Los Angeles Times

Moonves out at CBS amid growing sex abuse scandal

CEO resigns without his severance package. He and network will donate $20 million to women’s groups.

- By Meg James

Bowing to pressure brought on by a sexual harassment scandal, CBS Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Leslie Moonves resigned Sunday, marking a stunning fall from grace for one of Hollywood’s most respected entertainm­ent executives.

CBS announced that it and Moonves will donate $20 million to organizati­ons that support the #MeToo movement and equality for women in the workplace. The donation, which will be made in the coming days, will be deducted from any severance benefits that might have been due to Moonves, who has been accused by multiple women of sexual misconduct.

Moonves’ most recent contract, which was due to expire in 2021, made him eligible to receive an exit deal valued at about $180 million — but now that won’t happen. The CBS board plans to negotiate a financial settlement after the conclusion of an investigat­ion by two prominent law firms into the allegation­s against Moonves.

In a statement, CBS said that Moonves was exiting immediatel­y and that Chief Operating Officer Joseph Ianniello will serve as president and acting CEO while the board searches for a permanent successor.

“For the past 24 years it has been an incredible privilege to lead CBS’s renais-

sance and transforma­tion into a leading global media company,” Moonves said in a statement. “Untrue allegation­s from decades ago are now being made against me that are not consistent with who I am…. I am deeply saddened to be leaving the company.”

CBS separately agreed to drop a lawsuit against the Redstone family investment vehicle, National Amusements Inc., that had been scheduled to go to trial in Delaware in October. The deal also calls for a dramatic makeover of the CBS board, with six new directors who are not aligned with the Redstone family.

Moonves becomes the highest-profile media executive to see his career collapse from the weight of sexual harassment allegation­s that surfaced in the #MeToo era. Hollywood and other industries have been forced to account for years of turning a blind eye to sexual harassment and discrimina­tion after allegation­s that movie producer Harvey Weinstein had sexually abused dozens of women. In the case of Moonves, there were fewer allegation­s of misconduct, but the stakes were higher because he managed a publicly traded company, which must protect the interests of shareholde­rs.

“These allegation­s speak to a culture of toxic complicity at CBS, where the safety of women was continuous­ly ignored to protect the careers of powerful men and the corporatio­n,” a representa­tive of the Times Up movement said in an email Sunday. “The CBS board of directors has an obligation to move swiftly and decisively to create a safe work environmen­t for all and rid the company of this toxic culture.”

Moonves’ departure was not unexpected. The 68year-old executive had been negotiatin­g a settlement with independen­t CBS board members in recent weeks, but those talks accelerate­d after a report Sunday in New Yorker magazine detailed six women’s allegation­s involving him in the 1980s and 1990s, including reports that he demanded massages from women or forcibly kissed them. At least 12 women have alleged that Moonves made inappropri­ate advances toward them.

The article included the account of a former Lorimar television executive, Phyllis Golden-Gottlieb, who described being attacked by Moonves in the mid-1980s when the two were colleagues at the prolific TV studio.

Golden-Gottlieb filed a report with the Los Angeles Police Department last year, and police found her allegation­s to be credible, according to law enforcemen­t sources. She described two incidents, including one in which she said Moonves demanded that she perform oral sex on him. In the second incident, Moonves was angry over a work matter and allegedly slammed her against a wall. But prosecutor­s declined to bring charges because the incidents were more than 30 years old and the statute of limitation­s had expired.

“CBS takes these allegation­s very seriously,” the network said Sunday in a statement. “Our board of directors is conducting a thorough investigat­ion of these matters, which is ongoing.”

The company’s stock is down 10% this year, and board members faced heavy pressure to respond quickly to a scandal that threatened the company’s business and reputation.

“CBS has a lot of work to do,” said Diane Doolittle, a trial lawyer with the Los Angeles law firm Quinn Emanuel. “Like everyone, I am shocked, saddened and disgusted by the nature of the allegation­s, the number of women and the force of the violence that is being alleged.”

The allegation­s against Moonves came to light as CBS was struggling to mop up a separate scandal at its vaunted CBS News division. Longtime PBS personalit­y and CBS morning news host Charlie Rose was ousted late last year after allegation­s by women that he acted inappropri­ately. In addition, “60 Minutes” executive producer Jeff Fager has been accused of boorish behavior and tolerating inappropri­ate conduct at the storied newsmagazi­ne. An outside law firm has been investigat­ing the CBS News culture since March.

Moonves’ exit represents a spectacula­r reversal of fortune for one Hollywood’s most powerful executives who has been the face of CBS since 1995. He took over a flounderin­g television network and steadily built it into a juggernaut that attracts more viewers than any other U.S. TV network. Since 2006, Moonves has served as chief executive of CBS Corp., which, in addition to the broadcast network, owns a string of television stations, a growing television production studio, the Showtime premium channel, the Simon & Schuster publishing house and a 50% stake in the CW network.

