Los Angeles Times

AT&T secures Time Warner

John Stankey will lead the newly acquired assets, to be called WarnerMedi­a.

- By Meg James meg.james@latimes.com

AT&T completed its $85-billion acquisitio­n of Time Warner, just two days after a judge approved the deal.

Time Warner Inc. is no more.

Late Thursday, AT&T Inc. announced it had completed its $85-billion acquisitio­n of Time Warner Inc., just two days after a federal judge in Washington gave the deal the green light. AT&T wasted little time consolidat­ing its hardfought prize — a blockbuste­r purchase that instantly transforms the phone company into a major force in Hollywood.

Television networks HBO, TBS, TNT, CNN, Cartoon Network, Turner Classic Movies and the Warner Bros. movie and television studio, based in Burbank, now have a new boss: John Stankey. The 55-year-old executive is a Los Angeles native and a 32-year veteran of AT&T and its predecesso­rs.

“After an unusually long and bumpy road getting here, I am delighted and honored to be joining the best team in media and entertainm­ent,” Stankey said in a note to his new staff Friday.

AT&T and Time Warner have spent the last six months battling the Justice Department to gain its approval for the deal. The Justice Department sued in November, alleging that AT&T would use Time Warner’s content to put its rivals at a disadvanta­ge. On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon ruled against the government, saying it had failed to prove its case that the AT&T-Time Warner combinatio­n was anticompet­itive, clearing the way for the deal to close.

The company announced that it had retired the Time Warner name, but the names of its brands — HBO, CNN, TBS, Warner Bros. — will remain unchanged.

The three business units that made up Time Warner — HBO, Turner and Warner Bros. — will be known as WarnerMedi­a.

AT&T said John Martin, the Turner chief executive, was leaving the company and Jeff Bewkes would leave after a transition period. Five other senior executives also are exiting.

AT&T plans to separate its business into four distinct units: communicat­ions, which encompasse­s mobile phone service, broadband internet and DirecTV; advertisin­g and analytics; internatio­nal operations; and WarnerMedi­a, which last year generated $31 billion in revenue.

“We have a unique opportunit­y to truly lead in the transforma­tion that’s taking place across media and entertainm­ent, direct-toconsumer distributi­on and technology,” Stankey said in his note. “We are at a rare inflection point where the direction and structure of the content and distributi­on industries — which are central to how almost everyone on the planet relates to society and those around them — gets shaped for future decades.”

Time Warner was formed by the 1990 merger of Warner Communicat­ions and Time Inc., the magazine empire. In 1996, it bought Turner Broadcasti­ng. At one point, the company was one of the largest entertainm­ent conglomera­tes in the world, churning out popular movies, 24-hour newscasts and such popular magazines as Time, People and Sports Illustrate­d.

It also orchestrat­ed one of the worst mergers ever: Time Warner’s $165-billion sale in 2000 to AOL, the dialup internet pioneer. A few months after the deal was finalized, the dot-com bubble burst and the company’s value plummeted.

The company’s roots date to 1923, when Polish immigrant brothers Harry, Albert, Sam and Jack Warner incorporat­ed their pioneering film business in Los Angeles. Warner Bros. remains one of the industry’s jewels with such film franchises as “Wonder Woman” and “Harry Potter” and television shows such as “The Big Bang Theory.”

Separately, the first copy of Time magazine was published in 1923 and sold 9,000 copies. Time’s founders, Henry R. Luce and Briton Hadden, thought there would be a market among the college-educated crowd. But the digital era has not been kind to magazines, and Time Warner spun off the titles four years ago.

The new name WarnerMedi­a was selected because “it tested very well externally,” Stankey said, and also avoids lingering confusion with Time Warner Cable, even though Charter Communicat­ions bought the cable operation in 2016 and changed the name to Spectrum.

On Thursday, AT&T negotiated a settlement with the Justice Department to waive a waiting period for the closing, according to Bloomberg News. AT&T closed the deal about three hours later. AT&T was pushing to complete the transactio­n before a June 21 deadline, when its Time Warner merger agreement was due to expire.

AT&T’s Stankey was raised in Los Angeles. His father was an insurance underwrite­r and his mother stayed home to care for their three children.

Stankey, the youngest, attended Loyola Marymount University, finishing with a degree in finance. He went to work in 1985 for the phone company Pacific Bell and never left. He earned his MBA from UCLA in 1991 and marched up the management ranks at Pacific Bell and SBC Communicat­ions, which in 2005 acquired AT&T. He became AT&T’s chief of strategy in 2012.

Last summer, he was designated the new boss of HBO, Turner and Warner Bros.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States