Los Angeles Times

WarnerMedi­a ousts two chiefs of programmin­g

- By Meg James Times staff writer Ryan Faughnder contribute­d to this report.

In a sweeping reorganiza­tion, WarnerMedi­a on Friday ousted two of its programmin­g chiefs: Bob Greenblatt and Kevin Reilly.

The surprise move comes three months after Jason Kilar, the former chief of Hulu, took the helm of the AT&T-owned media company and after the debut of WarnerMedi­a’s high-stakes streaming service, HBO Max, which has gotten off to a slow start.

In a memo to staff on Friday, the WarnerMedi­a chief executive acknowledg­ed that the shakeup was “neither timid nor without risk” but said he needed to make “changes that will help us operate more effectivel­y and efficientl­y.”

Another goal, Kilar said, was to give HBO Max more prominence within the corporate organizati­on — because it is key to the company’s future.

HBO Max has struggled to make a splash in the crowded streaming market. AT&T told investors last fall that at least 10 million subscriber­s would have HBO Max when it launched in May to take on Netf lix. While 26 million HBO subscriber­s have access to HBO Max, the service had notched only 4.1 million subscriber­s by the end of June.

The launch was hampered by the app’s $14.99-amonth subscripti­on fee and confusion among consumers about how HBO Max differed from other HBO services already in the market. It also lacked a robust slate of buzzy originals — and has been constraine­d from adding much more to its lineup in recent months after TV and film production was interrupte­d due to COVID-19 stay-at-home orders.

The big winner in Friday’s shuffle was Ann Sarnoff, who only last summer was named chair and chief executive of the storied Warner Bros. film and TV studio.

Now, Sarnoff will lead the company’s West Coast entertainm­ent empire in a newly consolidat­ed Studios and Networks Group. She takes over Greenblatt’s portfolio and will oversee all of WarnerMedi­a’s TV series and movie developmen­t and production, as well as its TV networks, including HBO, TNT and TBS.

Sarnoff made history when she became the first woman to lead the nearly 100-year-old Warner Bros. studio, known for “Casablanca” and the “Harry Potter” film franchise. Before joining WarnerMedi­a, she ran BBC Studios Americas.

Kilar said he faced a difficult choice in picking between Sarnoff, a business executive, and Greenblatt, a veteran programmer who joined WarnerMedi­a 18 months ago. However, Kilar said, he believed the company had room for just one entertainm­ent division — and thus, just one entertainm­ent chief.

“I easily could have made the decision to go with Bob,” Kilar said. “He’s got the talent, the executive vision, he’s incredibly insightful and he’s a damn good programmer. But I could only give that job to one person.”

HBO Programmin­g President Casey Bloys also gained more turf by picking up Reilly’s responsibi­lities. In addition to programmin­g the premium HBO channel, Bloys now will oversee content for HBO Max as well as cable TV channels TNT, TBS and TruTV.

“Casey’s appointmen­t is a big part of this too,” Kilar said. “A lot of the programmin­g on HBO Max that people love and are watching comes from Casey and his team. Let’s be very blunt about that.”

Greenblatt, Reilly and Keith Cocozza, who until Friday served as WarnerMedi­a’s chief communicat­ions officer, declined to comment.

Kilar also tapped former deputy Andy Forssell, general manager of HBO Max, to run a newly created HBO Max business unit. Forssell, who helped Kilar build Hulu into one of the country’s most popular streaming services, joined WarnerMedi­a in May 2019 after a stint at Otter Media, which AT&T purchased.

WarnerMedi­a’s shakeup comes just days before the company plans to begin making substantia­l cuts in its staff; it is expected on Monday to begin notifying employees about job cuts. Burbank-based Warner Bros. is expected to lose as much as 10% of its workforce, according to people familiar with the situation.

Dallas-based AT&T has been under pressure from investors to cut the mountain of debt — more than $160 billion — brought on by its acquisitio­n of DirecTV and then WarnerMedi­a.

Kilar’s memo affirmed existing and expanded roles for several other executives: Toby Emmerich will continue to run Warner Bros. Motion Pictures Group. Peter Roth will continue to lead Warner Bros. Television Group. Christy Haubegger, chief enterprise inclusion officer, now will oversee the global marketing and communicat­ions team. In New York, CNN chief Jeff Zucker continues as chairman of WarnerMedi­a News and Sports.

“A lot of this is about leading into the future and focusing on the consumer,” Kilar said in the interview, explaining that traditiona­l media companies have been set up as wholesaler­s, licensing their programmin­g to TV networks and cable TV distributo­rs. With the advent of the internet, he noted, consumers have latched on to streaming services that create one-on-one relationsh­ips with them.

Kilar’s moves ripped up a structure put in place 17 months ago by John Stankey, who is now AT&T’s chief executive.

With great fanfare, Stankey hired Greenblatt — who previously served as chairman of NBC Entertainm­ent for seven years — and entrusted him with programmin­g HBO, HBO Max and the Turner channels.

Reilly, who previously ran the Fox network and NBC Entertainm­ent, had three years remaining on his contract. Amid the upheaval at WarnerMedi­a last year, Reilly signed a new contract that was supposed to last through 2022.

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