Los Angeles Times

Lifestyles of the rich and infamous

The guilty-pleasure expose ‘Unscripted’ rolls out the lurid saga of Redstone family.

- By Jordan Riefe

Sex plays an important role in “Unscripted: The Epic Battle for a Media Empire and the Redstone Family Legacy,” a guilty-pleasure exposé on boardroom and bedroom maneuverin­g between Viacom and CBS. Sometimes it is taken at will by men in charge. To some, mainly men, this sort of behavior was a revelation when #MeToo became the most popular hashtag of 2018. To others, mainly women, not so much. Both will be riveted by the new book.

New York Times reporters James B. Stewart and Rachel Abrams weave together court files, interviews and news stories into a gripping and illuminati­ng account of C-suite shenanigan­s and intrafamil­y strife. Entertaini­ng on a gut level, it is populated by those we love to hate — horrible rich people, sleazy, greedy and driven by lust; even the most sympatheti­c of them, Shari Redstone, is a Trump supporter.

Her father, media mogul Sumner Redstone, is the book’s villain-turned-victim. He went to Harvard on a scholarshi­p; he later attended law school there. An accomplish­ed linguist, he cracked enemy codes during World War II before returning home to Boston and working for his father.

Turning a pair of drive-in movie theaters into multiplexe­s (a term he invented), Redstone laid the foundation for National Amusements, the holding company at the core of an empire that would include Viacom, Paramount and CBS, which was acquired in 1999, spun off in 2006 and re-acquired in 2019.

After divorcing Phyllis Gloria Raphael, his wife of 52 years, Redstone married Paula Fortunato in 2002. At the same time, he embarked on a string of affairs with women a fraction of his age, on whom he lavished Viacom stock, houses, horses and millions of dollars. Those he really liked he would put in his will. But if they betrayed him, he would take them out again and make room for the next model or actress.

According to the pilots who flew the company jet, he made a habit of harassing women in the passenger cabin and then having them fired. Christine Peters, exwife of Hollywood producer Jon Peters, dated him before becoming a longtime platonic friend. She claims he was banned from every restaurant in L.A., recalling an incident in Hawaii in which he threw a steak at the chef, alleging it was overcooked. When Christine Peters asked him why he was so mean to people, he allegedly replied, “I don’t care. I’m going to hell anyway.”

Two that remained in his inner circle were ex-girlfriend­s Manuela Herzer and Sydney Holland. With his speech impaired by strokes, the wheelchair-bound mogul grew isolated. Herzer and Holland lived in his Beverly Park mansion and took over his life. Blocking his family, they convinced him he was abandoned, often leaving him in tears, the book says.

In 2014 alone, according to “Unscripted,” Herzer and Holland ran up more than $3.5 million in charges. Over the course of several years, according to Redstone, they managed to skim roughly $150 million from his fortune.

But when Holland was found to have a boyfriend — “Guiding Light” actor George Pilgrim, living in an Arizona home paid for by Redstone — the jig was up. Redstone excised Holland from his will and banished her from his home.

According to the book, the move made Herzer sole manipulato­r of his fortune. But Shari, with the help of household staff and nurses, engineered a coup, rescuing her father and effectivel­y locking Herzer out by revealing her many transgress­ions.

With the family happily reunited, Shari turned to reviving Paramount. Led by her father’s hand-picked successor, Philippe Dauman, the studio had been reporting one disappoint­ing quarter after another.

One solution was to remove Dauman in May 2016, then re-merge Viacom with CBS, which under the stewardshi­p of Les Moonves had become an industry leader. With the board behind him, Moonves was resistant to a merger. But cord-cutting and the transition to streaming were rapidly making a dinosaur of network television, weakening his hand.

Posing a greater threat were persistent rumors about a pending New Yorker article by Ronan Farrow, which dropped in July 2018. Actor Illeana Douglas said Moonves forced himself on her; another, Bobbie Phillips, said he did the same to her. Producer Phyllis GoldenGott­lieb filed a police report against him. And Dr. Anne L. Peters also claimed she was fondled by Moonves.

The “Unscripted” authors report that when CBS Communicat­ions Chief Gil Schwartz was told of Peters’ claim by Vanity Fair writer William Cohan, he responded, “This doesn’t sound like Les,” claiming that Moonves was a “blow job guy,” not a “masturbati­on guy.” He might have been basing it on reports that one of Moonves’ assistants was on call for whenever the former was required.

When urged by Peters to forgo his nomination to the CBS Board on account of Moonves’ behavior, veteran producer Arnold Kopelson (“Platoon”) reportedly said her concerns were “trivial,” noting: “We all did that.” Which might be why it was so easy for Moonves to allegedly lie when confronted by Shari about the claims. “Look me in the eyes,” he reportedly told her. “There is nothing there.” Despite all who came forward, Moonves was never charged with a crime; L.A. County prosecutor­s said the allegation­s exceeded the statute of limitation­s. Nor was he sued civilly.

Stewart won a Pulitzer Prize for explanator­y journalism and is the author of 10 books, including the 1991 bestseller “Den of Thieves,” about Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky. Abrams was part of the New York Times’ Pulitzer Prize-winning team that broke the Harvey Weinstein story.

Together they paint a lurid portrait of Sumner Redstone’s dissolutio­n while meticulous­ly stitching together a day-to-day and sometimes moment-to-moment account of a power struggle. The book features a cast of dozens, adroitly differenti­ated by the authors, making internecin­e corporate warfare digestible without dumbing down.

Confronted with her father’s hostility (he called her a “c—” in front of company executives), Shari also faced down a sexist boardroom that turned a blind eye to allegation­s against Moonves. Her journey brought her face-to-face with the rotten truth about corporate governance: CEOs tend to dominate the boards charged with overseeing them.

When Sumner Redstone died in August 2020, his funeral was attended by only family, mainly as a result of COVID-19 pandemic restrictio­ns. Shari reportedly wept furiously at his graveside and — per his request that the Sinatra classic “My Way” be played — sang the lyrics off her daughter’s phone.

She had prevailed, wresting control of CBS away from Moonves and assuming the position of chair of ViacomCBS, now Paramount Global.

Like this book, the record shows that she took all the blows and did it her way.

 ?? Katy Winn Invision / Associated Press ?? MEDIA TYCOONS: Sumner Redstone and his daughter, Shari Redstone, in 2012.
Katy Winn Invision / Associated Press MEDIA TYCOONS: Sumner Redstone and his daughter, Shari Redstone, in 2012.
 ?? Jorg Meyer Jong Meyer Photograph­y ?? AUTHORS Rachel Abrams and James B. Stewart delve into C-suite shenanigan­s and intrafamil­y strife.
Jorg Meyer Jong Meyer Photograph­y AUTHORS Rachel Abrams and James B. Stewart delve into C-suite shenanigan­s and intrafamil­y strife.

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