Los Angeles Times

SUSAN ROVNER POISED TO EXIT WARNER

NBCUnivers­al is said to have tapped her to oversee network and cable programmin­g.

- By Meg James and Anousha Sakoui

NBCUnivers­al has narrowed its search for a top TV programmer to Susan Rovner, a longtime Warner Bros. studio executive.

The media company, owned by Comcast Corp., is in advanced negotiatio­ns with Rovner to oversee a vast portfolio that includes programmin­g for the NBC broadcast network, cable channels including Bravo, E!, Syfy and USA, as well as the recently launched Peacock streaming service, according to two people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified because the deal has not been finalized. An agreement is expected to be completed and announced as early as this week.

With last month’s ouster of Paul Telegdy, the former NBC entertainm­ent chairman, NBCUnivers­al announced it would hunt for a leader to oversee programmin­g for the NBC broadcast network as well as its collection of cable channels. The move is part of a corporate streamlini­ng, initiated by NBCUnivers­al Chief Executive Jeff Shell, to respond to the economic realities of the streaming era and tear down walls that previously had separated the two TV groups.

Rovner would report to Mark Lazarus, chairman of NBCUnivers­al Television and Streaming.

Rovner is a proven and respected leader with strong

relationsh­ips in Hollywood. She has been a key executive within the prolific Warner Bros. studio since 1998, helping shepherd such hits as “Gossip Girl,” “The O.C.,” “Everwood,” “Rizzoli & Isles,” “Pretty Little Liars” and more recently “Riverdale,” “Shameless” and “Westworld” for HBO.

Her departure from Warner Bros. comes amid a consolidat­ion and cost-cutting at the studio’s parent, WarnerMedi­a. Last month, the company laid off nearly 600 people.

The belt-tightening comes two years after telecommun­ications company AT&T spent $85 billion to acquire Time Warner, changing its name to WarnerMedi­a. There has been an exodus of entertainm­ent executives ever since. Just last month, WarnerMedi­a Chief Executive Jason Kilar stunned the industry with a dramatic reshufflin­g, sweeping out veteran programmer­s Bob Greenblatt and Kevin Reilly and several top business executives. That shakeup came two and a half months after the disappoint­ing launch of its streaming service,

HBO Max.

Rovner remained a key part of the Burbank studio’s executive team, and her exit will be a blow. Last year, Warner Bros. TV studio chief Peter Roth promoted Rovner to co-lead Warner Bros. Television’s primetime programmin­g production unit alongside fellow executive Brett Paul.

Rovner and Paul were responsibl­e for more than 60 original series and were credited with helping spearhead the expansion of Warner

Bros’ studio business into streaming and maintainin­g high-profile deals with such prominent producers as Chuck Lorre, Greg Berlanti, Ava DuVernay and Mindy Kaling.

Many viewed Rovner as the eventual successor to Roth, who has led the studio for two decades.

WarnerMedi­a and other legacy media companies have struggled to adapt to consumer changes and compete with Netflix, Hulu and Amazon. Cash-cow cable channels have lost millions of viewers amid the accelerati­on of cable cord cutting. Media companies are trying to strike a balance between cranking out expensive scripted production­s for their cable outlets, such as NBCUnivers­al’s USA and WarnerMedi­a’s TNT and TBS, and devoting more resources to producing originals for their streaming services.

The COVID-19 pandemic, which has led to a shutdown in TV production and a decline in advertisin­g revenue, has exacerbate­d the dilemma.

At the same time, the competitio­n for talent has been intensifyi­ng as media companies jostle for attention with their recently launched streaming services — Disney+, HBO Max and NBCUnivers­al’s Peacock. Some of the industry’s most successful producers have been lured to Netflix, which has dangled lucrative production deals.

Programmer­s at NBCUnivers­al, Walt Disney Co., ViacomCBS and WarnerMedi­a have struggled to keep big-name producers in the fold and recruit new star writers to fill their primetime schedules.

Senior executives are in high demand too. Netflix has been waging a court battle with Fox and Viacom over alleged poaching of executives as the Los Gatos-based streaming giant built up its operations. Netflix recently appealed a decision that found against it in its fight with Fox and has highlighte­d a growing arms race for talent in Hollywood.

NBCUnivers­al has spent several months fine-tuning its organizati­onal structure after Shell took the top job in January.

Shell has been under pressure to elevate women and people of color amid a cultural reckoning. Last month, NBCUnivers­al elevated veteran programmer Frances Berwick, the longtime Bravo head. She is now in charge of all strategic and business elements of NBC as well as the entertainm­ent cable channels. The company also is expected to find a prominent role for another rising star, Pearlena Igbokwe, head of the Universal Television studio.

NBCUnivers­al and Warner Bros. declined to comment Monday.

 ?? Amanda Edwards WireImage ?? SUSAN ROVNER helped shepherd such hits as “Gossip Girl,” “The O.C.” and “Pretty Little Liars.”
Amanda Edwards WireImage SUSAN ROVNER helped shepherd such hits as “Gossip Girl,” “The O.C.” and “Pretty Little Liars.”

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