USA TODAY US Edition

Apple’s Hollywood flirtation­s nothing new

- Jon Swartz @jswartz USA TODAY

Apple’s dalliance with Hollywood and rumors of a studio play have circulated even before Toy Story hit the big screen in 1995.

A report Thursday that Apple considered a bid for Time Warner, owner of Warner Bros., HBO and other media properties, should not come as a surprise. The Financial Times, citing unnamed sources, said Apple exec Eddy Cue broached a deal with Olaf Olafsson, head of corporate strategy at Time Warner. The talks were preliminar­y, however, and did not involve Apple CEO Tim Cook or Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes, the report said.

Apple and Time Warner de- clined comment on the report.

Flash back to late last year, when Variety reported Apple held talks with Hollywood executives about creating its own original programmin­g. In March 2015, The Wall Street Journal reported Apple was in talks with CBS, ABC, Fox and other broadcaste­rs to offer a TV bundle via Apple TV.

Had the Time Warner talks escalated and reached fruition, it could have led to exclusive, original content for an Apple entertainm­ent service, Edward Jones analyst Bill Kreher said in an interview Friday. Sense a trend?

Rumors of Apple’s fascinatio­n with the industry stretch at least two decades to Steve Jobs’ stewardshi­p of Pixar Studios, the computer-animation film studio that once was a piece of Lucasfilm. Toy Story, the first film from Pixar, not only was a megahit but a cultural touchstone.

Jobs, who concurrent­ly ran Apple and Pixar for several years, made no secret of his love of enduring, family-oriented entertainm­ent content during a 1996 interview while I was a tech reporter at the San Francisco Chronicle. When asked to name his favorite brands, he answered, without hesitation, Disney, Lucasfilm and Sony.

“When you make a Fantasia (1940), people remember it from generation to generation,” Jobs said. “You make a personal computer, and it’s obsolete in six months to a year. “Classics are timeless.” Pixar in many ways redefined the Disney model for acclaimed content for all ages. Disney thought so much of Pixar it bought it for $7.4 billion in 2006, making Jobs the top Disney shareholde­r at the time. Jobs had it both ways: influence in making films that resonated for decades while overseeing the product lineup at Apple.

Today, the creation and distributi­on of content in the digital age is critical to Apple’s future. A subscripti­on service leveraging the content of a studio could mean potential billions of dollars in sales and a more diverse product portfolio.

Apple has made this bet before — a $3.2 billion acquisitio­n of Beats Electronic­s in 2014 — with mixed results. The accord led to the creation of Apple Music, the second-largest service of its kind, behind Spotify’s 30 million paid subscriber­s. But with 13 million paid subscriber­s, the nearly 1year-old service has fallen short of lofty expectatio­ns of analysts.

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