Posted on 03/30/2004 11:35:51 PM PST by Registered
Al Gets Gore-TV by Joe Hagan
The Observer has learned that former Vice President Al Gore and business partner Joel Hyatt, an entrepreneur and Democratic fund-raiser, will close the deal to pay around $70 million to French-owned Vivendi Universal this week, making them the owners of the tiny digital-cable channel Newsworld International (NWI), moving Mr. Gore from politics to mini-media-moguldom.
Mr. Gores group plans to transform the sleepy foreign-news outlet into a youth-oriented public-affairs channel, a jump-cut news network for the iPod set. Despite vociferous claims that the network isnt attempting to be the liberal antidote to Rupert Murdochs Fox News, its difficult to ignore the obvious: It may be fair, it may be balanced, but its going to be owned by Al Gore.
Meanwhile, the other Al among media giants, media-political hybrid Al Franken, incipient Minnesota Democratic candidate and Bill OReilly tag-team partner, was launching his somewhat more overtly political media project, Air America Radio, the little liberal radio network determined to correct the Fox effect on American news. And Als pal Al was delighted.
"Fabulous!" Mr. Franken said. "I think its a good thing. I think Al Gores a good guy." He started laughing with pleasure just thinking about it. "And I think Al Gore is a smart guy who has tremendous curiosity, and I think hes a person who likes ideas," he continued. "And I think, you know, from all I know from the people Ive met in media, hed be a good choice as someone to have a piece of it. Im much more comfortable in his hands than a lot of people."
As far as the dovetailing between Air America Radio and Mr. Gores project, Mr. Franken said, "Its all part of the same thing. Its fighting back . I think that the countrytheres an odd idea that the mainstream media is liberal, and it just isnt. And I think the mainstream media has become scared of its own shadow. Basically, their testicles have been sucked up into their body cavity with a slurping sound."
And how were his own testicles holding up?
"Mine are hanging fine," he said.
Would he address Mr. Gores new TV network on his radio show?
"Yeah. I think were going to have Al on the show, actually," he said.
Had Mr. Franken considered coupling the radio network with Mr. Gores TV project? He hadnt, but "Id be open to that," he said.
No one from Mr. Gores camp would comment. They were keeping a low profile, said a source, until they had a high-wattage executive to face the press. "Theyre going to stay quiet until theyve hired their Roger Ailes and let him do all the talking," said the source, speaking of Mr. Ailes, the media visionary, liberal bête noire and former Nixon adviser who put Fox News on the map. "They dont have him yet."
Mr. Franken agreed that Mr. Gore had to find an Ailes type to lead the show. "Roger does a very good job," he said. "Thats exactly what they need. And I told them that at the beginning: a little less evil, but someone like him."
Mr. Franken didnt speak the name of Mr. Murdoch; he didnt have to. After all, it was News Corp.s conservative tycoon who, 10 years ago, laid the groundwork for the empire that would redraw the American political center, step up to bat for George W. Bush and send the American liberal establishment into a frothing, reactive tizzy, and Mr. Franken into best-sellerdom.
It wasnt easy for Mr. Gore to get his hands on NWI. According to two sources familiar with the situation, Mr. Gore went so far as to seek the influence of French President Jacques Chirac in buying the channel, hoping that Mr. Chirac would aid him in landing a sweetened deal with Vivendi chief executive Jean-René Fourtouand quick. That request resulted in a meeting last summer with executives of Universal Television Group and Vivendis chief operating officer, Jean-Bernard Levy. At the time, however, Vivendi was preparing to sell its cable properties to NBC, which temporarily stalled Mr. Gores media ambitions.
The deal was delayed for nearly a year, most recently by Barry Diller, chairman and chief executive of InterActive Corp. As the former owner of USA Networks, which he sold to Vivendi for $10 billion in 2001, Mr. Diller still owned a stake in those properties. Sources said Vivendi was keen on selling NWI to Mr. Gore, but Mr. Diller needed to resolve his ownership in Universal properties first. One source with knowledge of the situation suggested that Mr. Diller had stalled the deal as a bargaining chip to improve his take on Vivendis sale of Universal to NBC. But a spokeswoman for Mr. Diller disputed that. "It was only Mr. Gore who asked us to reconsider, given how long the process was taking," she said, "to which we did agree to let this asset escape from our J.V. [joint venture], for no consideration of any kind or as part of any discussion with Vivendi."
