EXCLUSIVE: I’ve just learned that former Overture Films CEO and MGM Vice Chairman Chris McGurk is calling studios to let them know he has landed a new gig. The 53-year-old executive has been named chairman/CEO of the publicly traded Cinedigm Digital Cinema Corp, a leader in the digital cinema industry, effective today. McGurk will be based in Los Angeles. Co-Chief Executive Officers Adam Mizel and Gary Loffredo will continue with the company. I hear the deal to bring in McGurk was brokered by ROAR management company.
UPDATE: Cinedigm Digital Cinema just made the announcement. McGurk said he is “impressed with the progress Cinedigm has made in the past six months”. According to the company, in addition to a significant personal purchase of common stock in Cinedigm, McGurk “will receive an option grant to align his interests with those of our shareholders. Under the terms of his employment agreement, pursuant to NASDAQ listing Rule 5635(c)(4), Mr. McGurk will receive an inducement grant of non-statutory options to purchase 4,500,000 shares of the Company’s Common Stock (the “Options”). The Options are grouped in three tranches, consisting of Options for 1,500,000 shares having an exercise price of $1.50 per share, Options for 2,500,000 shares having an exercise price of $3.00 per share and Options for 500,000 shares having an exercise price of $5.00 per share. One-third of the Options in each tranche vest on January 3 of each of 2012, 2013 and 2014 and all of the Options have a term of ten (10) years.”
“Having closely watched the rollout of the Cinedigm platform, I am honored and excited to join the exceptional team at Cinedigm Digital Cinema,” McGurk said in a statement. “The industry is fast approaching 20,000 screens converting to digital, and this rapid transformation is largely a consequence of Cinedigm’s foresight and leadership. Cinedigm has extraordinary prospects to further grow its business and I look forward to assisting in the Company’s ongoing development and success… I am very comfortable with and committed to the mission of Cinedigm. The Company will continue to rapidly expand its comprehensive digital cinema technology and service platform and leverage it with industry leading software applications as well as through the marketing and distribution of alternative entertainment content, including 3D films, live special events such as concerts and major sporting events, and regularly scheduled programming. Cinedigm’s platform will also be an increasingly important conduit for the distribution of independent films. Our primary goal will remain to provide our exhibitor, studio and content partners with the platform, services and tools to capture the potential created by the digital conversion of theaters.”
“We are extremely pleased to have Chris McGurk lead our Company going forward,” commented Ned Gilhuly, founder of Sageview Capital, and a member of Cinedigm’s Board of Directors and Search Committee. “He has an ideal mix of relevant industry experience, strategic insight and demonstrated leadership ability to help drive Cinedigm to the next level. As a Board, we are confident he has the industry stature and the skills to accelerate Cinedigm’s progress in its mission to become a leading provider of comprehensive digital cinema technology and services, and compelling alternative entertainment content.”
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Like a cockroach, he survives everything.
I agree, no talent, big ego, not creative,………
Hater alert! Seems like every time a studio exec does anything the haters all come out to take cowardly attacks. Rothman, Horne, now Chris. Get real, execs in this biz piss people off because that’s their job to turn people down and get rid of excess baggage. The best and honorable ones do it to your face. I worked for McGurk and he is very smart and always took care of his employees. Good luck Chris.
Chris is a great executive, that’s why he survives. What are you up to lately besides stalking chat-rooms pal?
Let’s see if he can make it three for three… You know… In terms of companies he’s led into oblivion.
LOL, I agree, where he goes, the companies fall apart. WTG peps. Did you not learn anything from his past. Just because someone has an MBA does not make them good at their jobs. Good luck…lol
Congrats Chris and don’t listen to these clowns…good for you and good for the business.
Chris had an impossible task at Overture because of the notorious lack of support from Liberty. And that was not Chris’ fault. Liberty never gave Overture a fighting chance in terms of a war chest to really go out and compete. And he got no support for raising third party capital.
