EXCLUSIVE: After weeks of checking out rumor after rumor, I'm finally able to pin down details of the long-overdue shakeup that's ahead for NBC when this fall's primetime schedule shapes up to be an unmitigated disaster. Someone has to shoulder the responsibility, and both Ben Silverman and the Reveille development exec he brought with him to NBC, Teri Weinberg, now deservedly have big fat targets on their foreheads. Staying in charge will be Marc Graboff and Katherine Pope who both have been trying to keep NBC up and running while Weinberg continually fucks up and Silverman regularly goes AWOL. For instance, last Thursday was Ben's first day in the office all month after attending the Beijing Olympics and guesting aboard Elisabeth Murdoch's yacht. (Elisabeth's Shine Group bought Ben's Reveille productions which put $60+ million directly into his pocket). But a pressing issue has been Silverman's partying ways, especially his excessive off-hours drinking and drug-taking, which has not only been visible to but also prompted complaints from Hollywood's TV community. "When he's around, he is totally engaged and focused and not in an altered state of consciousness. But that's when he's around. Literally, he has not been around from August 1st until August 28th, and you can't run a network programming group and not be around for the month of August," an insider tells me. So NBC is faced with two personnel problems simultaneously: Weinberg and Silverman.
Back in May 2007, I broke the story that NBC Universal boss Jeff Zucker was unceremoniously firing NBC Entertainment president Kevin Reilly, and surprisingly hiring Silverman to be partnered with Graboff as co-chairman of NBC Entertainment and NBC Universal Television Studio. It was a very risky move by Zucker, not helped by his cluelessness about Silverman's drug and alcohol habits until it became a real question whether Ben could pass the mandatory corporate drug test for prospectve employees. But TV circles were just as confounded a week later when I scooped that Ben had hired his Reveille gal Teri Weinberg to be the new EVP of NBC Entertainment. She had been his glorified gofer until just a few years ago, then his Reveille development exec (and held other titles, like his co-exec producer on Ugly Betty). Now she was in charge of comedy, drama and everything below Silverman and Graboff at NBC Entertainment. At the time, Weinberg's appointment was seen as a major mistake because she wasn't ready for such a major gig. She also was described to me as a "world-class prima donna" - and, from the sound of things, she has lived up to that reputation.
I'm told by insiders that Weinberg has been a train wreck, and it shows in this fall's terrible slate which bears her first imprint. "With Ben not involved in the day-to-day, Terry was too inexperienced to be thrown into the deep end of running a broadcast network with no experience. Yet Ben kept delegating it all to her. It became a huge, huge job, which she's just not qualified for," one insider explained to me. "I feel sorry for her. She's just in over head."
Weinberg's contract concludes next summer. But it's clear that NBC is now building a case to get rid of her. Last week, NBC took the unusual, almost unprecedented, step of cancelling an exclusive contract for a team of TV writer/producers, paying them off to the tune of millions of dollars, and letting them take back every one of their projects developed at the network. The reason is because one of the showrunners was Weinberg's live-in boyfriend.
Here's what I've been told by several knowledgeable sources: It's not that Mark Abrams and Michael Benson weren't qualified. They'd been writer-producers on both The Bernie Mac Show and Entourage. So that wasn't an issue when Weinberg secured for them an exclusive multimillionaire overall deal at NBC. (This was far from the only insider dealing at NBC since Silverman himself kept buying Reveille shows for his network.) But Weinberg was specifically warned not to get involved in their business because of the personal relationship. Yet insiders tell me she did again and again (especially with their pilot Zip, which was shot and reshot at exorbitant cost). It got to the point that complaints came in from the TV community.
"Teri just couldn't stay out of their business even though NBC had instructed her for months and months and months to do so," one insider informs me. "Other TV writer/producers began assuming that every decision Teri made was influenced by her relationship with her boyfriend's company. If she didn't buy something of theirs, they complained she was protecting her boyfriend's pitch. The truth is that this appearance of a conflict was really starting to hurt NBC's business." Echoed another source: "NBC couldn't deal with the conflict of interest anymore, so Zucker told Graboff to terminate the deal. And the network last week wrote a fat check for the whole amount of the contract even though it still had a year and a half to go, and they gave the guys all their projects back which they're now free to shop."
The result is that this lack of judgment, combined with this fall's weak schedule, has put Weinberg's head on the chopping block. Especially because her mentor Silverman won't be around much longer to protect her.
Up to now, it's been only Silverman's salesmanship, not his executive or programming skills (and certainly not his childish stunts like reviving the NBC chimes), that has helped the 4th place network. I'm told NBC was impressed that his relationships with advertisers put "several hundred millions of dollars" of additional revenue into the network's 2008/2009 upfront sales. But that doesn't offset the fact that Silverman is widely seen as a major disappointment. "If only NBC could take the good of Ben and ignore the bad of Ben," one insider tells me.
The laundry list of Silverman's faults reached critical mass after Ben began negotiating to sell Reveille and knew he would soon have the proverbial "fuck-you money" to tell Zucker et al to take the NBC job and shove it. The whispers about Silverman's off-duty behavior became loud chatter when he was drunk and disorderly at this year's SuperBowl where he notoriously made a fool of himself with NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg. That capped a period during which Ben began missing meetings and cancelling appointments and forgetting callbacks because of too many late nights where he had partied hearty. For some time, Endeavor talent agency owner Ari Emanuel had been counseling his pal to tone down this over-the-top behavior -- even last spring when both men were attending a cancer benefit dinner where Silverman was widely observed "high as a kite". During the fundraiser, Emanuel reminded Silverman that scheduled the very next morning was a big meeting about an important piece of Marvel Studios business between Endeavor and NBC, and Ari warned Ben not to be late. But the next day, Silverman was a no-show. Though Endeavor does 75% of its TV business with NBC, Emanuel didn't hesitate to complain directly to Zucker -- and the conversation focused on Silverman's over-indulgence of alcohol and drugs. Alarmed, Zucker instructed Universal boss Ron Meyer to determine if Silverman still wanted to work at NBC. As it happened, Meyer took Silverman to lunch at the studio at the same time Emanuel was there with Uni film chief Marc Shmuger. In full view of everyone, a shouting match ensued: Ben belligerently blamed Ari for getting him in trouble with his boss, and Ari aggressively shot back that it was justified, and neither man backed down. Meanwhile, at lunch with Meyer, Silverman said he wasn't interested in quitting despite his new-found fortune. So Meyer reported back to Zucker that Ben claimed to still want to be onboard. Silverman by all accounts shaped up and buckled down for weeks after. But then his work ethic became erratic again.
To be fair to Silverman, attending the Beijing Olympics was a command performance for all NBC and GE brass. But almost every other top TV executive would have hurried back after a week, tops, to supervise production of the fall schedule especially at a network where the new shows are already having problems before they're even on the air. There's general agreement that the one NBC scripted show which looks good is Kings, and the rest are going to be ratings disasters. It's thought to be the result of NBC forgoing pilot season and instead announcing series off scripts. Adding to this notion that the network's primetime is in creative freefall are repeated reshoots (like on Kath & Kim, the U.S. knockoff of the Aussie sitcom) and showrunners stepping down or pushed aside (like on My Own Worst Enemy, the Christian Slater series), none of which ever bodes well. That Silverman chose to stay away despite all this speaks volumes about his lack of commitment to his job. And that he was vacationing with Elizabeth Murdoch was like a shout-out to the TV community that he's looking for a graceful way out.
