Texarkana Gazette

‘Oprah,’ ‘Wheel’ TV syndicator Michael King dies

- By Matt Hamilton

LOS ANGELES—Michael King, half of the hard-charging brothers whose King World Production­s distribute­d television sensations such as “Wheel of Fortune,” “Jeopardy!” and “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” has died.

King, 67, died Wednesday at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles from complicati­ons arising from pneumonia, according to his brother-in-law, Jon Felson.

When King and his older brother Roger inherited the television syndicatio­n company from their father, who died in 1972, the business was foundering. The company claimed one product—distributi­on rights to “The Little Rascals”—and Michael King, working out of the kitchen of his uncle’s New Jersey home, managed to gross $150 per week by peddling Spanky and Alfalfa to TV stations.

The company struck gold in 1983 when it paid $50,000 to Merv Griffin for the rights to “Wheel of Fortune.” The brothers traveled the country, lining up a roster of top markets to air the glitzy game show starring Vanna White and Pat Sajak, and “Wheel of Fortune” swiftly became the highest-rated syndicated program in history. Griffin awarded the pair the distributi­on rights to a revival of “Jeopardy,” and profits soared. King World Production­s went public two years later.

The Kings’ stature only rose higher after they successful­ly launched a talk show in 1986 hosted by a former Baltimore news anchor: Oprah Winfrey. In a 1985 interview with the Los Angeles Times, Michael King billed Winfrey as “an exciting alternativ­e to Phil Donahue.”

The brothers King developed a reputation for being forceful salesmen, with Michael attuned to marketing and Roger knowing station managers by name and browbeatin­g them to pay higher rates. As their fortunes grew, they displayed a flair for showmanshi­p. To market “Hollywood Squares” and Roseanne Barr’s shortlived talk show, they rented the Superdome in New Orleans, built a big-city skyline and hired Elton John.

“I never wanted to be a pinstripe suit with wingtips. I never wanted to be a banker,” Michael King told The Times in 1999. “We absolutely wanted to climb to the top of entertainm­ent broadcasti­ng. … But we sort of had, you know, that rock ‘n’ roll spirit.”

Replicatin­g the success of its early game shows and “Oprah” proved difficult. By the late 1990s, with media companies consolidat­ing into mammoth corporate empires and federal rule changes hurting the syndicatio­n business, the Kings looked for a buyer.

When CBS acquired King World for about $2.5 billion in stock in 1999, the company claimed long-running news magazine “Inside Edition” and “Dr. Phil” as hits. But it was Winfrey’s award-winning show that was generating nearly half of the company’s $210-million annual cash flow in its final year.

Michael Gordon King was born in New Jersey on March 8, 1948, one of six children of Charles King and his wife, Lucille. He is survived by his wife, Jena; their children, Theodore, Audrey and Jesse; and Alexandra, his daughter from a previous marriage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States