UPDATE: Here's what I've found out beyond the memo to staff (below) about the layoffs which I, other journalists, and of course the employees themselves had been expecting and dreading: While no final decisions have been made internationally, the company expects the layoffs, elimination of open positions, and outsourcing, to affect nearly 800 positions worldwide, or approximately 10% of its 8,000 employees.
-- The 800 positions break down as follows: 200 open positions around the world; 300 outsourced (with a third being offered employment opportunities with Capgemini and continue to be based in Burbank), and 300 lay-offs.
-- Warner Bros claims it has examined "every aspect" of its businesses in order to cut costs "responsibly". The company explains its outsourcing of certain job functions to a third-party company allows it to provide resources at a lower cost to help mitigate the possibility of any further staff reductions. To that end, they will outsource the U.S.-based components of certain parts of MIS and accounts payable. Capgemini is the company’s primary partner in this process.
-- Almost 1/3 of people in the positions that were outsourced will be offered employment opportunities with Capgemini and continue to be based in Burbank. (It is their option whether or not they choose to accept Capgemini’s job offer.)
-- Despite the fact that Warner Bros performed solidly in 2008, this decision to announce layoffs reflects changes necessary "for stability and growth" going forward. "Warner Bros is not immune to the changing entertainment business landscape, shifting consumer demand and the state of the global economy," an insider tells me.
Yeah, I know this stinks. Here is the Warner Bros memo:
From: Executive Communique
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2009 10:23 AM
Subject: A Message From Barry Meyer and Alan HornDear Colleagues:
We’d like to take a moment and provide some follow-up information to the memo you received earlier this month regarding cost containment at the Studio. We are very sad to announce that based on the global economic situation and current business forecasts, the Studio will have to make staff reductions in the coming weeks in order to control costs.
This was a very difficult decision to make, and one that was not made easily. Despite the fact that the company performed solidly in 2008, this decision reflects changes necessary for stability and growth going forward. The changing entertainment business landscape, shifting consumer demand and the overall state of the economy have affected companies around the world, and Warner Bros. is not immune to these factors.
We have examined every aspect of our business in order to cut costs responsibly and to keep staff reductions to a minimum. One way to achieve these objectives is to outsource certain job functions to a third-party company. To that end, we will be outsourcing the U.S.-based components of certain parts of MIS and accounts payable. This initiative, as well as the ongoing analysis of our global MIS and finance and accounting structures, will be explained in more detail to those business groups directly impacted.
Over the next few weeks, specific information regarding cost cutting measures, including staff reductions, will be shared with you on a divisional or departmental level by your management team.
We will also continue to review our global operations to make sure we’re operating as efficiently and effectively as possible, without negatively affecting our divisions’ ability to conduct business.
We want to reiterate that these staff reductions and organizational changes, which are being made at every level across both corporate and divisional businesses, were our last resort to help position the company for its future.
We understand that these are difficult times for everyone and appreciate your patience and support as we move through them together.
Sincerely,
Barry Meyer, Alan Horn


Yes- “Despite the fact that the company performed solidly in 2008,this decision reflects changes necessary for stability and growth going forward.” Translation: Despite the fact that we had a record breaking billions dollar year, we’re going to make some cuts so that next year we can have an even bigger record breaking billions dollar year!
Wasn’t Warner Bros. bragging about how the Dark Knight gave them such a great year. Where did all those profits go?
Oh wait, it’s Hollywood…. what was I thinking.
I’m glad I didn’t take an IT job at WB after being laid off from NL. Good job, Jeff Bewkes.
Those wicked studios will stop at nothing — nothing –to promote their position in the SAG negotiations. This is — clearly — just another ploy to break the union!
it used to be the greatest place to work. interesting work, and an interesting place
no longer. the worst of the worst.
might as well sell soap at proctor & gamble
If they’d released the new Harry Potter that’s sitting on the shelf there, maybe they wouldn’t have to fire anyone.
while nobody is in favor of people losing their jobs, these are tough times, that will get tougher.
the above posts sound like people expect the studios to act in a way which is not in their own interests which is just plain wrong.
its darwinism time here folks…
Unfortunately the studios are just columns on the spread sheets of much larger corporate entities. Even when they do well, they are the Peter that is robbed to pay Paul when other columns on that spread sheet are lacking.
