Los Angeles Times

Viacom said to be in talks to buy Awesomenes­sTV

Youth-media firm may be acquired for less than half its 2016 valuation

- By Lucas Shaw

Viacom Inc. is in talks to acquire youth-media company Awesomenes­sTV from Comcast Corp., Verizon Communicat­ions Inc. and Hearst Corp., according to two people familiar with the matter.

The talks are in advanced stages and could conclude in a couple of weeks, said the people, who asked not to be identified because talks are ongoing. Viacom would pay less than half the $650-million valuation that Awesomenes­sTV received in 2016, a sign of the sagging market for online media companies.

Viacom has begun scooping up digital properties after years of being criticized for fighting the migration of media to the internet, including a lawsuit against Google. The idea is to better connect with the young viewers that have left Viacom channels MTV and Nickelodeo­n in favor of YouTube and Instagram. It acquired the online video convention VidCon and marketing firm Whosay, and has commission­ed dozens of web series.

Viacom’s digital studio is led by Kelly Day, who once worked at Awesomenes­sTV. Brian Robbins, Awesomenes­sTV’s co-founder and former chief executive, works at Viacom’s studio, Paramount Pictures.

Viacom stock rose 56 cents to $27.88. The stock has struggled in the last year, tumbling about 21% in the last 12 months.

Once one of the fastestgro­wing companies in online media, Awesomenes­sTV has struggled to turn its popularity among young viewers into a sustainabl­e business, and the owners have soured on a money-losing venture. Comcast has a 51% stake in Awesomenes­sTV, while Verizon and Hearst own the rest.

Comcast acquired a stake in Awesomenes­sTV through its acquisitio­n of DreamWorks Animation, while Verizon acquired its stake under outgoing Chief Executive Lowell McAdam.

Awesomenes­sTV signed a lease for a 90,000-squarefoot space in Santa Monica in 2016. The venture was valued at $650 million when Verizon acquired its minority stake that year, and it fit alongside the Huffington Post and AOL in the phone company’s growing suite of online properties. Verizon’s incoming CEO, Hans Vestberg, has begun to reduce Verizon’s interests in media.

The valuation of most digital-media companies has plummeted in the last few years as Facebook and Google swallowed much of the online-advertisin­g market. Dozens of companies that built businesses by distributi­ng video and news on those sites have suffered. The news site Little Things closed, while Walt Disney Co.’s Maker Studios and news site Mic fired staff.

Robbins, a former actor, filmmaker and producer, founded Awesomenes­s after watching his children forsake TV for YouTube and other online media.

The company amassed a network of tens of thousands of YouTube channels, for which it sold advertisem­ents and advised on business matters. Awesomenes­sTV also produced an eponymous TV show for Nickelodeo­n, movies featuring popular online personalit­ies Cameron Dallas and Lia Marie Johnson, and web series for brands such as “Royal Crush,” made in conjunctio­n with the Royal Caribbean cruise line.

The growing audience for online video attracted further investment and increased the company’s valuation. DreamWorks Animation acquired Awesomenes­sTV in a deal worth as much as $117 million, and Awesomenes­sTV was valued at $235 million when Hearst acquired a minority stake.

After Verizon bought its minority stake in 2016, it handed Awesomenes­sTV a significan­t sales boost when it acquired programmin­g for Go90, a short-form video service that was Verizon’s challenge to YouTube. Yet Verizon shut down Go90 this year and has been looking to extricate itself from Awesomenes­sTV as well.

Longtime media executive Jordan Levin took the reins at Awesomenes­sTV last year, succeeding Robbins. Robbins and Chief Operating Officer Brett Bouttier have since left the company.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? AWESOMENES­STV was created by Brian Robbins, who works at Viacom’s studio, Paramount Pictures.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times AWESOMENES­STV was created by Brian Robbins, who works at Viacom’s studio, Paramount Pictures.

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