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1995-02-21
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<text id=94TT0048>
<title>
Jan. 17, 1994: The Arts & Media:Radio
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Jan. 17, 1994 Genetics:The Future Is Now
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SPECTATOR, Page 65
The Agony Of Victory
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Kurt Andersen
</p>
<p> One of the reasons why I don't get excited about sports is
the same reason why so many Americans get really excited about
sports: each game or match ends unequivocally, always with a
clear winner and loser. Almost nothing else is so simple and
stark, and indeed as the consequential sectors of life become
more and more untidy in this post-cold war, confused-sexual-etiquette
age, obsessing over sports scores becomes for many people a
tempting refuge. Fifty-nine to 36, 125 to 119, 5 to 2, 4 to
0; scores are all so obvious and pure--too damned obvious
and pure for those of us inclined to suss out subtle meanings
and unseen truths. Where are the paradoxes and ironies? Where
is the rich, dialectical unfolding?
</p>
<p> Which is why so many current business stories, especially those
involving glamorous, huckstery businesses--that is, information
superhighway businesses--are providing such extensive pleasure.
In the just completed fight over the right to televise professional
football games, and in the interminable fight for control of
Paramount Communications, it doesn't require much contrarianism
to see the nominal winner in each instance as the ultimate loser.
</p>
<p> Losing as a means of winning has some antecedents. When the
Paris art establishment declined to let the Impressionists into
their annual show in 1863, they got their own Salon des Refuses,
and as a result the losers, including Manet, Whistler and Pisarro,
are somewhat more familiar names today than such winners as
Gleyre and Couture. Then there was, of course, the good luck
of Germany and Japan to lose their war against the U.S., which
enabled both to enjoy a half-century run of knock-'em-dead economic
robustness under American military protection. (Foolishly, Vietnam
won its war against the U.S., and two decades later is still
suffering for that victory.)
</p>
<p> In 1985, at the height of real estate a-go-go, the developer
and publisher Mort Zuckerman was chosen after an intense competition
to erect a gigantic high-rise--luxury condominiums! luxury
offices!--on government land at the southwestern corner of
Central Park; he was a winner. But a coalition of liberal Manhattan
swells, worried about the shadow the skyscraper would cast over
the park, ruinously slowed down Zuckerman's plans; Mort was
a loser. Then the commercial real estate market crashed, with
Zuckerman, lucky for him, having built nothing; so he is a winner.
</p>
<p> Lately, however, the trend has been for putative triumphs to
reveal themselves as defeats rather than the other way around,
and to do so quickly. Almost as soon as West Germany, for instance,
achieved its fondest desire, unification with East Germany,
its economy and politics started going haywire, and the peace
and prosperity that had resulted from surrender was over. The
Senate's confirmation of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court
was a putative win for the Bush Administration and the Republicans,
but it was anti-Thomas backlash a year later that elected a
squadron of Democratic women to the Senate and helped lose the
election for Bush. In the fall of 1992, the four broadcast networks,
especially CBS, were giddy at winning their long fight in Congress
to oblige the cable-TV companies to negotiate payments for the
network shows carried on cable; a year later, the networks,
especially CBS, capitulated to terms essentially dictated by
the cable companies.
</p>
<p> CBS lost N.F.L. football last month, and the Fox network won
it. What Fox won, though, was the right to spend $399.5 million
a year on games for which CBS has been taking in around $200
million a year--which means Fox has agreed out front to squander
tens and probably hundreds of millions of dollars during the
next four years. The deal, Fox's Rupert Murdoch blithely concedes,
"will certainly be a loss." But these days in the televi--that is, information superhighway--business, the iffy expenditure
of billion-dollar sums is required in order to be considered
visionary. "It's a plan for the future," says Lucie Salhany,
Murdoch's charmingly high-strung network president, of the football
deal. "It takes the network to another level." In other words,
it's a 21st century thing, and if you don't get it, you're a
plodder and a bean counter.
</p>
<p> It is Day 121 in the struggle between Sumner Redstone's Viacom
and Barry Diller's QVC to acquire Paramount. The winner in this
fight will almost certainly be a loser because the winner will
overpay. Overpaying is a major symptom of show-business fever.
Whatever the wishful rationalization of the day--magazines
and cable TV need the synergy of movies and records (Time and
Warner, 1989); hardware needs software (Sony and Matsushita
buying Columbia Pictures and MCA/Universal, 1990-91); the information
superhighway needs content (everyone, 1993-94)--it is almost
axiomatic that when people come down with show-business fever,
they pay a premium of 20% to 40%. QVC and Viacom are each offering
nearly $10 billion for Paramount, which is about $3 billion
more than the in-house analysis run by Capital Cities/ABC, for
instance, reckoned the company is worth.
</p>
<p> Close confidants of both Diller and Redstone say they have urged
their respective principals in the past few weeks to back down
and let the other tough guy win Paramount, plus the exciting
obligation of assuming $4 billion to $8 billion in debt. But
Redstone has the fever. Last Friday he threw more billions on
the table and, to raise the cash, all but ceded control of his
company, giving up half the seats on his board of directors
to outsiders. He is plainly determined to win, even if it means
losing.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>