And yet nowhere in the memo does it announce that the Alan Horn’s of the company are taking a pay cut.
I guess things are tough, but not THAT tough…
This layoff, as well as others, is the manifestation of corporate ownership of Hollywood studios. Although, thiw particular studio is doing record breaking business, it’s still only a small part of larger conglomeration whose stock prices are spiraling downward. I don’t know if you’ve heard – we’re in a depression. The corporations are going to squeeze the worker until the eagle screams.
Sue West,
I think I love you! …………….. (of course many still don’t get it)
Didn’t we recently learn Warner got clobbered by the “Watchman” settlement with Fox and were recently selling off furniture? Everyone is tightening their belts. We shouldn’t be surprised.
If anyone thinks this is a negotiation gimmick, pick up a newspaper (which might help that industry as well).
Lemme guess Sue West, you have never worked a studio, have you? Do you know how the financing of a studio owned by a corporation works? I doubt it.
Do you really think that the problems with the SAG are anywhere NEAR the radars of those guys right now??
You wrote that comment to intentionally start a comments war, right? You realize how dumb what you said sounds, right??
When will people get it through their heads? Beyond following various labor and employment laws and regulations, no one – not Warner Bros. or anyone else – owes anyone anything. No one is entitled to a job merely because they exist and are a good person, even if they have done all the “right things” (i.e., gone to school, worked hard, etc.)
If you just reflect on the past ten years when times were good, you probably know at least a dozen people who continually “jumped ship” from company to company every 12-18 months so that they could get a better deal for themselves. But no one ever faults an employee for his lack of loyalty, rather they always find fault with the employer.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: the only person you can count on is yourself and your own abilities, determination and work-ethic. If people have problems with Warners or any other company, they should try starting up their own companies so that they aren’t dependent on others.
Over it,
You are spot on. I was being facetious.
Sorry to those who didn’t — or won’t — catch on.
Sue
I think it’s great that Sony isn’t going to downsize or let anyone go. It shows real character to take a stand like that in these times. Bravo Sony!
Wake-up, everyone. WB has had this move under wraps for a long time. This has been at least
2 year’s in the making. WB’s has worked with Capgemini
http://www.capgemini.com/services/outsourcing/
and IBM in developing their master OUTSOURCING plans! All of Hollywood should be paying attention. First, they’re outsourcing MIS and accounts payable jobs to India AND Poland! Next, they’ll be going after other divisions. There are 7-8 East Indian companies, in downtown L.A., alone, that are working full time on outsourcing American jobs. These slime bags are facilitated by the likes of Meyer and Horn, who are treasonous “Americans”. Outsourcing jobs with over
2 million American jobs lost in 2008, alone!!?? What crap! We need to network within all of WB’s, and develop a master strategy to interrupt these “global” corporate plans! Let’s start the conversation, and get our heads out of our rear ends. SW
That’s right! It’s so refreshing to see everyone jump to the studio’s defense. I mean, they’re all so sweet, innocent and harmless…they need all of you to make sure we all understand that in tough times, it’s always the best and wisest practice to cut workers.
Nothing about bonuses, golden parachutes, lavish parties, botched, over-the-top marketing campaigns, huge paydays for worthless stars, the list goes on. Nah, just hack at the biggest line on the spreadsheet and you’ll be sure to make your tee time.
Hey Over it,
Why don’t you explain to all the idiots how it works. ……………. Companies that are losing money give away more of it, no wait that can’t be right can it……… Oh I just find it all so confusing!!!!! ……………… please straighten me out………(yeah, I’m in a mood today)………. Started out great!!!
Could this be how WB is compensating for the ‘Watchmen’ deal?
It is sad comments like gotmyjd2003 stated that shows what is wrong with Hollywood and American business in General. People and employers should take pride in each other and protect one another’s interests, not this dumb attitude of fend for yourself.
The fact of the matter is yes we are in a recession and every company that lays off people is just perpetuating the problem, true business leaders create new solutions and innovative ways to correct tribulations, everyone else just lays people off.
Don’t worry people.
Obama is here.
They examined every aspect, but Robinov, Greg Silverman and countless others are still there?
Uhhhhh, sure.
It’s the Writer’s fault!