I'm told that NBC is hoping that Silverman jumps before he is pushed. And several sources have information to believe there is every reason that Ben is a short-timer. His contract, like Weinberg's, expires next summer. But already Ben's posse is letting it be known that he may start negotiating his out with an eye to exiting before December. His reasoning, according to insiders, is that, if by some miracle this fall's primetime schedule succeeds, he'd like to go out "a hero". And if it tanks, he doesn't want to go out "a failure" and get fired. However, office morale slumped on Thursday when Silverman returned after a month away and kept giddily telling everyone how newly "engaged" he feels. What a ridiculous statement and sentiment, only underscoring how wrong for the gig Ben really is.
One faction at NBC believes that, after Silverman and Weinberg exit, there may be no need to bring in new people because the existing network/studio team of Katharine Pope, Katie O'Connell, Jeff Ingold, and Erin Gough (as well as the team under them) is "rock solid". However, others believe USA Networks chief Bonnie Hammer would be a good leader if she'd even take the job. There's also talk that Zucker should put the entire NBC Universal entertainment unit under the administration of Ron Meyer, who after all has both a movie and TV background and was originally hired as prez/COO of Universal Studios to be in charge of both.
As for Silverman's future, pals expect him to partner with Elisabeth Murdoch or, somewhat more unlikely, his best friend Ryan Seacrest. (Ben was providing exclusive but asinine live reports from the Beijing Olympics for Ryan's syndicated Los Angeles-based morning radio show...) It doesn't really matter what Silverman does as long as he quits sooner rather than later. Because Jeff Zucker isn't man enough to admit a huge mistake and fire him.
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- Jeff Zucker To Flee Scene Of NBC Accident
- Ben Silverman Now Official NBC Employee
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- Ben Silverman Didn't Forget To Ass-Kiss
- Well, At Least He Didn't Call Me Rat Finke
- Ben Installs His Reveille Gal At NBC Ent
- Don't Sweep This Under The Rug, NBC
- NBC SHAKE-UP: My Final Wrap & Analysis
- Ben Silverman & Marc Graboff New Co-Chairmen Of NBC Ent/NBC Uni TV
- Kevin Reilly Officially Out. Ben Silverman Offered Bigger Job. Marc Graboff Upped.
- NBC SHAKE-UP! Ben Silverman Replacing Kevin Reilly?


Zucker should lose his job. Talk about someone who continues to fail upward! He didn’t see this coming?!?
Awesome. This is the best thing ever. I am getting so much perverse joy reading!
Whats his drug of choice? Is he a coke man?
This is a major slap in the face to people who work hard and take this business seriously.
The continued downward spiral of NBC, NBC News, NBC Sports and MSNBC demands that GE CEO Jeffrey Immelt resign. GE stock is at record lows, they continue to do business with Iran and their entertainment devisions are pathetic.
With Immelt gone, Zucker would have no protection and maybe, just maybe, a complete house cleaning would bring the proud peacock back “in living color”. From LA Law to Hill Street Blues to Cheers, Wings and Seinfeld, NBC has a legacy of quality that could be built upon once again. But to do that requires adults with vision, excitement and commitment. Zucker and Silverman have none of those qualities.
We should all be concerned. This isnt a joke. Silverman’s temporary stewardship, and Jeff Zucker’s near decade of destruction, has almost killed the institution of NBC. Sure, NBC Universal and GE’s profits are up. The cable business has grown tremendously; but there was no need for that growth to be at the expense of the network. NBC has the smallest roster of writers, the worst bench of producers, the strangest development process, and a schedule anchored by shows that have been around for 15 years (ER, LAW AND ORDER x 3).
They need to clean house, hire some people that focus 100% on quality, Emmy-caliber programming. Kevin Reilly had moved them in that direction. Katherine Pope is excellent and should be empowered. Katie O’Connell is pushing thru product despite her ridiculous bosses. Support those two with some strong business people (Graboff?) and let them rebuild the relationships with Warner Bros, Touchstone, Twentieth, and others that Ben has quickly destroyed.
Use this opportunity to fight back the easy, empty-calorie diet of reality shows and stunts. As HBO proved over the years, if you put quality product on the air, the audience will reward you for it. GREYS, CSI, HOUSE, LOST … these are highly rated and top quality programs. NBC was known for that, but with the exception of 2 comedies and one upcoming drama, they have an emptiness that is palpable.
Those of us that love TV need NBC to work. We’re down to 4 real broadcasters … the failure of this network would be doomsday for big budget dramas and comedies and backends and making a living in the tv biz.
so, please fire him. and maybe zucker too.
How come Ben’s always the devil and Zucker always gets a free pass, especially when most journalists know better?
This is ridiculous.
NBC Primetime has been a disaster since Jeff got involved and then got promoted out of that job.
The problem is not Ben, it’s Jeff. It’s always been Jeff.
He doesn’t know what to do to fix the problems and he doesn’t know who to hire to fix them. The only thing Jeff knows is that it’s best if Jeff stays forever – or until Jeff wants to leave. In Jeff’s mind, YOU leave, YOU quit. Jeff stays.
He’s a great talker. He has great ideas. A great person to be friends with. A great family man. You can listen to Jeff talk for hours. Jeff is awesome.
But Jeff is not a great person to run your entertainment company. You can talk to Jeff and walk away believing anything – and it’s always that it’s not Jeff’s fault. Or if it is Jeff’s fault, how great is Jeff for admitting it?
The best thing for NBCUNi is to dump Jeff.
The fish rots at the head, and these developments show really dysfunctional management at NBC at almost all of the top levels.
I don’t see Elisabeth Murdoch partnering with Silverman, she strikes me as a shrewd, and able businesswoman, especially with the way her Shine Group has grown so large, so quickly. She might use him in a “sales” position, but I doubt she’d have someone with his alleged habits as a partner or in any position of real responsibility.
A Seacrest partnership might happen, but that might finally sink the Seacrest ship.
I think it would probably be best for everyone if he takes his $60 million and retire.
NBC should be so lucky to get Bonnie Hammer, who is a really solid, sane executive. For her sake, I almost hope she just stays at USA.
Sorry to say, I am loving this Silverman implosion. Does the problem extend beyond him? Yeah, sure. It has long mystified me that Zucker keeps his job. (I think he’s actually a decent guy as a person. Which is rare for people at his level. But at the same time, I don’t think he’s a good fit for TV decision-making at that same level.)
However, to be fair to Zucker, Silverman is awful at his job. Just awful. No matter how hard you think you rock, there’s a point when even Hollywood needs you to show up sober and ready to work instead of douching it up on the party circuit.
I never understood why on earth you’d think that replacing Kevin Reilly with Silverman was a good move. I’m appalled that Silverman has continued to fail upward. Even if he’s reached the end of the line, 60 mil buys you a lot of strawberry-flavored coke to retire on.
Ben and Teri.
Two out of three ain’t bsd.
They would never hire Bonnie Hammer – she’s too normal. I have always thought it was a pity that Bonnie Hammer doesn’t run the CW – she would’ve been great.
What’s the buzz on NBC’s new show KINGS which is supposed to air in February? The pilot is done and a portion of it was shown at Comic Con…
I was looking forward to seeing the series premieres of My Own Worst Enemy, Kath & Kim, Crusoe, and Knight Rider at the NBC Fall Preview Party next week at the Paley Center. But they must really suck as they just did a last minute lineup change and are now showing the season premieres of Chuck, Life, and Lipstick Jungle instead. It’s pretty sad when you don’t actually have any new shows to show during a fall preview event.
Zucker is the real problem there, that he hired another putz in Silverman is not surprising. That Zucker renewed Kevin Reilly’s contract while secretly negotiating with Silverman is disgusting but not surprising. That Zucker thought Silverman was better than Reilly shows how clueless Zucker really was and is, it continues to amaze that the GE execs haven’t figured any of this out.
this is what happens when a guy with a penis for a head rises to the top.
