the last time any of you began a company from scratch and sold it for over 300 million?
p.s. Whoever wrote the initial “exclusive” part of this webpage, needs to check themselves.
Harry Sloan’s bio was written by the useless publicist Jeff Pryor so I wouldn’t bother looking there.
Sloan’s golden parachute is probably a wrench in getting rid of him entirely. I’d guess they have to let his contract run out and let him keep the chairman title rather than pay him out. They’d be better off paying him out. He’s bound to do more damage.
If they really want to clean house,get ride of Charles Cohen too. Nothing sticks to this fraud.
Stephen Cooper “rescued” Krispy Kreme? Jeez, in the summer of 2007 it traded around $7 a share…now it’s at around $3 a share and wobbly. And he “rescued” Enron? Isn’t that like keeping Adolf Hitler from pulling the trigger of the gun at his temple? If this guy doesn’t sell outright Bond and all rights to anything Tolkien within the next 6 months, I will be genuinely shocked.
I agree with posters above. Let MGM fade away like Pan Am, etc.
Everyone knew this information 1 1/2 years ago except Harry and Mary is too smart to explain it to him.
I think there’s a location manager kissing ass for a job….
“Susan Hart” should remember that the movies “she” cited were 22 years ago. Grudge, anyone? The letters in the first and last name are suspiciously like a well known MGM disser…