Anonymous, that has to be the most naive, downright idiotic statement I’ve heard all day. You think our new prez, who just partied with all the studio/producer bigwigs gives a crap?
Why don’t you hold your breath til it happens.
I wish Obama had come in enough time to insure my job.
“No one is entitled to a job merely because they exist and are a good person, even if they have done all the “right things” (i.e., gone to school, worked hard, etc.)”
Nobody has a “right” to have a business or make profits either. Warner Brothers doesn’t have a right to exist in perpetuity…
Yes, Obama will make everything alright. Right after he heals the planet and raises the level of the oceans.
Sue West…I got it…been saying it for months…love your dry, sly humor.
Well, next up is Disney… on hit shows they are NOW trying to cut back by 20% in each department…but this is because…please see Sue West’s post @11:33AM.
But seriously, I’m staring to get a little freak out. People who work on features have taken a hard hit, and now T.V.s being cut back, and I’m talking about people who used to work all the time.
Make Alan Horn and Barry Meyer take pay cuts, eliminate surerflous managers, take away perks at the top instead of laying off hard working dedicated workers. Better yet, Time Warner, shitcan AOL that is the real problem
If they think they are going to save any money by outsourcing IT they might want to talk to the folks over at Disney first. Mousehouse outsourced some of its IT to big blue and then realized how expensive it really is. Now they are stuck with some outsourced, and the rest stalled due to “unforseen costs”. Good luck, glad I got out when the gettin was good.
I’m not an economist, but if the heads of Warner’s were
brought up on Capitol hill they would sing the same capitalistic
tune the oil companies did. “Uh, yes sir, demand for superheroes is very high right now but a hurricane of a recession is upon us and theres nothing illegal about being prudent despite our embarresing wealth and thriving market”.
– So come now Hollywood, if you could really have a few more yachts to waterski behind, wouldn’t you? Or would you really settle for hauling just one around on a trailer like some white trash weekend warrior?
I thought not.
Please… let’s show some sensitivity.
Reading through the comments, I see some that reflect an insider’s biased, though probably accurate, perspective, some goofball, inflammatory nonsense (welcome to the boards), and others that miss the mark, though well-intentioned.
Yes, it is sad that there will be layoffs.
But one comment that resonates most is the one that points out that WB, for many years, was the best of the best, a place where people stayed, thrived, created, succeeded, failed, succeeded again, and pushed the limits of their creativity and whose voices were heard in a vibrant, energizing environment.
And it worked.
This has given way to a dreary, paranoid place, where mediocrity reigns, where second-rate executive talent is rewarded, where dissent is not tolerated, where performance is always second-guessed, and creativity takes a back-seat to ego.
Lay this at the feet of Alan Horn and Barry Meyer.
They have allowed this environment if not directed its machinery. It just may be time for them to go.
Layoffs themselves may at times be an economic imperative at the best-run companies, sad but necessary.
What makes them so tragic at WB is that it is no longer a well-run company. Waste, inefficiency, mediocre creative development, misplaced trust in the layers of management that foster that mediocrity and in fact poor executive management choices BASED on mediocrity have poisoned the place.
So show runners do their thing, Eastwood & Nolan et al. theirs, and it’s hard to screw it up. The production and marketing people high-fiving each other about how wonderful they are when the numbers come in are victims of their own synthetic visions of themselves. They create nothing, they inspire no one, they fool few.
Layoffs may be sad, but more sad is the long slow decline of a giant.
There is a reason Slumdog Millionaire is at Fox Searchlight and irony that one of WB’s big holiday releases was “Yes Man.”
Outis, I completely agree with your post. The whole notion that Warner Bros. is this poor, little hurting studio, who’s only doing what it needs to do in order to survive, ignores the over the top salaries the executives make. Businesses should behave responsibly, and that doesn’t have to happen at the expense of profits, but it’s hard for it to happen when excessive greed is at work.
And for all the cynical posters taking issue with Obama being the solution, he never said he would be. If you’d listened yesterday, and really all along the campaign, he was pretty clear that it’ll require the American people to take the initiative and work together with him to improve things.
Slomo,
If I have to explain the sarcasm then it’s lost on you.
