Viacom Is Having A Midlife Crisis
Why nobody wants their MTV
By Felix Gillette and Lucas Shaw
Photographs by Tina Schula for Bloomberg Businessweek
July 1, 2015
A half-dozen security guards stand watch outside the Vibrato Grill Jazz, a supper club in Los Angeles, as a stream of black SUVs, Bentleys, and Teslas pull up to the valet parking stand. It’s a clear May evening, and a handful of journalists and paparazzi loiter in the vicinity, hoping to witness an increasingly rare sight: Sumner Redstone in the wild. They watch as Hollywood dignitaries in formal attire arrive—producer Robert Evans, philanthropist Barbara Davis, former studio executive Sherry Lansing.
For the past year, Redstone, the chairman and controlling shareholder of two media conglomerates, Viacom and CBS, has largely retreated from view. The disappearance of Redstone, once a candid, quarrelsome, constant public figure, has fueled speculation about his health and what will become of his media empire. A week before the party, the Hollywood Reporter wrote that Redstone could likely be seen on that day venturing outside his Beverly Hills mansion near dusk to celebrate his 92nd birthday. Invitations, citing his “passion to party,” called for guests to arrive at 6 p.m.
“The changes are hitting Viacom harder than virtually any traditional media company on the planet”
At the designated hour, there’s no sign of Redstone. His handlers have managed to slip him in through a back door, obscured from would-be peepers by a makeshift black curtain. Once again, there will be no opportunity for the press to assess Redstone in person.
The party is short-lived. By 7:30, guests emerge to retrieve their cars and assure the reporters outside that Redstone is well and the soiree terrific. Tony Bennett sang jazz standards. There was cake. “Everybody showed up,” says billionaire Ron Burkle. “Any time with Sumner is a highlight,” says Michael Milken, the former junk-bond king. “I’ve known him a long time. He looks great.”
Yet concerns about Redstone’s health persist, because while he may show up for a party in his honor, he isn’t defending Viacom as he always has. And while CBS is thriving, Viacom, which includes 23 major and minor cable-TV networks in the U.S. and Paramount Pictures studio, is in trouble.
This season, according to Nielsen, the TV industry’s chief measurement agency, ratings have declined by double digits at Viacom’s most popular cable networks, including Comedy Central, BET, VH1, Nickelodeon, Spike, and TV Land. At MTV, the company’s flagship network, prime-time ratings are down 21.7 percent from last season and 25 percent in the 18- to 34-year-old demographic the network targets.
Redstone has a fortune estimated at $5.6 billion. As two of seven trustees, his daughter, Shari, and her son Tyler Korff will help determine the future of Viacom and CBS when Redstone dies.
Viacom’s poor ratings have managed to stand out, even as the collective pay-TV industry suffers an unprecedented ratings slump. In May, according to data compiled by MoffettNathanson Research, overall cable-TV ratings among 18- to 49-year-old prime-time viewers dropped 7 percent from last year. At Viacom, ratings fell 19 percent.
While Viacom is still profitable—last year it earned $2.4 billion in net income on $13.8 billion of revenue—the ratings collapse is alarming because the company is one of the least diversified of the U.S. media conglomerates. Its fortunes are heavily dependent on TV ratings, which help determine how much money it collects from advertisers and how much cable, satellite, and online distributors pay to carry Viacom programming.
In February the company’s prospects worsened when Jon Stewart, the star of Comedy Central’s The Daily Show, announced he would soon be leaving the network. Stephen Colbert has also jumped ship. Recently, a few cable operators have questioned whether they need to carry Viacom’s channels at all. Since the beginning of 2014, Suddenlink Communications and Cable One, two small operators, dropped the company’s lineup entirely.
In early April, Viacom announced it would write off $785 million in the second quarter, in part to cover the cost of older shows that are no longer as valuable. Across the company, large numbers of employees have been dismissed. During an April earnings call, Viacom said its domestic ad revenue had fallen 5 percent in the previous three months, the third straight quarterly decline.
In January, Todd Juenger, a Sanford C. Bernstein analyst, delivered a grim prognosis for Viacom. “Given our view that the audience abandonment of ad-supported TV is structural, and worst among kids and young-adult demographics, we believe the future is more likely negative than positive,” he wrote.
For years, even as the Internet razed much of the profits at newspapers, magazines, books, music labels, and movie studios, cable-TV networks kept making big money. More recently, as consumers shifted their viewing time from live television to various on-demand options, anxiety has risen. The standard subscription cable- or satellite-TV bundle—so lucrative for so long for TV programmers such as Viacom—is under duress because of the growing popularity of YouTube, Netflix, Hulu, and Amazon.com. At the same time, cable distributors, whose profits are becoming more dependent on selling speedy Internet access, are experimenting with cheaper, slimmed-down menus of programming that allow customers to purchase a few popular TV channels instead of paying for them all. As a result, poorly performing networks can’t count on the package deal to bail them out.
Nowhere is the mounting pressure on pay-TV more evident than at Viacom, whose 23 networks include several such as CMT, Centric, MTVU, and Palladia that few people watch but many pay for as part of bundles.
Philippe Dauman, Viacom’s chief executive officer and president, calls concerns about the company overblown: The problems, he argued recently, are the result of faulty measurement, not faulty programming decisions. In the meantime, Redstone’s 61-year-old daughter, Shari, is waiting in the wings, ready to lead a turnaround should the opportunity arise. “The threat to the core of Viacom is profound,” says Patrick Keane, a longtime media executive and current president of Sharethrough, an online advertising company. “The changes are hitting Viacom harder than virtually any traditional media company on the planet.”