Los Angeles Times

Murdoch is easing out of his kingdom

The media magnate opens a final meeting with Fox shareholde­rs.

- By Meg James

Rupert Murdoch’s handoff to his older son is nearly complete.

On Wednesday, the 87year-old media baron choreograp­hed a coda for 21st Century Fox — the company he has spent decades shaping into a global media juggernaut.

In what was expected to be the company’s last meeting with shareholde­rs, Murdoch offered only a brief welcome before turning over the podium — in the dimly lit Darryl F. Zanuck Theater on the Fox lot in West Los Angeles — to his oldest son.

Lachlan Murdoch, who shares the title of executive chairman with his father, noted it was “likely [the] final such meeting” because the family is selling much of the company to Walt Disney Co., a deal that is expected to

be completed in January or February.

The $71.3-billion deal is expected to transform both Disney and Fox, which will become a much smaller television company focused on news and sports.

Rather than reciting Fox’s financial performanc­e, Lachlan Murdoch paid tribute to his father, saying the maverick newsman from Australia built companies that “defied convention­al wisdom and succeeded where others failed.”

“It began with my father’s unwavering belief in the power of innovation and consumer choice,” Lachlan Murdoch, 47, told the sparse crowd in the theater and others listening to an audio feed. “He has always had a passion for engaging audiences with stories and experience­s that endure — but perhaps the most enduring story is his own.”

Rupert Murdoch has spent 65 years assembling an empire that Wall Street now values at $97 billion. It began with a single Australian afternoon newspaper, the Adelaide News. Murdoch inherited the tabloid from his father, a celebrated Australian war correspond­ent, who died in 1952.

Over the years, he amassed newspapers on four continents, dozens of television stations, satellite TV systems, and, in 1985, the 20th Century Fox movie studio in Los Angeles from oilman Marvin Davis.

In 1986, after gaining U.S. citizenshi­p, Murdoch launched the Fox broadcast network. Then came the purchase of book publisher Harper & Row, which became HarperColl­ins, cable channels FX and Fox News Channel, and the purchase of the Wall Street Journal.

Wall Street didn’t approve of the newspaper purchase but Murdoch possessed super-voting stock, allowing him to run the company as he saw fit.

Rupert Murdoch’s long run has been impressive, agreed former cable television executive Leo Hindery.

“There are only two people in the industry who had super-votes and the vision and courage to define the industry,” said Hindery, who ran the former cable companies AT&T Broadband and TCI. “And those two guys are Rupert Murdoch and [cable magnate] John Malone. And Rupert was the first one to have a global vision.”

Now, Rupert Murdoch is midway through a dramatic downsizing of his corporate dominion. He orchestrat­ed the sale to Disney because he feared that Fox lacked the scale to successful­ly compete against such technology giants as Google, Facebook and Netflix.

As his son spoke, Rupert Murdoch quietly studied a briefing book atop a long rectangula­r table — draped in black. He sat alongside seven other corporate directors, including his younger son, James Murdoch.

The younger Murdoch, Fox’s chief executive for the last three years, did not speak during Wednesday’s 20-minute shareholde­rs’ meeting, which included a reelection of board members. He has already announced that after the Disney sale is completed, he will branch off from the family business to pursue his own ventures. James Murdoch, 45, has not revealed his future plans.

The sale of much of Fox to Disney provided a graceful exit for the aging mogul and helped solve a delicate issue of corporate succession, according to people close to Rupert Murdoch who are not authorized to speak publicly.

James Murdoch struggled for years to become his father’s successor, working at Fox for more than two decades. He oversaw farflung parts of its internatio­nal portfolio, including satellite TV operations in India and Britain, before joining his father in New York.

Rupert Murdoch instead chose his older son, in part, because a power-sharing arrangemen­t proved awkward and his views — including on politics — were more in sync with Lachlan Murdoch’s. Lachlan Murdoch had spent nearly a decade in Australia, overseeing his own projects after leaving his father’s company, then known as News Corp., in 2005 to strike out on his own. But he returned to the corporate fold in 2014.

Lachlan Murdoch will become chairman and chief executive of a new company, Fox, which will be made up of the assets that aren’t part of the sale to Disney.

Those include the New York-based Fox News Channel and its sister Fox Business Network, Los Angelesbas­ed Fox broadcast network, two national cable sports channels, including FS1, and Fox’s chain of TV stations, including KTTV Channel 11 in Los Angeles. Longtime Murdoch lieutenant John Nallen will serve as chief operating officer.

“Fox will be America’s media company, offering programmin­g the country wants most,” Lachlan Murdoch said. That includes live sports programmin­g on the Fox network and FS1 and Fox News.

The Disney deal more than doubled the Murdochs’ wealth, which is concentrat­ed in a family trust. The family also will become one of the largest shareholde­rs of Disney.

The Murdochs also will continue to control publishing company News Corp., which owns the Wall Street Journal, New York Post, Times of London and dozens of publicatio­ns in Murdoch’s native Australia, a growing digital real estate informatio­n business and HarperColl­ins.

“Defying expectatio­ns and performing well is at the core of who we are,” Lachlan Murdoch said from the podium. He thanked the small crowd and returned to his seat at the table.

Rupert Murdoch then leaned over and gently patted his older son on the back.

 ?? Leon Neal AFP/Getty Images ?? RUPERT MURDOCH is flanked by sons Lachlan, left, and James in 2016. Most of their 21st Century Fox business empire is being purchased by Disney. Lachlan Murdoch will run a new, smaller Fox.
Leon Neal AFP/Getty Images RUPERT MURDOCH is flanked by sons Lachlan, left, and James in 2016. Most of their 21st Century Fox business empire is being purchased by Disney. Lachlan Murdoch will run a new, smaller Fox.
 ?? Stephanie Keith Getty Images ?? LACHLAN MURDOCH will become chief of a new company, Fox, made up of assets not sold to Disney.
Stephanie Keith Getty Images LACHLAN MURDOCH will become chief of a new company, Fox, made up of assets not sold to Disney.

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