800 people won’t be buying tickets to the next WB release. The 5400 people that rely on the residual spending power of those 800 salaries also may not be buying tickets. An on it goes…
Thumbs up to “Happiness is a Warm Gun.” The “studio” is dead. Long live the “corporation.” If WB had the rights to Titanic, they would have already made a sequel to it. The lack of creative thought comes from the top and filters like coffee made through a
colander. Coffee grounds included.
Talent has been leaving the place at an alarming pace the last 5 years and with these layoffs, I can only wonder what talent will be left?
Good luck to you talented few who will remain. You’ll need it.
I heard Richard Branson the other day warn against this very behavior.
I would hazard to guess this type of corporate greed will perpetuate this recession right into a depression. Self fulfilling shortsightedness and sad indeed at how stupid this environment makes people act.
We may really need some laws that would require the suggestions ‘movie goer’ made. Isn’t that what happens in bankruptcy? Isn’t the country bankrupt? Should not the lesser paid workers be somehow protected from harmful greedy corporate maneuvering?
gotmyjd2003 –
Thanks for the lesson in Republican ideology. You’ve made me see the light. Indeed, hard work, dedication, perseverance, a passion for one’s own work ethic and life’s calling, all channeled into years of diligent service to one’s employer are entirely irrelevant. That merits NOTHING when weighed against the security and well being of the guys at the top of the corporate ladder. It’s like getting kicked out of an airplane without a parachute — you either flap your arms really, really, really fast or you fall. And if you do fall, hey, that’s on you because you should have learned some friggin’ self-responsibility instead of counting on the company you’ve loyally served! I mean, what the hell were these people expecting in an economy like this, some loyalty in return?! What a nation of whiners!
You made Adam Smith sport a big, toothy grin in his grave when you proclaimed that the last ten years were a great time in America. They showed that the real way to succeed and prosper is to be a dishonest robber baron. It’s the guys who exploit the poor masses domestically and abroad with low wages and meager benefits and then yank their jobs right out from under them, who start unnecessary wars to land fat contracts they never fulfill in the process, who create financial calamity and then get huge government bailout packages at the expense of the very people they’ve screwed in the first place — THOSE are the people who DESERVE to succeed!
You’re absolutely preaching the great American gospel. You’ve inspired me. I don’t know why I’ve never thought of this before, but thank the good Lord that you’ve sounded the trumpet and woken me from my opiated, hopin’-for-a-hand-out slumber. I’m gonna head out right now and start up my own, diversified, multinational corporate entity so I can start sticking it to the little guy!
Thanks a bunch!
– Your faithful Disciple
I used to work for WB. We called it the “evil empire”. We spent thousands on parties, gifts for the big wigs and so called stars. We got company cars like Lexus and BMW’s. Enormous year end bonuses. Six figure salaries for little or no work. I once told them that the WB network, now called CW, was a money hog and should be scrapped, but they kept it to “save face” for Meyer and Moonves. It has lost almost 100 million so far. Dump it and save all those jobs far into the future.
God, you people are insane! We are in the worst economy since the great depression and you come on here and bad-mouth WB. Almost every single company in the country is laying people off. Get a clue people.
WTF……was this really a shocker to anyone in WB? Everyone knew this was going to happen? It was just the specifics that no one knew (when and how). I am not sure why they are blaming the economy, just another easy escape goat for good old Barry and Alan.
I think it absolutely sucks for anyone to get laid off when you never hear of any CEO or big shot taking a reduction in there pay to continue to employee the workers (the ones that make the Co. run) to keep fueling the economy. No it is just easier to keep there wallets fatter, if not fatter, and layoff hundreds of employees weather they have only been there 2 weeks or 20 years. The little guy is always held responsible for the big shots poor choices and or mistakes.
All this outsourcing that companies are doing will come to bite them all in the ass one day. That day maybe coming sooner than later because they are not help fueling America’s economy by outsourcing to another country. It is like hiring illegal(s) to work here in the US, where do you think they send that money to?
This is a fine example of American greed at its worst, just living for the moment not protecting the future of Americans.
This is a time when everyone needs to do there share of sacrifices for the good of the economy but it seems the more you make the more you want to take from others. So you can always expect no sacrifices from the Barry and Alan’s of the world.
Hey Joe, Warner had a record year. The only part of that Godforsaken conglomerate that did. Aol = Always Off Line? Time Warner mags…what’s a mag? Time Warner Cable…Satellite? CW…nevermind. HBO…ratings are like WHOA! Home Video…Oh yeah, I’ll buy the Dirty Harry box set.