Gee This is why I’m writing a play this year.
Television in General sucks.
At least in off Broadway you can sleep with whomever you want and no one really cares as long as the show makes money.
NBC’s lineup
As for programming. Maybe NBC should go back to radio shows. Like Burns and Allen. I hear Seinfield is doing commercials so they can’t revive that show.
Oy.
Why everyone learned nothing doing the writer’s strike
Theirs no business like show business. I can’t even get an interview let alone a pitch deal like these guys did. Buy back who the hell would do a buy back, don’t they have a morality escape clause in their 100 page contracts. Further I thought they weren’t developing for TV any more, just doing more reality shows.
Women who help out their men.
Maybe I should hang out at better coffee shops and keep and eye on the suits instead of the bikini top girls.
While we’re all passing around that saucer of milk, can we at least congratulate Nikki Finke for remarkable reporting and analysis? Not only has she clearly cultivated multiple inside sources, but she’s tracked, developed, and written a story that has drawn, as I type this, 17 supportive comments and no disputes — and on a holiday weekend.
I wonder if the new boss will hit the hold button on Conan and keep Leno. It’s bad enough they let Scrubs get away. Just kidding about Scrubs.
Abrams and Benson… the Paris Hilton and Ryan Seacrest of the writing community.
At least Ben has that “Entourage” guest spot to fall back on.
I mean, if that didn’t speak volumes…
Holly shit, Nikki. That’s a story.
USA has been corrupted into NBC Lite and Sci fi Channel has been even further corrupted now that metrics have been abandoned:
http://www.syfyportal.com/news425335.html
Wrestling, “reality” shows, and fantasy on Sci fi Channel!?! Read any talkbalk/comments re: Sci fi Channel and learn of the fanbase fury. Scorning the fanbase while attempting to reach a wider out-of-genre base is ridiculous…And NBC is failing at both: That is the current state of the NBC Cable.
Remember what is happening to Fox re: Watchmen.
Now you propose to have their leadership lead the broadcast ship? How difficult is it to put reality or a procedural or any other repurposed program and squeeze out viewership? There is a reason Peter Liguori is at the head of Fox while others in cable stay in cable. You have to take risks in order to find success and that is rare commodity at GE/NBC.
Personally, I am glad GE/NBC is suffering. Back when I was at Universal we were at the top of the game but after GE/NBC took over we all were swept out.
Karma is a bitch and I hope NBC’s advertisers recognize how pathetic your programming schedule iu and you choke on the givebacks.
just a regular tv watcher here: anyone who’s in charge of finding a decent show to put on after Heroes on Monday nights for *3 years* and can’t do it. whoever that is, they need to get fired.
I’m in awe of what’s happening with this site. It is widely read, and it prints the kinds of stories that make the behind-the-scenes people in this town (and the in-front-of-the-scenes people for that matter) accountable for their hideous behavior. I know for a fact that a hugely powerful woman who was slammed on DHD a few weeks ago was furious about the incriminating stories and ensuing unflattering comments about her (they were all true, FYI). Apparently, she called it a wash because she thought the picture of her Nikki posted was good. Deluded and hilarious. The big point is, the kind of stories that were only whispered about before are now on the record. It’s amazing. The high and mighty have to be a lot more careful these days — most of them are rich and will always be rich, but they can’t bully their way to good public perceptions anymore. Bravo. Just make sure to use this power responsibly, Nikki, because it’s also obviously true that false stories about good people are seeded among the true stuff…
@ Amazed -
I know you’re taking about Dawn Ostroff. And honestly, that was such a good photo of her, I thought it was a mistake.
And yes, she is deluded.
Here’s a thought…maybe corporate GE wants to dump NBC now that they’ve made their inroads into the next greatest market on earth, China vis a vis the Olympics. After all, they really bent over backwards to kiss the People’s Republic’s collective asses. What better way than to hire a time bomb ready to go off like Silverman who is “overseen” by basically a glorified morning show producer (that’s you, Jeffie boy), then let them shit can the whole shebang?
Everyone knows it’s not about Ben.
You really want to fix NBC?
Fire Zucker and bring in Tom Freston.
If you took pot out of the Hollywood equation, most of the films you report on Nikki would cease to exist. That isn’t exclusive to NBC, it’s a creative ingredient for this entire town. Thought someone should stick up for the sticky, it’s too lazy to defend itself.
Since I was away all day & only now could read the story, I have to echo so many previous commenters:
How the Hell do the two Jeffs keep their jobs?
What the fuck is wrong with the GE board of directors, let alone the executive committee, which is supposed to made up of actual adults that have the company’s best interests at heart?
NBC is a flailing mess & nothing that Little Jeffie does is going to succeed as this guy went above his level of competence at the Today Show!
Does Little Jeffie have pix & video of Immelt & the board in compromising situations?
And I’m not joking one bit when I ask that question, as nothing else explains how someone can fail this badly & publicly & still keep his job!
Finke I love the story. But geez you didn’t couch the drug stuff at all, I hope you have a smoking gun and rock solid sources because otherwise I assume you’ll hear from someone’s lawyer on Tuesday. That being said what is actually the rap on these shows they did develop. Are they funny? Good? Silverman has been saying that NBC’s profits are up, if this is actually true can’t that buy him more time. I assume rehashed 1980s reality shows are cheaper than real shows and thus don’t need big ratings to make them profitable.
Dawn Ostroff is right behind him. “Easy Money” looks cheap, drab and slow paced… though maybe the fantastic Laurie Metcalf can save. “Valentine”, am I the only one that thinks it’s a rip-off of “Cupid?” And of course we know “In Harm’s Way is stolen. But it’s not so much that all they’re are so awful is they do not fit in at all with the brand.
I get Privileged, Stylista, etc. The others, not so much.
Wow … I think the old saying is truly appropriate in this case …”the chickens have come home to roost.”
Fire all three of them and see if the network can return to interesting, quality programming once again. After all, there is no where for the network to go but up. Good luck!
Nikki,
I’m with Chris wondering what’s up with NBC’s dev. (though I hear “Kath & Kim” is getting tons of retooling. What about Greg Daniels stuff? Other deals?
At least NBC Universal’s syndication division is doing well.. But the network line up sucks. Badly.
Some of Silverman’s decisions have been totally laughable this development season but I can’t help but wonder whether this upcoming parade of fail will help or hinder those shows that NBC already has on the cusp of breaking out like the wonderous 30 Rock or the very enjoyable Chuck.
Frankly after last year’s dire Bionic Woman redux what on Earth possessed Silverman to try his hand at Knight Rider? Last year’s TV movie was among the very worst things I have actually sat down and watched. But the ratings were solid so he should thank himself lucky and left it at that. But no. Now we have another series that no one asked for.
That could yet be NBC’s logo for this upcoming season.
NBC 2008/9 – Making shows that no one asked for.
They are already reverting to type by ordering stuff like John Wells (admittedly quite interesting sounding) pilot LAPD. But, as I said, as long as this misfire of a season doesn’t bring down shows like the 30 Rock and Chuck with the rest of the dreck, then I’m sure NBC will be able to dust itself off and come back (hopefully) anew next season.
Though in saying that, I’m really interested to see the ratings for (and how NBC handles) imports like the Robinson Crusoe and the BBC’s Merlin series. Personally I think that American broadcast networks could benefit from a little (inexpensive) imported drama from the likes of the BBC.