Chris certainly can’t be blamed for the decline of the theatrical business…it has claimed many heads in the process, and Chris was one of them.
Congratulations, Chris.
Smart move for all. Distribution is the money road, CIDM has been traveling the digital road for years. Chris understands all aspects of the the business -
Congratulations, Chris. You can ignore most of these people commenting. MGM sold for $5,000,000,000 under your leadership. The naysayers here haven’t a clue. Any company will prosper under your guidance and I’d work for you again any day.
You tout that figure like it’s a good thing… LOL! Yeah, you’re right, Chris started out from day one at MGM by forcing a super-expensive Rollerball remake down everyone’s throat despite all resistance.
And that was a dead-on perfect call. His prescient reading of market trends, his astounding creative sense and his ability to please the masses made that movie an enormous hit. And it was followed by one blockbuster after another under his guidance.
Gee, rewriting history is fun. Facts are facts. There are plenty to show his failures. Few to show his successes.
To “You’re Right!” – I don’t disagree with you that Rollerball was a theatrical misfire, but we sold a HELL of a lot of copies of that on DVD. Please understand, we all want the movies that are made to be good, but even when they are not never forget we are in a business that sells product. Films are only in the theaters for a couple of months and theatrical is merely a springboard for all future ancillary revenue streams (including DVDs & Blu-rays). Ultimately the films themselves become plastic. Plastic discs housed in plastic (Amarays) and shrink wrapped in plastic and sold to the masses and MGM sold a sh*tload of plastic. Doesn’t matter if Rollerball was crap, cause at the end of the day it sat on a shelf in Best Buy right next to MGM distributed Academy Award winners Platoon, The Silence of The Lambs, West Side Story and Dances With Wolves. No one is rewriting history here. MGM broke away from Warner in ’99 and McGurk contributed to growth that made the company worth $5B. When the company was sold, he left, pretty much everyone under him left and now take a look at MGM. And you are right… facts are facts… please allow me to show you his “few” theatrical successes: Thomas Crown Affair, Stigmata, World is Not Enough, Hannibal, Legally Blonde, Legally Blonde 2, Jeepers Creepers, Jeepers Creepers 2, Bowling for Columbine, Barbershop, Barbershop 2, Die Another Day, Agent Cody Banks, Uptown Girls, Hotel Rwanda, etc… Yeah, there were a few theatrical misfires, but they ALL sold on DVD. None the less, that’s a heck of a lot of theatrical hits over the course of six years.
i hear ROAR is negotiating a deal to turn One Tree Hill into webisodes. shhhhhh.
stupid move, he’s a loser….
Yes, b/c destroying the MGM brand for $5 billion is something to be congratulated for. Forgot about the hundreds of MGM employees at the time, myself included, that profited from that, not to mention the film community losing a studio. Right.
Now that I see Roar negotiated a great deal for Chris-I hope they
throw their money to where they promised me-Pediatric Aids Foundation..RJG
I suspect that Chris McGurk wrote all the positive comments himself.
If this is the kooky, despised, failed reporter Anita Bush who fired George Christy and who Pellicano threw dead fish at and ran and hid out of town and now lives in a convent in Ohio, that is pretty cool!
Congratulations Chris…good luck in the new post and we’ll soon be knocking on your door with our brilliant upcoming slate. All the best, Gary and the Intandem team
As long as he’s kept away from features, he can go off and continue pretending to do whatever it is he pretends to do to appear relevant in this industry. I hope, however, that this is the beginning of his slide into industry oblivion.
McGurk got rich off the MGM deal and anyone who knows him knows he doesn’t care about being relevant to losers like you. He is a businessman who likes to create new models and strategies. That’s what he and Yemenidjian (who got even richer) did at MGM and they both couldn’t have cared less what the old boy network and the groveling film producers wanted. They made that one of the mantras of the company and were quite open about it. They got rid of everybody there and brought in a new group, which some of us were lucky to part of. They gave stock to every employee in the company. All of the shareholders there were ecstatic when the Company sold. He may do the same thing again.