In any case, the path was cleared for Mr. Gores group to close the deal. Its not clear where Mr. Gore and Mr. Hyatt rounded up the money, or how they will cover the gargantuan programming costs to come. But as you may recall, Mr. Gores first gig after the election of 2000 was becoming vice chairman of Metropolitan West Financial Inc., headquartered in Los Angeles, which hired him to explore high-tech investments. With the assistance of Peter Knight, his former Democratic fund-raiser and a managing director at Metropolitan West, Mr. Gore had access to scores of investors, according to sources close to him.
The Observer has also learned that the chief operating officer of the fledgling company will be a Los Angelesbased media consultant named Mark Goldman, who served during the late 90s as the president and chief executive officer of Mr. Murdochs satellite company, Sky Latin America.
So here we are. Mr. Murdoch had astonishingly realigned the American media while the Democrats had wallowed in power during the Clinton-Gore era, building a base by insisting nonstop that the traditional television networks (CBS, NBC and ABC) were liberally biasedthe same claim that Republicans had been making from Barry Goldwater on, and that reached a near bulls-eye with Vice President Spiro Agnews attacks (written by Pat Buchanan and William Safire) in 1970.
It took a while for the right to get a commander of Mr. Murdochs power and vision, but he showed up. And since the liberals command of the media, such as it was, was neither as explicitly ideological nor as passionate as Foxs, they wallowed lazily and cluelessly as they were turned into culture villains by the right. And as liberalism went into abeyancedebunked even by President Clintonthe left never really developed an explicit alternative.
Starting in the early 1990s, with mighty-righty railer Rush Limbaugh, Republicans had built a well-oiled machine of speakers bureaus, think tanks, newspapers and magazinesincluding Mr. Murdochs own glossy high-end neoconservative mouthpiece, The Weekly Standardand spearheaded the whole thing with the revolutionary cable juggernaut, Fox News. Suddenly, in 2000, what constituted the fair and balanced was over here, rather than over there.
In 2002, a motivated and focused Al Gore, having lost the Presidency for reasons that he partly chalked up to what he felt was a rancid culture, told The Observer that Fox News and Mr. Limbaugh were part of a "fifth column" within the media, responsible for injecting "daily Republican talking points into the definition of whats objective."
With a veritable culture war driving the Presidential yearand with the news media serving as the weapon of choice to bludgeon the hell out of an opponentthe Democrats are building their own left-handed sledge, or at least a rough approximation of the weapon of the right. It started with the Center for American Progress, former Clinton chief of staff John Podestas think tank, the lefts response to the Bush-approved American Enterprise Institute. Next came Governor Howard Dean with his populist Internetadmired by Mr. Gore, the Deanie Web site was apparently the thing that made Mr. Gore most ga-ga to endorse the Vermont governor for Presidentperforming a counterweight to the Wild West of right-wing Web sites. A source close to Mr. Gore said that his endorsement of Mr. Deans bid was inspired almost exclusively by his fascination with Dr. Deans media approach and his ability to reach young voters through the Internet. "The reason why Gore became engaged with Dean," said the source, "was he was fascinated with the way they consumed information and communicated with their supporters, and the way their supporters communicated with them."
"He clearly got it," recalled Joe Trippi, Dr. Deans former campaign manager and now an MSNBC election analyst. "He clearly got that there was a difference now, that you had to go from the bottom up to use the media."
And now theres Air America Radio, the antiRush Limbaugh network.
Suddenly, in New York, you can find Mr. Franken on WLIB 1190 AM. It may not be the FAN, but its there. And Mr. Gores NWI will be on Time Warner Digital Cable, Channel 103a long way from Hannity and Colmes, but a signal nevertheless.