But that’s just me.
what on Earth possessed Silverman to try his hand at Knight Rider? Last year’s TV movie was among the very worst things I have actually sat down and watched. But the ratings were solid so he should thank himself lucky and left it at that. But no. Now we have another series that no one asked for.
Probably because there’s a fanbase in place for it and 12 million people watched it.
I wish you’d stop writing opinion pieces and stick to journalism. But since there is no journalism, we’ll have to make due with slanted opinion. The problem at NBC is Jeff Zucker. Ben Silverman could fit in to some kind of a creative box if only he had a partner who had the bonafides to engage with him creatively. From day one Zucker has been a disastaer and yet never seems to answer for anything. I like Ben and find him to be a maverick in the best sense of the word, he just never should have gotten this gig in the first place. Reilly comes with his own complications, but he programmed the hits arl, Heroes, Office, 30 Rock and to a lesser extent, critics darling Friday Night Lights. In most environs, that’s a star. But Zucker couldn’t handle the teflon Reilly nor his Waspy, frat boy ways, and knew that at some point he had the chops to replace him at GE. Classic Hollywood greed and hubris. Now it’s all a mess and Zucker should be fired for gross mis-management of one of the great brands in the world.
Rev it up –
I was not talking about Dawn Ostroff. It doesn’t surprise me, though, that my little piece of insider info applies to more than one cruel egomaniac.
Hey, even NBC’s “web series” suck. Did anyone get through even episode one of Gemini Division? I bailed at 2:39 (out of 5:52) and my brain had already been gasping for breath within the first 60 seconds.
Oh, and Zucker’s contribution to the History of TV? “Super-sized” episodes.
Maybe NBC should air all the Olympic sports they didn’t air in primetime cause they were too busy showing beach volleyball. I, for one, would much rather watch some of the boxing, LOTS more track, rowing, etc. than bad sitcoms and dull dramas.
I am totally serious here…
Dawn Ostroff postings – hilarious!
This is excellent, juicy reporting Nikki. Your postings are always enjoyable.
“Kings” looks great, and I am POSITIVE that Michael Green knows what he’s doing, but it doesn’t premiere until January. It’s possible that ALL of NBC’s fall premieres will fail. The media has seen more of midseason Kings BTW (first 20 mins at Comic-Con) than fall series K&K, Knight Rider or My Own Worst Enemy.
I don’t know anything about Zucker except he’s the schmuck who fired Kevin Reilly. I want Reilly and Steve McPherson to do a buddy comedy together. One’s the suave uptown preppie, the other’s a gyro-lovin’ blue-collar joe. Together…they fight crime, bad TV and the likes of Ben Silverman.
I am so grateful Nikki is writing about this conflict of interest at NBC but it has been going on since day one of Ben’s arrival. The Reporter and Variety never bothered to write about this even though NBC’s development list was all Reveille stuff. Jeff never liked Kevin. Which really shouldn’t matter because Kevin did a great job. Somehow Kevin didn’t grovel enough. Ben felt familiar to Jeff. But the problem has been from day one is that Ben was only buying Reveille shows. Which is sort of against the law and I am sure disgruntled WGA members could file a class action law suit against this network.
During the strike Jeff was outraged and deeply angered at the writers and vowed his pound of flesh. But again this shows such a lack of nuanced understanding of the connective tissue that has behind the many layers of developing a TV show good or otherwise. Jeff would prefer that NBC is all Reality or News based because that is what he can understand. He doesn’t like creative types. He resents them deeply. He resents paying them. And then he resents trusting their visions. Jeff learned how to make TV at the TODAY show. Which decisions are all made under the guise of time or what Good Morning America is doing. It is so simple. Straight forward and clear. Kevin did remarkable work leaving the creators of The Office, Heroes, 30 Rock and Friday Night Lights ALONE to succeed or fail. TV audiences want original voices. In hiring Ben I believe Jeff thought he was hiring himself with some extra ingredient thrown in. A network can be run with plenty of narcissism but Jeff’s kind is dangerous because he shoots himself in the foot. His lack of soul searching is what is profound about the guy. And he has four kids and nice wife and he survived cancer. He needs to let something real penetrate that hubris or he is doomed.
While Hollywood waives its Obama banners, they continue to deal in this perverse nepotism and favoritism which has the effect of racial bias and general discord.
The fix for Hollywood is to level the playing field and promote on merit.
@ the commenter from 11:17am
Do not use the name Tartikoff to post politically charged, race-baiting comments on this page.
Tartikoff is a legend and was a great man.
And the problem with this town may be based on nepotism, but it is not based on race (there aren’t five shows in all of prime time Television with a Black lead).
There are some very good people at NBC. Hopefully, soon, they will get their chance to steer it in a new course.
I don’t understand how the conflict of interest with ben buying his own shows was tolerated by the tv community? Seriously, how did this continue? Nikki, this is great stuff. Now I’m moving on to Sarah’s newly anticipated grandchild. That’s great stuff too….
Before you go crowning Kevin Reilly as some kind of genius, Reilly HATED “Heroes” when he saw the pilot, he thought “Kidnapped” was going to be NBC’s big hit that fall. And don’t forget Reilly’s the guy who wasted tens of millions on Bionic Woman and green-lighted last season’s dead-on-arrival NBC fall line-up. Neither Reilly nor Silverman should have been hired to program a network.
I’ve worked twice with Ben and Terri at Reveille – She is a smart, savvy developer and a true supporter of writers. Ben was around less, but he is an enthusiastic guy who very hard to get these shows on the air. I had no problem with him. I wrote a pilot at NBC last season for them and it was a difficult process. Partly because they were in new jobs, but MOSTLY because the strike messed up any chance at normal development. They have had once development season and it was totally fucked up by the circumstances. I would like to see what they could do during peacetime. Final word: They were the only network not to cut ONE SINGLE WRITER DEAL DURING THE STRIKE. That counted for something with me…
Has it been pointed out that Silverman embraces the spoof of his lifestyle on The Office?
Will the ghost of the great Brandon Tartikoff please stand up?
Quote:Though in saying that, I’m really interested to see the ratings for (and how NBC handles) imports like the Robinson Crusoe and the BBC’s Merlin series. Personally I think that American broadcast networks could benefit from a little (inexpensive) imported drama from the likes of the BBC.
That’s a cop-out – are these execs so incompetent they can’t even bother to re-make the ideas they steal? (Don’t answer that question, haw.) As for the rest of us, we can watch everything on DVD and/or “alternative methods.” There’s no substitute for original programming.
BG… Don’t know where you get your facts, but Ben and Terri cut LOADS of writer deals during the strike. People I know personally. And they cut people for personal reasons (the quote I heard was Terri kept certain people based on how ‘cute’ or ‘not that cute’ they were). Thank god I was dealing with other folk by the time these poseurs came on board. Had one meeting with Terri a few years ago, after which it took everything in my power not to hang myself.
And Nikki’s got it COMPLETELY RIGHT… One of the only deals NOT to get dumped was Benson and Abrahms. No problem with them personally, although Zip was horsecock, no matter what draft you read.
Don’t bother anointing Ben and Terri as good people in a bad situation. They are bad people with bad ideas on a drowning network. Clear and simple. Time to take out the trash… Hope someone comes to their senses and kicks Zucker out on his wee ass soon too.
BTW, anyone see the cover story of Portfolio magazine? None other than the miniscule prince of mediocrity his bad self… Jeff Zucker. Apparently, according to the cover… he has a plan.
great info here..
Is it a battle of stars/plebians, craft/craft or producers/trade??
Problem’s ZUCKER… NO Hair + NO Vision = NO More a Boy Wonder.