Nope, just little old Warner Bros. which has been solid even with the Speed Racer’s and Body of Lies of the past year (remember the good old days of Poseidon?). Dark Knight is a whisker away from 1 billion worldwide (IMAX release to get it over?). In spite of Vince Vaughn thinking he’s Santa last year and flopping in a bad movie, Four Christmases did well as a bad movie. Clint, he always is underbudget, early and profitable. Somehow, even with idiots telling us that the pyramids, Wooly Mammoths and horses being riden at the same time in the same place, 10,000 years ago, it somehow made a buck.
WB had a fair share of duds (*cough* Robinov *cough*) and still had a great year yet the people on the “lot” pay for the sins of their recent clown Parsons (who just got a bank to ruin, Citigroup), Meyer and Horn (who drives a “green” car yet WB is famous for redundant xeroxes of materials called trash that have been e-mailed).
Horn also gave WB 2009 an über-fail with not having the common sense to have the Watchman situation cleared. One of the top lawyers at WB left last year due to lack of the thought process in the company.
Now Joe, in spite of that WB is still profitable with talented people? They might not be in the old buildings on Olive nor in the reflective building across the street yet they are. They just don’t have titles. They will pay for the sins of their masters and their masters masters.
They aren’t even the short men (singular) with no communication skills who are against having women as lead roles (Jodie Foster in The Brave One) who green lights those very pictures. They aren’t women (singular) in black (every day) who hide in their office for the same reason and snap at those with talent. They aren’t the tall men (singular) who pretend to be visionaries yet believe a sequel or an old T.V. show (Yogi Bear possibly?) is artistic inspiration.
No sir Joe, they are the backbone who save those people from setting themselves on fire on a daily basis. Who actually pull together miracles to insure that short men and women in black can take credit for great moments and still will stand up when those same people deflect responsibility and blame away from themselves.
And WB makes money regardless of those who are two paragraphs above and because of those only one paragraph above.
Whether they are in the edit bays, the sound stages, the marketing meetings, the folks who distribute, they are the ones who will pay.
BTW Joe, they laid off a heap of people two years ago after a great year.
What’s your excuse for that moment in history?
“We are GOING TO BE in the worst economy since the great depression in 2008?”
Why exactly are there two studio heads at Warner Bros. Couldn’t they have eliminated one head and saved ~50 jobs from being cut based on one studio head’s salary? Why the duplicity? Where are the cuts at the top??
Just got hit from the whole debacle……..everyone knew, no one wanted to think it was them but it was. Being in post you cant help but know the amount of money WB spends on their marketing campaigns…….It is absolutely unreal………….and I would venture to say that half of the cost for a feature is on re-dos and do-overs of stuff that should have been done right the first time seeing as what they are paying (i.e……trailers…..tv spots…..)
With that being said……..it seems like the money being lost falls on the hands of the marketing people. Speed Racer was the biggest Marketing campsign of last year…….WB did more spots, tie-ins, and marketing for that picture than all……even more than Dark Knight. It flopped…….and was a huge loss for them…heads rolled……
The Dark Knight did very well and they well exceeded the quota…….but then the Christmas move was made and their prime player was Four Christmases. They pumped a lot of money into that movie……..a movie that they knew was not an award winner, but they figured they could make it up on the back end by numbers.
It just seems to me, with the amount of horrible features they are cranking out at WB, that they tend to put way more money into a film that they know is a dud…….
And trust me, they have films ready to explode, Horn just wants them to explode when it suits him….
Let us not forget that less than a year ago WB threw 600 people to the streets when they shutdown New Line Cinema. Then closed Picturehouse and even ended Warner Independent.
Welcome to the real world “Hollywood”.
How does that idiot Alan Horn keep a job through all this?
