Business World

Apple poaches Sony Pictures TV execs to boost video content

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Apple, Inc. has hired two long-time Sony Pictures Television executives to expand the iPhone maker’s push into original television programmin­g, plunging deeper into a field crowded by Hollywood studios and online streaming services. Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg, responsibl­e for hit shows such as Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul and

The Crown, will join Apple to oversee all aspects of video programmin­g. “Jamie and Zack are two of the most talented TV executives in the world and have been instrument­al in making this the golden age of television,” said Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vicepresid­ent of Internet Software and Services.

LOS ANGELES — Apple, Inc. has hired two long-time Sony Pictures Television executives to expand the iPhone maker’s push into original television programmin­g, plunging deeper into a field crowded by Hollywood studios and online streaming services.

Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg, responsibl­e for hit shows such as Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul and The Crown, will join Apple in newly created positions to oversee all aspects of video programmin­g, the technology company said in a statement on Friday.

“Jamie and Zack are two of the most talented TV executives in the world and have been instrument­al in making this the golden age of television,” said Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vicepresid­ent of Internet Software and Services.

“There is much more to come,” Cue said of Apple’s video effort.

The new hires demonstrat­e a serious commitment by another deep-pocketed technology company to produce quality television shows. Erlicht and Van Amburg have served as senior Sony television executives since 2005.

But Apple did not elaborate on its strategy, leaving investors guessing how many shows it plans to distribute, how much it will spend and where the programmin­g will be available.

The company is playing in an increasing­ly competitiv­e field. Amazon.com, Inc. and Netflix, Inc. have invested billions of dollars in award-winning comedies and dramas featuring A-list Hollywood stars. And social media company Facebook, Inc. has signed deals with millennial-focused news and entertainm­ent creators, including Vox and BuzzFeed, to make shows for its upcoming video service.

Apple began its move last week with reality program Planet of the Apps, an unscripted show about developers competing for venture capital funding. The series is available only to subscriber­s to Apple Music, a $ 10- a- month streaming service.

VIEWER DATA

Apple has one huge advantage compared with other companies — one billion iPhones, iPads and other devices that run Apple’s mobile operating system and offer a broad distributi­on platform. The company has widely promoted Planet of the Apps across iTunes, the App Store, Apple’s website and elsewhere.

As tech companies push further into the content business, pressure mounts on traditiona­l media outlets that do not have the same amount of data on viewers or the ability for content to be a loss leader, said Rich Greenfield, an analyst with BTIG.

“These companies do not need to make money off video because they can make money other ways,” Greenfield said. “And they are going to have tons of data on their viewers.”

It is more cost-effective for Apple to pay for original content and secure licensing deals on its own than to buy a content company, said Moody’s analyst Gerald Granovsky.

“From a credit perspectiv­e, we’d much rather see Apple overpay to deliver original content than pay $50 billion to buy Netflix and basically compete for the same content,” he said. “They’ll definitely get a better bang for their buck by focusing on their Apple TV product.”

Greenfield said news of Apple’s hires should put to rest rumors that Apple might acquire another content company, Walt Disney Co. “It’s pretty clear now that Apple isn’t buying Disney,” he said.

Disney shares were down 0.5% at $105.40 on Friday afternoon. Apple shares were down 0.9% at $143.01.

For Sony, the departures come as the Japanese conglomera­te revamps its movie and television studio under new Chief Executive Tony Vinciquerr­a. In a memo to staff, Vinciquerr­a suggested Apple could be a buyer of Sony programmin­g.

“While we are sad to see them go, we are excited by the opportunit­y to work with them as partners in the future,” he said. —

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