Zuckers a hack. TV 360 was his bold idea for the Internet, I assume he developed that concept while spinning on his head grasping for inspiration.
And GE loves that kind. There are mini zuckers all over the company. All light bulb salesmen with no vision or ability, just GE monkeys working to scrap pennies together for their division.
The Net and the Studio love to put shows into production with failure in mind. “Surface” would have been a masterful hit but no one inside wanted to deal with the “size” of it. When people started watching they hacked the scripts down to avoid FX and cut cost. That show faded away. They sunk the ship on purpose.
They refused to provide NBC talent as guests on the “Megan” talker.
No help from within…
There is no interest from the powers at be to uphold any sort of reputation with the audience.
The UMS PRODUCTION SERVICES division alone could be replaced by a $200 SWITCHBOARD. Savings millions.
But, “they” rather spend the countless dollars on paying nobody’s to do nothing then spend their money the right way. Most execs don’t even go into their offices anymore. The factory is on auto-pilot.
It has almost become very Bush like, in the “with us or against us” attitude inside.
I was once yelled at for saying I though a pilot we screened “wasn’t that funny.”
The over-sized number crunchers run everything.
Creativity no longer has a home at NBC. They don’t care for TV.
Teri Weinberg is a great developer, a great executive, a loyal friend and a very hard worker. She is not, however a prima donna. At all. Period.
I second Paul’s comment. Vote Tom Freston In.
NBCU/U most certainly DID cut writer deals during the strike. Whoever posted that they did not is incorrect. I think what you meant to say is that they didn’t cut Abrams & Benson’s deal. Didn’t really notice them on the picket lines, either. Hmmm. I guess they were busy doing something other than picketing. Hmmm.
I pray that GE brass are reading these comments.
While it’s true that the Ben Silverman regime is not one of the network’s finest, the real reason for the NBC’s dismal state of affairs is Jeff Zucker.
GE management should at long last hold Jeff accountable for his poor management and programming decisions.
The first casualties of the WGA win in the strike
NBC did not terminate any script deals during the strike. Not one. That is a fact. Name one script deal that was terminated.
to Amazed:
heard the same story, hilarious. ah, this town.
and i’ve never gotten zucker. never, ever. when i first heard silverman was getting the nbc job i seriously thought it was a joke. i was in a meeting once with him when he was a producer and thought how ridiculous and immature he was — then. how could that idiot ever possibly run a network? and his reports on ryan seacrest’s show were insane for someone at this job to be doing. if u haven’t heard them, go to the link nikki put up and go to ON DEMAND interviews, scroll down. absurd, absurd. congrats on the story nikki, great read.
BG you are a moron. Writer’s deals were cut at NBC. Many of my colleagues lost their deals. Where do you get your info? THE GLOBE? Teri Weinberg has no talent. She is controlling and wouldn’t know a good tv show if it bit her in the %#^@. The sitcom has gone the way of the dogs and NBC is a skeleton of what it once was. Remember, people in Hollywood fail upwards, do a bad job here, come and work for us for twice the money. Fail there, make 4 times as much next time out….That is why TV is horrible. I’m at home with a TIVO full of Cheers and Frasier reruns. I hear Teri is working on a 3rd spin off of The Office? It will be about her and Ben sitting in their new offices in North Hollywood somewhere.
Okay, so Ben Silverman is basically a hustling and somewhat charismatic, ambiguously sexual (oh, please, you’ve all heard the stories) druggie and Teri Weinberg is a vacant and materialistic past-her prime cougar who has no business being a creative exec, because she is neither. The whole town knows that, and has for some while….But isn’t that the scary part? People like Teri and Ben–as a matter of fact EXACTLY Teri and Ben–get the last laugh because we all knew exactly what they were and everyone simply allowed this to happen and validated it by trying to get into business with them. Forget that the emperor had no clothes, we all just wanted what they had ($$$) and guess what boys and girls–they’re going to get a lot more in their “exit packages…” Who’s the joke on now? Shame on us…..
I walked the picket lines with Mike and Marc and have done business with them as well. Good guys, good writers, good producers. I feel bad people that obviously don’t know them or worked with them are posting douchey comments on here.
@TadAllagash : Thank you! Have known both Silverman and Tartikoff, and the continued comparison is nauseating.
When will the national media pick up on the incompetence of Jeff Zucker? G.E. has lost literally billions in ad revenue since his mystifying ascendancy at NBC.
Obviously CNBC would never address it, but what about the Rupert Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal? Maybe they’re so happy at having inept competition at NBC that they don’t want to rock the boat.
Nikki should do an article on that lying weasel Zucker for Vanity Fair or New York magazine and expose him to G.E. shareholders worldwide with the excellent type of reporting that she did for this post.
In response to “Tartikoff” (a true legend sorely missed) Blacks are over-represented on TV and definitely Advertising. Blacks make up only 12% of the population (you can go to the US Census Bureau and check this) yet make up far more in Ads and TV roles. Nielsen also has ratings available for download, compare to the total population and Hispanic (”back out” Whites only) to see the size of the population: Whites 75%, Blacks 12%, Latinos/Hispanic 13%, with Latinos/Hispanic not watching much English Language TV (to put it mildly) according to Neilsen’s ratings.
What NBC needs is another Tartikoff. Who understands demographics and can make good moves. Nikki’s article sounds solid — appalling nepotism and drug-fueled bad decisions making the schedule into mush with shows targeted at no one really.
ABC at least knows what it’s about: women. CW (is failing) because they’re young women (and there just aren’t enough demographically for that to pay out with all the competition for young women). CBS is older men. Fox is younger women.
A good move would be NBC as younger men’s network, and exploit that demographic advantage and the lack of competition. Heroes, Chuck, Life, and Friday Night Lights are all shows that appeal to that demo. Even better would be scheduled cross-overs ala Marvel/DC to build the “brand.” It would be exciting to have say, “Chuck” show up in Heroes twice a season, and say the guy in “Life” in Chuck, within continuity. This isn’t new, old time 50’s TV shows worked the same gag with Gracie Allen which probably dates back to radio. Because it works.
Understand the recession means guys will cut back on the video games. Offer them shows based on adventure and excitement with a self-contained, pop-pulp universe where shows regularly cross over. It’s not like networks compete for men, and the competition for women is brutal. There’s enough talent to execute action/adventure too, comedy is just brutally hard to do successfully.
my NBC experience predates Silverman/Weinberg’s. But I can speak for the decade leading up to it. Among the striking, repeated examples of dysfunction at NBC:
- the idea that this is cyclical, they’ve bottomed out, it’s only a matter of time until they’re back on top…then they discover a new bottom.
- they’ve long promoted from within. Idiot execs, teaching idiot junior execs. NBC lops off the head of the snake every couple years and everyone jumps up a level. Network execs, especially at NBC are historically bottom-feeders. Enamored of the industry, they’d gladly do something else…only by and large, they just can’t. They give notes (merely for the sake of giving notes) and take the constructive approach of a torpedo. While admittedly unfair to bash within the anonymity of this board, I can honestly say I’ve never met dumber people than the network brass at NBC’s network or studio.
And two of the four NBC execs of the future, that Nikki mentions above? One is excellent, one is ok, one is an insecure psychopath and the latter is someone whose name I’ll never forget. Because when I shook her hand, pre-promotion, roughly 5 years ago, I told co-workers, she was the dumbest person in the building. The future’s so bright…!!
- Reilly was wrong for the place, as he’s the only one who gave the impression that he knew what he was doing. As D-girls sat stammering through mindless notes, Reilly could ID a problem and suggest fix-its, seemingly invested and not speaking just to hear his voice. How novel…
A real shame over there.