The same Warner Brothers that was looking to dump SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE and release it direct to dvd before they were able to work out a deal with Searchlight
I’m sorry to hear that mnore people are being layed off. Seems they do this every year, or every other year. What is job security with WB anyway? When I heard about the 800 – I went to type in Warners Bros layoffs and it added several selections…
…2005
…2008
…2007
…2006
When Warner Bros bought out Lorimar in 1989, there were 2500 that they let go. Times are tight, and when you’re in the entertainment business, it’s a want not a necessity.
i hope jeff bewkes get a very annoying long-lasting rash
As state above, everyone knew Halsey was fishing around for a better way to save a buck. What I want to be around to see is the youknowwhat hit the fan when Alan Horn’s PC breaks and he calls the help desk that will now be staffed in Poland. Then he will be forwarded to a crack IT support team in Bangalore who will try to remote in to fix it by telling him they have to reimage. GateWorks goes down enough, can you see them trying to reboot the server in the data center with a crash cart from India? Sorry we cant print your pass so you cant come on the lot.
What do you expect from a man who has vendors bid for the right to supply laptops. Everyone who got one has had a mother board fail, hard drive crash, you name it and then wait for a week while a part is ordered. I offered to go to Frys down the street and get my own hard drive. They said it would be too expensive. I aksed them how much it cost for me to sit in my office and not be able to work for those 5 days. It didnt matter. CapGem does not support many of the platforms and applications WB has just outsourced. Do you think they kept appropriate staff here for the transfer? I think not. CapGem is now scrambling to hire these resources in Bangalore…good for their economy, bad for ours.
These 800 jobs are just the first slice…more are coming as CapGem (or CrapGem as they are known in the industry) sells Halsey a load of BS which he swallows and asks for more. The meeting with CapGem this week was more a cheerleading session than an get to know you. The North America HR rep is from the UK. He knows the UK HR inside and out, he cant tell you a bloody thing about US HR rules. GRREAATTTT!
The people that were presenting were all proud that they joined CapGem after their company was downsized, rightsized, handed over to CapGem. They all had pretty smiles and Stepford Wife manners. They went out of their way to tell us how great it is to leave a secure job, at a company that used to be a blast to work for, near my home – so I can work at a company that will work me like a dog to make an an out of reach goal. Best off its a consulting company so I can be sent here and there to make them money while I lose my work/home life balance. None of them seem to have a balance and also dont seem to care.
The interviews with their staff are just a veiled way of trying to determine who will jump ship and who will come quietly. Make sure you get it all in writing from CapGem, they have promised lots, but have already failed to deliver. Meeting notice emails came to some stating use the VOTE button at the top of this email to let us know you are coming. What? Huh? What VOTE button – ok. Many never even got the email with the invite…then they blamed it on WB’s mail saying it must have gone to spam. OK. We have yet to hear anything concrete about the turnover or the new reporting structure. Many were told they would get a signing bonus – when asked CapGem said umm – no. Your commitment package clearly states your title and job description will be provided to you when you join or after. Who joins a company without knowing what their job description will be? We were told our salary would be the same OR BETTER (note the emphasis). Only reason my proposed salary will be better is because they need to cover the health benefits cost and 401K shortage. Really now.
Its not over, they still could figure out that it was all a bad dream and Bobby Ewing will be in the shower when we wake up, but I doubt it.
I wonder why Barry and Alan haven’t offered to take a pay cut? hmmm….
Folks:
I was one of the 2500 laid off from Lorimar in ‘89, I was on the Warners lot and just got the shaft as a WaMu corporate casualty.
Let me tell you how it works: the execs at the top NEVER suffer. Kerry Killinger, erstwhile CEO of WaMu, is currently in hiding in Italy while fondling his $24 million serverance. Which he got for taking a 119 year old institution and putting it in the shi**er.
If Alan Horn decides to star Brad Pitt in THE LIFE OF SARAH BERNHARDT and WB stock tanks, guess who takes the hit? Not AH, people.
When Lorimar went down, Bernie Brillstein, may he rest in peace, made a great show of publicly bursting into tears. Yet he went on to thrive, as all those in The Club do, and we who stand outside the velvet ropes go jobless. Welcome to America, Obama’s or not.
Someone used to tell me the term “failing upward”. Only asshole knows how to accomplish that. You guess it, I’m not one of them. That’s why I make shit and read this blog.
Upper management fails to see the writing on the wall. Consumers want to be able to download any movie (or television show) at their convenience. Movies and music are data, and currently the internet is the best medium for data transmission.
A high speed internet connection will eventually replace going to Target or ordering from Amazon.
