Ron Meyer turns 68 on Tuesday. So on the eve of his birthday, he finally made a public statement about the August rumors that he would be involuntarily or voluntarily exiting his job at Universal Studios soon. On a panel at the inaugural symposium of the USC Schwarzenegger Institute for State and Global Policy this afternoon, Meyer was asked by the moderator about “these rumors he might be leaving” the President/COO job he has held atop Universal Studios since 1995. Ron’s reply was as follows: “I wouldn’t know what to do retiring. So I have no plans to retire. I like what I’m doing and, as long as they will have me, I can stay.”
I immediately phoned Meyer afterwards and asked if he would expand. “What more is there to say?” he answered. Well, actually quite a lot. Because it’s a case study in how parent company Comcast failed miserably in stopping the rumors or doing damage control on behalf of the Universal brass.
The rumor that Comcast was going to replace Meyer with Stacey Snider first surfaced in the New York Post at the start of August. That usually unreliable newspaper had erroneously posted at least once before that Meyer was about to be fired. The Meyer-Snider rumor then was repeated by The Hollywood Reporter. Whose Kim Masters is widely regarded as the most consistently inaccurate reporter covering Hollywood. As an NBCU flack told me at the time, “She’s called us 20 times saying Ron is being fired or kicked upstairs – and been wrong 20 times. And even when we told her this time, ‘It’s not true,’ she ignored us.”
Related: Time Warner Says THR/Barry Meyer Claims “Complete Fabrication”
Next to jump on the rumor was the Los Angeles Times which claimed on August 8th that “Meyer will be headed upstairs to parent company NBCUniversal before his time in Hollywood is done. The longtime head of the Universal movie studio and theme parks has a provision in his contract, signed in June 2011, stipulating that at some point in the next year or two he will move into an advisory role working with NBCUniversal Chief Executive Steve Burke, according to two knowledgeable people not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.”
This, too wasn’t true. I’ve confirmed that Meyer has no such provision in his contract.
I understand it was at this point that NBCUniversal boss Steve Burke, who’s also Comcast #2, picked up the phone to the Universal brass and said somethng to the effect of, “I’m sorry you had to read this shit.”
Deadline never repeated the rumor. But Comcast never gave us a public denial to post, either. I believe Comcast made a big mistake not going public with a ‘Nope’. Sure, various in-house flacks were pooh-poohing the rumor off the record. But a big fat denial would have prevented destabilization of the studio. Which did occur as the rumor ran rampant. One reason for this was its plausibility. Yes, Snider who used to oversee Universal movies has ties to the Philly guys. Yes, Snider and Spielberg briefly discussed with Comcast the idea of bringing DreamWorks Studios to NBCU. But they all quickly discovered that getting DreamWorks out of its Disney deal would have been difficult because of the draconian financial terms being demanded. By the time anything surfaced in the media, the notion had been dead for a while – and replaced by new whispers that Tom Rothman lobbied his Comcast pals for the job.
As for anyone imminently replacing Meyer, Comcast still privately denies it – and Ron made clear today he isn’t soon exiting.
Related: DreamWorks Duo Stacey Snider & Steven Spielberg Staying Put
Related: Ron Meyer: “You Don’t Have To Be An Asshole To Succeed”
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.


Fleming has actually inaccurately reported multiple stories about my company by jumping the gun and playing fast and loose with the facts, so give Masters some slack…okay?
The 80′s are over.
thanks for the insightful news!
I may be missing something, so apologies in advance if this is a dumb question. If Uni and Comcast aren’t changing horses, then what was Tom Rothman meeting with them about?
Biggest surprise? That there truly exists a USC Schwarzenegger Institute for State and Global Policy.
who cares
Ron Meyers TIME TO RETIRE
let someone relevant come in
Just when I’m determined to hate you you come up with some excellent responsible reporting.
What part about this surprises you when Comcast is involved?
Don’t you remember The Player? If it’s a rumor it must be true…
Time for new blood. All studios need to rethink the game. Can’t believe Meyer has held the position for so long…
neither can i. the meyer job (same with brad grey job) is the easiest one in town. when the studio fails, you just shift blame to whichever president you hired, fire him/her, shuffle the deckchairs around a bit and hope for the best. amazing.
Agree about Kim Masters. According to two of my sources, she name drops in meetings inside The Hollywood Reporter and editors from New York are none the wiser and just eat it up. Big disadvantage from being from out of town, folks. Oldest trick in the book to impress your bosses, but not done by serious reporters who care about protecting sources.
Also agree about Comcast’s handling of the matter, but they have for years been notoriously slow off the mark to comment or even act on anything even when it serves their best interests.
In addition, you failed to mention Stacy Snider’s well-known (compulsive, some might say) ambitions which has been her history in town as she has linked herself to such people as Mark Canton and Peter Guber to rise the ranks over the years. No one was surprised when she latched onto Spielberg to boost herself … and of course, Spielberg was none the wiser.
It would not surprise me if she herself puts the rumors out there to benefit herself.
Just my own opinion having reported on this industry for many years and observed the executive for many years strategically hopscotching up the ranks.
Anita you are so knowledgeable and you should have your own website it’s time for you to get back in the game. Start reporting again you could probably work for Nikki she’d probably love to have you on her staff with Fleming. I also read that Penske is going to buy Variety which means this site and Variety will merge in some super deluxe showbiz news venture.
Stacey Snider is parts equally tough and cold. I will never do business with her again.
She’s made few real movies, she has no real taste and she will only work with producers, directors, writers, actors that enhance her position as a power player.
Her desire to “look good” rather than “do good” leaves me cold.
That’s been her M.O. from the start.
She’s figured out a very limited way to protect her very limited talent.
We call her the geisha.
Hollywood seems none the wiser which is pretty sad.
I enjoy the articles in which Nikki reports on how wrong everyone else was. I reported news for a video game site for several years, and wish they had let me write this like is (not that I have the same apptiude for snark or had the same depth of contacts).
Soon after Ron first got the Uni job, he and I flew across the country on the Uni (then Seagram’s) jet together.
“You know, Bobby,” he said, “this is the last job I’m ever going to have.”
“Really? Are you sure?” I asked.
“Yeah, I’m one of those guys who can just walk down the beach at the end of the day.”
I told him I didn’t believe him, but I have to say, so far, his words have been true.
Just a thought, but MAYBE the reason for Dreamworks putting Rothman on an already go movie is to get him comfy at Dreamworks and ready to fill Stacey’s spot when she moves…
80′s? They’ve been over for like forever! I know, I was there – literally. But the 90′s are loooong gone too. Way gone.