Only hope is to bring Warren Littlefield back and I’m only 10% kidding.
If Mark Abrams and Michael Benson had an exclusive deal or deals at NBC, I am guessing they were cut by Jeff Zucker. Bad move.
Anyway, this news has been a long time coming. I wouldn’t be surprised to see Ben and his friend off before the end of October. And Nikki, I am putting in another name to replace Ben Silverman at NBC; Lorne Michaels. He is an Yes man for Jeff Zucker and his departure from SNL would allow Tina Fey to take over, and create a “Look a woman is running the show” kind of good feeling while Lorne Michaels would be touted to advertisers as NBC’s savior. Now I know this doesn’t make sense, but nothing Jeff did made any sense.
Get off Kevin, while not genius by any means, there is nothing better than watching him and Peter trade “whateva man” looks during meetings while creative producers ramble on about their vision. I think Zucker is a idiot, no scratch that, I know Zucker is an idiot. The fact that Ben is out treading water with the smart daughter of his business enemy and Zucker has not had his office boxed up is evidence of that. I pray that Benny boy does not make his way over to Newscorp, we have enough fly- by- nights to deal with, cough-Walden-cough, cough, so please Elisabeth, I hope he was the entertainment for you and nothing more. Don’t ask daddy to find him a place or give him any sort of deal, we are just starting to clean up over here.
WHAT?!?!?!? -
You are completely right. I met on Zip and as I was reading it I was thinking, gee anyone can get a pilot deal if they are gonna spend money on this turd.
I walked the picket lines with Mike and Marc and have done business with them as well. Good writers, good producers and good guys.
Will this management shakeup pull NBC out of its third place ratings? Jay Leno has been making the third place a but of jokes. Also could the news division face a shakeup in the future?
Thank God (or Nikki) that someone is finally exposing all this. That a public company like GE would allow itself to be used by Silverman to artificially inflate the value of his Reveille company so he could sell it is borderline (not so borderline?) criminal.
From Day One Ben and Teri have worked to further not the interests of NBC’s (and GE’s) bottom line, but to further there own. Teri canceled previously picked up projects and derailed others to make way for her boyfriend’s projects, Ben picked up Reveille shows straight from script (or in the case of the Office spinoffs, not even a script) to series, eliminating any pesky competition from non-Reveille shows that may have inconveniently turned out better. They used the strike as the excuse to execute this gameplan, even though other networks did not resort to such tactics.
That it took this long for all of this to see the light of day is a little shocking. That Nikki is the one who broke it is not surprising at all.
Wow. Part of me hopes it turn out all to be bogus, so I won’t have another piece of required reading every day. But until then, I’m on board. Great reporting.
Quote: He (Lorne Michaels) is an Yes man for Jeff Zucker and his departure from SNL would allow Tina Fey to take over.
…and 30 Rock? Assuming LM was to take over, since he’s EP on 30 Rock and Tina has like 4 jobs at 30 Rock. WHat would happen to that show?
What blows me away the most is that it’s taken this long. You can see that Silverman and Zuker are both truly incapable of running a network. You have two in house executives (without the addition of Bonnie Hammer) in Ron Meyer and Vivi Zigler who could easily run NBC and quickly turn it back around. I think that some of the other execs (Jeff Ingold) should not be asked back considering NBC hasn’t developed a decent comedy in years.
Ben, you’re showing…
Hmm…whiskey’s post is interesting about attracting male viewers.
I think NBC would have to REALLY revamp its sports coverage to attract more males – I’m sorry but Bob Costas and Keith Olbermann on Sunday Night Football is just embarrassing. At least Al and John are still calling the games.
What about utilizing the successful cable properties? Build up ‘Sci Fi Fridays’ or something for high school geeks-Rerun Battlestar Galactica Friday nights at 10, – hell, even put Stargate up there or rerun Surface. Dig out ORIGINAL Bionic Woman for Gen Xers at midnight.
Better than another stupid reality show.
…and in fairness to Teri, having developed something with her, I found her very accessible with a great sense of story and an overall good executive.
See? This is why I love Nikki. Who else would tell this story the way it is?
Between this and all the revelations about a certain inexperienced vp candidate…you just have to love the fact that in the internet age, news isn’t controlled and defined by a select few anymore…
Great stuff.
tams, BG… you guys must be getting fluffed by Ben and Terri, or partaking in Ben’s delightful “thinkin’ powder”. MANY MANY MANY deals were thrown to the wayside. To say any different is a disservice to good, talented writers who were cut off for no other reason than they had no personal ties to Ben and Terri. This is not conjecture. This is fact, said many times, heard with my own two, good workin’ ears. Don’t bother defending their largess… Again, bad people. Bad bad people. Even people who work with them on other projects, behind closed doors, have told me they are cyphers at best, detrimental to the process at worst.
Also, you are so right Yikes… these ‘execs of the future’… yeesh. The person you refer to is ABSOLTELY THE DUMBEST of the dumb. I assume we speak of the same person… and I really appreciate the Freudian misspelling of one of the people in question in Nikki’s initial post. A person jab? you betcha!
Please stop defending these turd farmers. It’s insulting to those whose heads were unceremoniously lopped off.
And here’s the thing — Ben doesn’t care. He’s laughing at all of us as he deposits his hundred of millions in the bank. In Ben’s mind he was “done” and waiting and welcoming his firing on the day he was hired. Being hired was his exit strategy. Once he sold himself to Zucker, he sold his company, and then bought his own shows. This guy is a genius as promoting himself. He fooled you all. Eat it.
One of the big mistakes made by Silverman & Company was to erase the serial “Las Vegas” (one of the few programmes keep up the ratings of NBC) without a final and underestimate the power of fans of this serial and viewers who still refuse categorically to protest not look more different programmes of NBC. Why watch a program that is so then erased?
The fans of Las Vegas hope to have the season final they deserve after 6 years of loyalty to the show and NBC.
Teri and Ben MOST CERTAINLY did cut writer deals during the strike, as was widely reported in places like Variety:
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117979041.html?categoryid=2821&cs=1&query=TV+studios+cut+more+overall+deals
They did so with mere days remaining in the strike when a deal was in sight. What the commenter named “tams” may be referring to is that after cutting many writer deals, Teri then opted not to not axe any script deals on pilots they had made (which would have been much smaller drop-in-the-bucket savings anyway, as the real money is spent on development deals with proven writers).
Maybe Silverman and Weinberg have done a horrible job. I don’t know them and will judge from afar in a few weeks. But what about Graboff? Notice how these “business” types keep moving into these top positions and remain unscathed no matter how badly everything is going on around them! It used to be that these people actually GREW UP in the programming ranks and LOVE figuring out programs (bow to Tartikoff, first person to extend encouragement to me, a lowly peon not yet staffed, that meant volumes way back then). In contrast, Zucker doesn’t know the first thing about programming yet survives year after year-why because the GE folks, who also know nothing about programming, like him and he can talk their talk! Graboff takes no responsibility for NBC’s failures either-it’s all Silverman, but last I read, don’t most of those NBC execs report to both of them? HBO is run by non-creative types now, pretty scary, and look at the recent crap they’ve put on compared to the old days–and compared to how Showtime is blossoming with Greenblatt, known very much for creative instincts and loving TV, running the place. Moonves is too far removed from LA and Tellem I hear is way in over her head without him as involved, not to mention their programs are so deadly dull or embarrassing (Swingtown?) that one wonders if there is any inspiration left there (to think this is the network that once did groundbreaking stuff in comedy). We’ll see how Ligouri/Reilly do at Fox but my money is cautiously on them for now. With their marketing and development backgrounds, and the fact they actually care about TV, at least they will attempt to do interesting stuff; I hope they get the time to prove themselves. Point is, it’s a different ballgame now with the non-creatives taking over these companies and trying to figure out the creative. Zucker is the most idiotic example of it, but it isn’t NBC alone these days that is walking down the Zucker road. It’s easy to kill the creative types for believing in the wrong things especially when they get an average of 12-18 months to prove themselves (Tartikoff had his failures too, anyone remember “Pink Lady and Jeff”?-enough to fire any network prez today all by itself!), but what about these business types taking responsibility too? Or the people above them reexamining the system and challenging themselves to go with creative types who may not talk their talk but at least care about the programs-which is what should count?