For a time, Mr. Gores TV channel will maintain its current programming, for which there appears to be a very, very small market. NWI has carriage in about 20 million homes, and packages "foreign newscasts originally broadcast in countries such as Germany, Japan, Canada and the European community," according to its Web site. Currently, Newsworld is a bit like something Bill Murray would flip on in the hotel in Lost in Translation: a two-minute dialogue-free video essay on squirrels, followed by the news about a freak rotating-door accident in a Tokyo shopping mall.
Sources close to Mr. Gore insisted that his new cable network wouldnt be a liberal answer to Fox News, as some had reported and even hoped. But everyone seemed to agree that the channel would be a 24-hour news, documentary and public-affairs channel geared toward kids in their 20s, with a scrappy, Dogme 95 news philosophy that would arm kids with cheap digital cameras and empower them to do an end run around the big media. As The Observer reported last year, Mr. Gores principal business partner, Mr. Hyatt, purchased a Web site called V.tv from the .tv Corporation in April of 2003, prompting speculation that Mr. Gores channel would be called VTV. The companys Web site listed Mr. Hyatt, who teaches business at Stanford University, as the representative of Mr. Gores holding company, INDTV L.L.C., registered in Stanford, Calif.
One thing thats clear is that VTV seems to fulfill Mr. Gores own youthful ambitions to get behind the camera, as opposed to being in front of it. His 103-page senior thesis for the government department at Harvard was entitled "The Impact of Television on the Conduct of the Presidency, 1947-1969." In essence, Mr. Gore argued that as soon as Presidential hopefuls could bypass newspapers and talk directly to millions of TV viewers, a scintillating personality became a job requirement. It was prescient, if not self-applicable.
Mr. Gore then worked as a reporter, first in Vietnam while serving in the U.S. Army, then at the Nashville Tennessean in the mid-70s. Much later, of course, he gave the Internet a crucial boost while in Congress. Mr. Gores obsession with newfangled tech-geek stuff was catalyzed by the dot-com boom. As Apple Computer chief executive Steve Jobs told reporters in 2003, confirming Mr. Gores geek credentials: "Al is also an avid Mac user and does his own video editing in Final Cut Pro."
He was also a big fan of MTVs late-90s video-diary show, Unfiltered, which inspired him to meet with its creator in 2002 in the hope of producing similar programming himself. In the last year, Mr. Gore began building a rationale for a new television service: In a speech to students at Middle Tennessee State University in November 2003, he spoke of televisions "quasi-hypnotic influence" on the electorate. "If people are just staring at a little box for four hours a day, it has a big impact on democracy," he said. "We have to choose to rehabilitate our democracy in part by making creative use of these new media and by insisting within the current institutions of our democracy that we open up access to the dominant medium."
Mr. Franken agreed that the left had been lax during the techno-revolution while the right "felt a certain urgency, to their credit, and they had a lot of right-wing financiers who saw this as a need. A lot of them were trust-fund babies who inherited a lot of money and wanted to keep it and now have bought their way into the Congress and the Bush administration, and you have a lot of wealth trying to keep a lot of wealth and a very stacked deck in this country right now."
Mr. Franken has said he may only do his radio show for a year, depending on how he likes it. For him, there was a pointed political endgame to his own media pursuitsgetting Senator John Kerry elected to the Presidency. "I think Rush has had some effect on elections, and I wouldnt mind having some effect on this one," he said. "I dont know how quickly but hopefully well be able to have some influence and some effect on the way people think."
Then Mr. Franken paused. There was an edge in his voice. He seemed to realize that he suddenly owned a piece of the playing field and it wasnt just a college game, that there were stakes.
"Kick a little ass," he said.
You may reach Joe Hagan via email at: jhagan@observer.com.
Will he come out with the iGore? A mp3 device that doubles as a butterfly ballot which tells you what prescription drugs you need and requires you to operate it only with your left hand?
"MINI MEDIA MOGUL"
LOL!
You just can't make anything up that's funnier than the real-life libs. They buy a network and it just happens to be FRENCH!
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