When Moonves joined CBS, the network was on the ropes in the ratings. He steadily rebuilt the network with a string of hits, including “Everybody Loves Raymond,” “Survivor,” “CSI: Crime Scene Investigat­ion,” “NCIS,” “Two and a Half Men,” “The Amazing Race” and “The Big Bang Theory.”

He was elevated to CBS Corp. chief executive in 2006 when Sumner Redstone divided his empire into two publicly traded companies, CBS and Viacom. Moonves, in the last decade, reshaped the company by launching streaming services, building a CBS digital product and shedding mature businesses such as the billboard division and radio stations.

Moonves also maintained the distinctio­n of being one of America’s highestpai­d CEOs. Last year, he received a compensati­on package worth $69.3 million.

But his tenure atop the media company took a big hit in late July when the New Yorker published a devastatin­g piece from investigat­ive reporter Ronan Farrow that highlighte­d claims of an actress, Illeana Douglas, who said Moonves tackled her at the end of a business meeting in his CBS office in 1997.

Moonves acknowledg­ed mistakes in his conduct, saying he recognized “there were times decades ago when I may have made some women uncomforta­ble by making advances.” But he denied harassing anyone and also pointed to his record of promoting women to high-profile roles.

Several prominent female executives — film executive Terry Press, advertisin­g sales chief Jo Ann Ross and Moonves’ wife and CBS talk show host, Julie Chen — rallied around Moonves in a show of support after the initial article.

But the damage was done. Three days after the article was published, one of the network’s biggest stars — Stephen Colbert — told his “The Late Show” audience that “accountabi­lity is meaningles­s unless it’s for everybody, whether it’s the leader of a network or the leader of the free world.”

CBS’ board of directors last month hired two high-profile female attorneys from powerhouse New York law firms to investigat­e the allegation­s of sexual harassment and examine the company’s workplace culture, including within the CBS News division. They have interviewe­d dozens of people who work at CBS and former executives and assistants who left long ago, according to several knowledgea­ble people.

Moonves’ departure will give a boost to Shari Redstone, daughter of the ailing patriarch Sumner Redstone who now oversees the family’s voting stake in CBS and serves as vice chair of the company. She has clashed with Moonves over her attempt to reunite CBS and Viacom, which Moonves and a majority of the CBS board were fighting to block.

The dispute flared in mid-May when the CBS board sued the Redstone family and National Amusements in an attempt to dilute their interest in the venerable broadcasti­ng company. Redstone and National Amusements filed a countersui­t, creating a major distractio­n for CBS.

CBS independen­t board members balked at the idea of reuniting the companies, fearing that Viacom’s struggling cable television channels, such as MTV and Comedy Central, would weigh down CBS’ business prospects. Then media reports began circulatin­g that Redstone was looking to replace several board members. In legal papers, the family has said it would advocate for a merger only if it made sense for both companies.

National Amusements controls nearly 80% of the voting stock of both CBS and Viacom. As part of the truce, National Amusements agreed not to propose a merger between CBS and Viacom for at least two years. CBS’ board also will be allowed to entertain offers from other prospectiv­e buyers — even if such a deal resulted in the dilution of the Redstones’ control.

And, in a sign of lingering boardroom tension, the company adopted a policy that requires board members and senior executives to immediatel­y notify the entire board if they become aware of a potential merger or business combinatio­n that would involve CBS. In legal documents, CBS complained that Redstone had unilateral­ly rebuffed the advances of one telecommun­ications company, an accusation she denied.

Ianniello has been with CBS and Viacom for 18 years. He is deeply familiar with CBS’ finances and has helped plot the company’s business strategy, but, unlike Moonves, he lacks relationsh­ips in Hollywood.

CBS has been considerin­g bringing in a high-level entertainm­ent executive from outside CBS to oversee programmin­g executives in Los Angeles, according people familiar with the matter.

meg.james@latimes.com Twitter: @MegJamesLA­T Times staff writer Richard Winton contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Chris Pizzello Invision/AP ?? LESLIE MOONVES won’t receive the $180million exit deal spelled out in his contract.
Chris Pizzello Invision/AP LESLIE MOONVES won’t receive the $180million exit deal spelled out in his contract.
 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? “I AM DEEPLY saddened to be leaving” CBS, Leslie Moonves, with wife Julie Chen, said in a statement.
Drew Angerer Getty Images “I AM DEEPLY saddened to be leaving” CBS, Leslie Moonves, with wife Julie Chen, said in a statement.

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