Jamie, the above is what Alec Baldwin says about 30 Rock and its relationship to NBC in the September 8th edition of The New Yorker. Besides the relationship isn’t regarding Lorne Michaels, it is regarding Tina Fey. 30 Rock is her creation and hers alone. Lorne just is there because his Broadway Video outfit helps produce the show along with SNL, Late Night with Conan O’Brien, and soon to be the Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien. The only show that is Lorne Michaels concern is SNL which he created in 1975. He is most likely hands off with 30 Rock except to let Tina and her staff know what NBC events are coming down the pipeline so they can use the event in the context of an episode. 30 Rock would suffer greatly if Tina Fey had to take care of SNL as well and the best way to do that is make Lorne Michaels the NBC Programming head because he would have to give up SNL and the only way he can afford to give up the show is if Seth Myers, for example, is the new head of SNL. Otherwise, both SNL and 30 Rock dip in quality and could be cancelled.
I don’t know — this report is obviously juicy and gossipy and conveys a key fact: 90% of the folks under Ben and Terri despise working for them, but is a shake-up really imminent? Where is that side of the story exactly. I think when Zucker looks at the balance sheet he sees that the most profitable show on the NBC is “The Biggest Loser” — a Silverman franchise that remains the only reality show to that can face down American Idol when it’s head-to-head with it in the ratings. And Ben surely has more reality hits up his sleeve. Ben’s a nice guy. He’s not pretentious and he’s not Satan. Some of that “next generation” of execs mentioned above are the most Machiavellian, pompous, troll-like people in Hollywood, and have hardly developed anything more than a skin rash.
I couldn’t have said it better myself, Yikes@12:01am. I worked at NBC during the glory years and am appalled at how far they’ve fallen. Little Jeffie is most, but not all, of the problem. Getting rid of him will go a long way to fix the problems there, but they are many.
Some of those execs Nikki named are able to step in, but Jeff Ingold? Not so much. Frankly, I’m surprised he’s still there. Shocked is a better word. Has he got no place else to be? He’s a dead-ender with no taste and less ability as an executive.
Warren, for all his faults, could run circles around Little Jeffie as a programmer. But I know Warren. He’d rather be staked out on an anthill.
Late to the party — Obviously, Ms. Weinberg turned you down. Gorgeous, intelligent women rarely go for loser, women-hating pigs. Your mother must be so proud. Just charming.
I can’t wait to see Ben Silverman go down. He’s a spoiled rich kid who I frankly resent because while I work my ass off to earn success in Hollywood, he takes his silver spoon for granted, and only seems to use it for cooking up drugs. (In fairness to Ben, I can’t confirm 100% what drug he was using, but I did know he was using drugs)
While I can’t comment specifically on what drugs he’s using, I will say he was dating druggie rocker chick Dirty Harry (look up her myspace) and I can confirm he was hanging out with a crowd of heroin addicts I know.
What’s even more shocking, is that his name has come up in conversations I’ve had with NA members as a “TV executive they know from their drug days!”
What most angered me, and the reason I’m spilling the beans, is that several weeks ago a female friend in her early 20s questioned me why I never go out anymore given my position in Hollywood when “Ben Silverman goes out all the time.”
He deserves his come up-pence for living like a Playboy and shirking all responsibility. Just what is Ben Silverman hanging out with crowds of heroin addicted 20 year old models for?
The only regret I have about seeing him fired is that it will sicken me to see his failure toasted by naive models in every club in Los Angeles as his $60m golden parachute means he’ll be a nightly bottle service fixture in Hollywood clubs.
here’s the clarification re the strike and terminations. NBC, the network, did not terminate any script deals during the strike. The network honored all script obligations.
The studio, however, like all of the others, terminated at least 10 overall deals. mainly they were writers who were not working on series. The slicing wasnt too deep — mainly writers in the last year of their deal, or people that were difficult to staff on shows. There were not as many ‘punitive’ terminations as you might expect from this cold environment at NBC.
Perhaps NBC should have terminated more. Has anyone else noted that not one single new series came out of Ben & Teri’s script development from 2007-2008? Everything was an old script, a foreign financed project, a backdoor pilot …
they bought 50 or 60 things … and NOTHING made it to series.
is this an indictment of the pilot process, or the abilities of the buyers to coach their staffs through their needs/desires????
Jeff Ingold has managed to retain his position for so long because he is A) in real life, a very nice guy and B) the EPITOME of the yes man. He is as political as political gets and possibly in great need of a creative spine. Never really seen him step out with an opinion of his own. He always plays it safe, which would probably make him terrible at the top. He’s probably in his power-alley right now… no real power to make the big decisions… it’s a position I think he’s happy to stay in (and should).
Warren is a good guy, but if I were him, I’d stay as far away from the NBC Valdez as humanly possible. It’s lose/lose right now, and will be for some time.
Here’s the other thing… THEY ALL SUCK ASS. I can count on one hand the executives that are worth a damn. I can actually count them on like two fingers. Or maybe one. Perhaps just a knuckle.
and NLC, Terri is a bad lady. Sorry if that’s misogyny to you, but I have found her to neither be gorgeous nor intelligent. Judgmental with a penchant for “cute people” (again, a direct quote), yes. And I say this proudly as she never even turned me down. And I’m not a woman hating pig. And my mother is proud. Also… I’m really charming.
I just want to know who the “live-in boyfriend” is! Did I miss it? Is he the show runner on Worst Week? I know they did re-shoots on their pilot.
And Nic…you’re probably another one of Weinberg’s cronies who can only ever say “oh, yes, you’re absolutely right.” I’ve never seen a bigger, more disgusting group of yes-men than the pack of people who follow her around. Sycophants can usually never see the forest through the trees….unless it’s burning down and they run for the hills to save their own skins. Nic, do yourself a favor and run. You’re not doing yourself any good supporting a ship that’s going down and this one is.
It’s just disgusting to see what the entertainment industry is today and sadly, Weinberg and Silverman are the poster children for the disease. It’s about time people stood up and did something about it. Thank you Nikki for letting this cat out of the bag
You know, in this town, a guy who sales hamburger franchises and men’s suits can rise up to be a studio head… after all, it’s just like hamburgers… just churn ‘em out and people will eat whatever is served…
‘cept it doesn’t really work now… when money is tight, people don’t spend it on crap… without talent, creativity, and leadership, it all falls down and goes boom…
Silverman and someone else had done no good for “health” of NBC going to erase the most popular programs. Las Vegas was (still is) a very good show and go to cancel without a final was a serious lack toward viewers who watch NBC.
I’m surprised Beth Comstock has not been mentioned here. I mean talk about a ridiculous entertainment exec. She is kind of hot in a weird way, but talk about an empty skirt who continues to fail up. I worked with NBC 1996 – 2002. What a bunch of arrogant losers inside 30 Rock. I have been critical of Zucker for years – but it seems the ol’ “126″ take care fo their own, always. Zucker, Silverman, Emanuel, Meyer, etc.
