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All posts tagged ‘Jeff Bewkes’

Monday, August 4, 2008

AOL: When I Was Born the Doctor Slapped My Mother

AOL is the Rodney Dangerfield of the Web. It don’t get no respect.”

Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes

America Online acquired Time Warner for roughly $106 billion in stock and debt back in 2001. “I don’t think this is too much to say: This really is a historic merger, a time when we’ve transformed the landscape of media and the Internet,” former AOL chairman and CEO Steve Case said at the time. “Time Warner will offer an incomparable portfolio of global brands that encompass the full spectrum of media and content.”

And it did. Problem was, AOL didn’t turn out to be one of them. And now, Time Warner (TWX), which struggled for years to turn AOL into the “digital media powerhouse” it was supposed to be, is planning to divest it. When the company reports second-quarter earnings Wednesday, it is expected to reveal that it’s separated AOL’s declining Internet access and advertising businesses. And that’s the first step in unloading one or both of them.

But who will buy the Rodney Dangerfield of the Web? Well, Time Warner has been and continues to be in informal talks with both Microsoft (MSFT) and Yahoo (YHOO) regarding AOL. Earthlink (ELNK) too is a possibility here. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal last week, CEO Rolla Huff said a merger of AOL’s dial-up business with EarthLink’s would be a wise move. “We think it’s worth aggressively pursuing,” he said of such a deal. “We believe we’re best-positioned to be the consolidator in this industry. When an industry reaches a point of maturation and growth stops, it simply makes good economic sense to consolidate onto one cost platform.”

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Another Historic Tete-a-Tete We’d Like to See at D6

yangballmer.jpgA tough act to follow, last year’s D: All Things Digital 5. How do you best, or even match, a 75-minute joint interview with Microsoft (MSFT) Chairman Bill Gates and Apple (AAPL) CEO Steve Jobs–a history-making history lesson taught by two principal protagonists of tech’s narrative? Summon Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla and George Westinghouse from the dead to reminisce about the “War of Currents”?

No. Better to let history make itself, as it always has, and focus on making news. And it’s likely there will be quite a bit of it coming out of D: All Things Digital 6. With this year’s lineup, how could there not? Microsoft’s Bill Gates and CEO Steve Ballmer onstage together just a month before Gates steps back from his day-to-day duties as company chairman. Time Warner (TWX) CEO Jeff Bewkes talking strategy as the media giant prepares to spin off Time Warner Cable and tries to figure out just what the hell to do with AOL. Lowell McAdam of Verizon Wireless (VZ) and FCC Chaiman Kevin Martin appearing separately, but together offering an insider view of the telecom industry as it grapples with issues of Net neutrality, open access and early termination fees. And then there’s Yahoo’s (YHOO) Jerry Yang and Sue Decker, who’ve been struggling to right a foundering Internet pioneer as it battles Google (GOOG), Microsoft, investor-agitator Carl Icahn and itself.

And that’s just a sampling. Clearly, there’s much to talk about. Much news to be made.

Sure, we may not have managed to arrange another tete-a-tete as historic as last year’s Gates/Jobs interview.

But we did manage to get Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and Yahoo Co-Founder Jerry Yang on the same stage–albeit at different times. Still, no easy feat, that.

And who knows, perhaps we’ll get them onstage together as well.

So join us at d6.allthingsd.com tomorrow for as-it-happens, all-access coverage of the conference. Liveblogs of the sessions and demos. Videos of the speakers. Photos of attendees. You’ll find it all here.

(Photo illustration by Beth Callaghan)

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

If You Can’t Beat ’Em, Bribe Their Users

New From Time Warner Cable: Dividend-on-Demand

Time Warner, the world’s largest media company, soon won’t be quite so large. This morning Time Warner revealed the details of its planned spinoff of Time Warner Cable, a massive transaction that will separate the company’s content and distribution businesses once and for all.

The deal, which has been approved by both companies’ boards, calls for Time Warner Cable to pay a hefty $10.9 billion one-time dividend to shareholders. As parent company, Time Warner (TWX) will pocket $9.25 billion of that payout.

It’s a flashy move for Time Warner’s new CEO Jeff Bewkes, who’s been hard pressed to reinvigorate the company’s stock price. “After the transaction, each company will have greater strategic, financial and operational flexibility and will be better positioned to compete,” he said in a statement. “Separating the two companies will help their management teams focus on realizing the full potential of the respective businesses and will provide investors with greater choice in how they own this portfolio of assets.”

That’s all well and good, but how does Time Warner plan to realize the full potential of a $9.25 billion payout? By buying a company or two, perhaps. “Our share of the special dividend will clearly enhance our financial flexibility,” Bewkes said during a conference call this morning. “… We’re looking at all of the usual uses of capital, including returning capital to stockholders, including disciplined acquisitions and including investing further in our business.”

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

AOL Revenues Worse Than Its Dial-Up Speeds

cliff.jpgTime Warner’s AOL division posted financial results today, and while its revenue did not, as some investors worried, “fall off a cliff,” it’s clearly hanging on to one for dear life.

Revenue at the AOL unit slid 23% to $1.1 billion, with much of that decline stemming from a steep 28% drop-off in dial-up subscribers. Ad-revenue growth slowed markedly, rising just 1%. Disappointing news for Time Warner (TWX), which has been mulling the possible sale of AOL. With the MicroHoo merger on the horizon, the field of suitors for the division could narrow by two very quickly.

That said, today brought with it good news for Time Warner as well. The company reported first-quarter earnings that were largely in line with analyst expectations and announced plans to spin off its cable operation. “We’ve decided that a complete structural separation of Time Warner Cable, under the right circumstances, is in the best interests of both companies’ shareholders,” Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes said today in a statement. “We’re working hard on an agreement with Time Warner Cable, which we expect to finalize soon.”

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Yahoo: “A Lot to Be Excited About”

About John

John Paczkowski has been poking fun at the tech industry and the personalities that drive it since 1997. From 1999 to 2007, he wrote the award-winning tech news Web log Good Morning Silicon Valley for the San Jose Mercury News, Silicon Valley's daily newspaper.

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Here is a statement of my ethics and coverage policies. It is more than most of you want to know, but, in the age of suspicion of the media, I am laying it all out.

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