The truth, the people I worked with came in to work anywhere from 9:20am to 10am, took un-monitored hour and a half lunches, and left work between 4:30 and 5:45. And when they were at their desks they were surfing the web, monitoring their blackberry’s and/or chatting with their friends and family on the phone. The exec’s and managers don’t really care, because they’re too busy attending time wasting meetings with over priced, and crappy, catered food from the lot, and they’re getting over-paid, so why should they care. I juggled and worked like a dog while my co-workers took smoke breaks every hour or more, visited their “friends” across the lot and on other floors, and small-talking with their bosses about their kids and plans for the weekend. There’s a problem when people are showing up to work in their flip flops, jeans and strappy tops, carrying large Starbuck’s drinks walking in fashionably late while their bosses phone is ringing off the hook. There’s a sense of self-importance because they’re working “on the lot” and there’s a huge lack of humility and a neverending surplus of cutesy girls with no business sense whatsoever. These layoffs should serve as a wake up call to all those time-wasters and idiots who think they are entitled just because they happened to be chosen from the loser pool and got lucky. And for those of us who do have a work ethic, show up early and leave late, and get no thank you except for a paycheck with huge deductions, the corporations are not for us. Corporations these days are for the slackers and minions who are just considered numbers, and easy come, easy go as they say. Don’t feel too sorry for these people folks. And this goes for Warner Music Group as well. That’s all!
and by the way…with all the crap this studio puts out it shouldn’t be a surprise the standards are so low when it comes to hiring staff and writers with no talent
i see all sides. i see the desperation on both sides. i know what it is like to be a temp. to have a company take you over. to take over a company. to be in the digs that decides all this. i was actually witness to a day when, upper management would *ask* the people that actually did the job, if changing the way a good idea, and listened to input. the Steven Ross, days. a “meeting” was too formal reserved for the quarters and year end. To resolve minor issues, a phone would be picked up, from a number was dialed and an actual phone conversation would take place; discussion BIG THINGS. No meetings needed, it was all direct, with a direct answer and or the promise of on as soon as available. THAT is efficient. A solution could be figured out, all within the company. Time Warner stock was was steady @ 100 per share. No outside consultants were involved. Just us. A good time to split.
Then AOL happened, not quiet sure “how”, was all between Steve Case and Geraled Levin; (a real ego trip of a deal for both, i can only assume (Levine pretending to be the late Ross on a decision of which he never would have approved; i assume), at the stake of so many. AOL/TimeWarner sank, like an iron tank… This was before Enron; mind you. So all at the WB end – lost – more than half of their 401k funds. It escapes me to this day, why Steve Case was never prosecuted for selling ALL of his shares in HIS NEW COMPANY to the day. Case sped off with an amount that anyone right now can Google; and it seems criminal that he was never arrested for “alleged” insider trading; perhaps because it was too much.
Yeah, it all looks good on paper, but the costs is an immeasurable deficit in the end.
A small point; a way that a company may think they may make a cut back: for example. A (non
mentioned) company has a cookie fund; and hat cookie fund is taken away. no more cookies, right? WRONG! the cookie fund, just becomes unregulated. because, there is another way to get cookies and those cookies become unregulated into other. and those unregulated cookies become even more expensive than the regulated original cookies. but no one knows why, overhead is so high. still. now on to the big fish. SAP. terrorist plot? soul sucking SAP, raped us from our lives and made us increase our staff to almost double. again… what looks good on paper, may – or in this case, WILL bite. and continues to do so; so – overhead. what to do about it… FIRST is to let all the consultants/outsourcing go and it is time for everyone actually involved to take a cookie break, roll up their sleeves and do some real work within the company. engage people that actually do the job to make it more effective/better for the company. the people that have been with/grown with the company for 20-30 to be involved. the real people. i feel bad for the people that work at warner bros that lost their jobs. but not for the fact that they lost their jobs, but for the fact that they have to actually try to train someone else, to do, what it is that they do by the instinct by the way of their experience. no one can teach “instinct” and it simply can not be translated to India or Poland. Anyone with the “in” of how the entertainment industry has always run, knows better. i feel bad. because the someone(s), who allegedly, don’t and or does have the experience, but maybe has an “advanced” graduates degree – or trumped up supposed, knowledge, of the entertainment industry, may or has not otherwise convinced – the trust of, to find themselves otherwise satisfied with what only with looks good on paper.