No, “Worst Week” is run by Matt Tarses… he’s a good guy, married with kids and with much better taste then that. Teri’s boyfriend is either Benson or Abrahms… I think Abrahms, but I’m not sure. Creators of the money sieve “Zip”.
Ben Silverman created the first true indy TV studio in years from scratch and made the office, ugly betty, the tudors, biggest loser, 30 days and many other great shows for TV audiences. I knew him as he built the company as an entrepreneur, and along the way he treated people with dignity and respect. He is one of the few people I have worked with who went out of his way in this business to help people when they needed a job, a favor, advice- he always offered to help people because that’s the kind of guy he is. At NBC he has been there for a little over a year (a strike shortened year) and all he has done is make NBC an additional “several hundred million dollars”- piss off Ari Emanuel- and allegedly party a lot- what exactly is your beef Miss Finke?
Give Ricky Gervais credit for the office! And Tudors was made by the BBC!
I worked for NBC for a lotta years. And I can tell you what went wrong with the company. GE. The day that a light bulb company bought a Number 1 TV network, was the day that NBC began to slip. With GE, it is all about saving a penny. Not saving a buck. They are intent on saving every penny possible. GE has run this great network in to the ground. As one VP said years ago, “GE’s been cutting us to the bone for years….now they’re cutting in to the marrow.”
One of GE’s brilliant ideas that proved disastrous was to bring in Scott Sassa to head the network. He thought TV was dead and the new wave was going to be the internet. All internet and only internet. And Sassa pushed NBC to do more and more “reality”. Why? To save those pennies for GE.
NBC went from consistently being Number 1 to Number 2, then 3, then in to the basement. For a time, it was downright embarrassing to be affiliated with NBC.
Then Zucker came in. (Ever notice how he looks like a live-action version of Homer Simpson? Doh!)
We thought NBC would return to its former glory under Jeff, but that didn’t happen. At least he put the focus back on TV. But, as clearly laid out in Nikki’s columns and these posts, Zucker has failed miserably as well.
We, the minions of NBC, prayed for salvation. We got excited every time there was a new rumor that GE was going to sell us.
Everybody wants to be in showbiz. These giant corporations buy movie studios and TV networks to feel like they are in the glamorous world of Hollywood. But then they try to apply their business plan to their new toy. And they break the toy. You cannot run a creative entity as though it were a washing machine factory. There are too many intangibles in show business.
To fix NBC: first, GE needs to get out. Sell the company to someone who is already in the Business. Leave it to the professionals. Please.
Second, yes, get rid of the Silvermans, Zuckers, and Weinbergs.
Third, dump Marc Graboff. None of you seem to be aware of how many MASSIVE mistakes have been his fault. Don’t look to Marc as NBC’s salvation. He’s just as bad as Zucker. He just doesn’t have as much power as Jeff. Yet. If he stays and the others go, Nikki’s columns will be about how bad Marc is.
Fourth, bring in someone else. Maybe someone Old School. Give them time to bring things back around. Give shows a chance to develop before putting them on the air and then give them a chance to develop an audience.
I doubt that they’d be willing to come back to such a mess, but it would be awesome if Warren Littlefield and John Agoglia would return to run the network and the studio.
Even Don Ohlmeyer, for all his flaws, including a drinking problem, would be a TREMENDOUS improvement over Zucker and his team.
Fifth, hire or re-hire more employees. The workload is unbearable because GE has cut so many needed employees.
Sadly, we will probably never see the likes of Brandon Tartikoff again.
Former NBC Employee….Here Here! on the Don Ohlmeyer idea. Now THAT was an executive. Yes, he had his share of problems, but that is one guy who didn’t hesitate to tell someone to suck it. He would have had Silverman out on his ass so fast…oh wait, HE WOULD NEVER HAVE HIRED HIM IN THE FIRST PLACE!!!!! Aaah, the good old days.
Former NBC Employee, I (and many others) feel your pain. I started there when Brandon was there and lasted through Warren, Scott, Garth Ancier (ohGawd) and then, Little Jeffie.
Don O, even before the intervention, was 10 times the executive Little Jeffie could ever dream of being. Don actually was interested in hearing what people who worked for him thought and would fight the corporate bosses in Fairfield when it was important. He was an inspirational leader, not an aspirational one. As in, Little Jeffie just aspires to his next job and doesn’t give a rat’s ass about the one he currently has.
And not to worry, GE will NEVER sell NBC, sadly. NBC continues to be a cash cow for the corporation as it throws off massive amounts of coin on a fairly consistent basis and is the closest thing to a liquid asset that GE has. And, it’s, you know, Show Biz!
And stop giving deals to posers like Abrams and Benson, guys that are all flash and buzz. And truthfully, Abrams and Benson are not unique nor are they really completely at fault. They are just typical of the wannabe people in this business, mostly studio and network execs, that are unqualified for their jobs but continue to move forward because the people who are above them and who judge them are also unqualified. The next studio that wants to give a team like Abrams and Benson a big deal should do two things first: READ their scripts, and ask the opinions of working writers on successful shows what they think of them. Then maybe you’ll finally be in on the joke.
Real writer, have you read any of their work, I’m curious? I looked them up on IMDB and they have worked on some very successful shows. And even Nikki didn’t question their talent. Honestly you just sound bitter.
Don Ohlmeyer for President indeed! not only was he THE REAL DEAL of an exec, he also had the nuttage to call Mike “i wiretap and sue people for a living” Ovitz the antichrist…in print! the guy rocks….
GE/NBC needs a major management top down review and shakeup. Especially when most its shows are in 3rd place. This has become a 3rd place network. Personally I expect its new division to be sold at somepoint; I expect its sister network MSNBC to sold at somepoint as well. Their biases news coverage has cost its reputation and political idealogues at the news network have done more harm than good.
I do have my favorite shows on the network: Law and Order Franchise. Even Heroes I’d like to watch and of course I’m a big fan of the Tonight Show. Even Jay Leno has made some comedy barbs at NBC too. Especially during the rating season.
When an executive doesn’t show no vision,no new energize mission statement,it’s the shareholders who loose. And the employees. NBC is in serious need of management revamp and reevaluation if its going survive in the 21st century marketplace.
As a former NBCer, it is truly sad how far the network has fallen. Blame rests squarely on Jeff Zucker for committing one mistake after another. Since leaving “Today” he has had the reverse-Midas touch. Nice call on “Lost”, “House” and “Desperate Housewives” … all of which could have been on NBC. He is the ultimate “Teflon executive” blaming those around him and taking no responsibility for the consistent failures during his tenure as leader. How I long for the leadership of Bob Wright. The more he ceded control to Jeff, the worse things got.
If Jeff Immelt does not take action soon, he will prove his detractors right – he is a weak executive unwilling to make the really tough calls. Perhaps he si hoping to unload the network before he needs to address this disaster. Good luck.
One big problem is that the focus of senior management rarely drifts west of 6th Avenue, and certainly not all the way to LA. It is rare to see any of the New York-based TV Execs on the Universal lot. This is despite the fact that LA represents the larger share of the NBCU pie. The network Bigs are hunkered down at 30 Rock and have forgotten the talented people in LA – often losing them to other nets, or forcing them to leave without knowing the true value they deliver.
Having worked for Ron Meyer, he would be my choice to save the network. At least he would bring a balanced hand to the entirety of NBCU. He has a proven track record, can provide vision and is well respected inside and outside NBCU. More importantly, he is not tainted by the Zucker Regime’s culture of blame and a failure to take personal responsibility.
Jeff Immelt – if you are out there – please save NBCU for the sake of my friends and colleagues.