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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT0273>
<title>
Sep. 27, 1993: The Man With The Iron Grasp
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Sep. 27, 1993 Attack Of The Video Games
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 74
The Man With The Iron Grasp
</hdr><body>
<p>Through sheer will, he escaped a fatal fire; now the king of
MTV wants to become a media tycoon
</p>
<p>By JOHN GREENWALD--Reported by Sam Allis and John F. Dickerson/New York
</p>
<p> In the most desperate moments of his life, a severely burned
Sumner Redstone saved himself by clinging to a window ledge
with his right handand counting to 10 over and over again as
flames swept through his room in a Boston hotel fire. "My legs
were burned to my arteries," he recalls. "I got to a window,
and it wouldn't open. I got to another one and hung by my hands.
It seemed like a lifetime." Despite 60 hours of burn surgery,
doctors doubted that Redstone would ever walk again. His tendons
were destroyed, his little finger partly amputated. Yet 14 years
later, he not only walks but plays tennis with a ferocity that
unnerves his opponents.
</p>
<p> That relentless will to survive and conquer has now led Redstone,
70, the chairman of MTV-owner Viacom Inc., to launch what could
be the business coup of a lifetime. At an age when most executives
are thinking country clubs and conferences, Redstone last week
engineered an $8.2 billion offer to acquire Paramount Communications
for $69.14 a share in cash and stock and thereby create one
of the world's media giants.Since Redstone would hold 70% of
the voting stock of the combined company, he would have majority
control of more movies, books and television shows than any
other media mogul_unless Ted Turner, Barry Diller or one of
the other rival suitors now circling the Paramount building
comes forward and derails the merger.
</p>
<p> Redstone, a rags-to-riches tycoon who is worth about $4 billion,
has always sought to crush all comers -- from rivals who might
try to bust up his latest deal to weekend tennis partners. On
the court he uses a special leather strap that wraps around
his scarred right hand to enable him to grip the racquet. "He
is the most formidable competitor I've ever had," says Alan
Friedberg, a retired chairman of Loews Theater Management Corp.
In one tennis rally, Redstone demanded to know whether his ball
was in or out. "He had to know, even though we were just hitting,"
Friedberg recalls with lingering wonder. "It happened to be
out, and I told him. He insisted it wasn't. We were rallying,
mind you. I was stunned."
</p>
<p> Off the court, Redstone wears nondescript suits and owns the
same three-bedroom home in Newton, Massachusetts, that he and
his wife Phyllis paid $42,000 for 35 years ago. He favors the
less fancy Pine Brook Country Club in nearby Weston over the
prestigious Longwood Cricket Club in Brookline. He spends weekdays
in Manhattan's Carlyle Hotel to be near Viacom headquarters.
Often rising at 5 a.m., he reads the morning papers and then
works out on a treadmill while watching TV. His days last up
to 18 hours. "I live modestly," Redstone says. "Possessions
don't count. Achievement counts. Winning counts."
</p>
<p> Just who is this ultracombative billionaire who happens to be
the grandfather of the MTV generation?
</p>
<p> Born Sumner Murray Rothstein in Boston's largely Jewish old
West End, Redstone was the elder son of a businessman whose
nail-biting Depression-era ventures included selling linoleum
from the back of a truck, working as a liquor wholesaler and
eventually owning two nightclubs and a restaurant. "People think
I grew up rich," he recalls. "I grew up in a tenement." From
childhood on, "I always had to be the best at what I did. My
mother was a big influence. When I used to practice the piano,
she would turn the clock back on me," forcing him to practice
longer. His father, says Redstone, was a "street kid" with little
formal education and a central "need just to survive," which
made his household a place where error and failure were not
easily tolerated.
</p>
<p> Redstone sharpened his competitive instincts at Boston Latin
School and then whizzed through Harvard in three years. "Harvard
was like going to kindergarten after Boston Latin," he recalls.
The public prep school was "tough, almost cruel. The competition
was vicious. But the cruelty was not discriminatory. It only
had to do with excellence." He graduated first in his class
at Boston Latin, a feat he calls "the primary educational achievement
of my life."
</p>
<p> At World War II Harvard, Redstone's gift for foreign languages
caught the eye of Edwin Reischauer, a future U.S. ambassador
to Japan, who picked him to join an Army intelligence unit that
cracked Japan's wartime codes. Redstone entered Harvard Law
School after the Army and began to use his business skills to
earn spending money, buying pens, tools and other merchandise
with G.I. discounts and selling them to local department stores
for a profit. "My children [Brent, 43, and Shari, 40, both
lawyers] will never have the benefit of that experience, and
it is a benefit, let me tell you." Redstone practiced law for
six years before deciding that "litigation is generally offensive
to me. All that happens is dissipation of intellectual and financial
resources."
</p>
<p> Turning to business, Redstone joined his father's drive-in movie
firm and built it into National Amusements, Inc., an 800-theater
chain. "He'd drive me up a wall," says Friedberg. "He'd call
the head of a movie company over a single movie in a single
town. Saturday or Sunday, he didn't care. He'd do whatever he
had to do legally to get the picture away from me." To ensure
that he would have total control of his theaters, Redstone insisted
on owning both the land and the buildings. He also was a pioneer:
first, he personally litigated (and won) a case that forced
the studios to give drive-in theaters the same access to first-run
movies as indoor movie houses had. Then, noting that audiences
wanted a wider range of features, he helped popularize the multiplex
cinemas that are now ubiquitous at suburban shopping malls.
And with typical thoroughness, he copyrighted the name Multiplex.
</p>
<p> In 1987 Redstone launched a bid to acquire Viacom, which owned
the nation's 10th largest cable system as well as cable networks
that included MTV, Nickelodeon and The Movie Channel. Although
he knew nothing about cable television or rock videos, he knew
they were stealing viewers away from movie theaters. At the
same time, he recognized the burgeoning worldwide demand for
home entertainment, particularly in the youth market. "A cable
system to me was a wire in the ground and a thingumajiggy pointed
at the screen," he says. "But I saw a vast technological and
global revolution that would change the habits of people all
over the world, and I saw Viacom at the center of it."
</p>
<p> Gaining the prize was another matter. Redstone says all he knew
about leveraged buyouts was that they were called LBOs; and
Viacom had just proved it could survive a takeover attempt by
raider Carl Icahn. When Viacom executives launched their own
bid for the company, Redstone seized control of the firm in
a bitter takeover war that forced him to raise his offer three
times.
</p>
<p> Redstone turned MTV into a global entertainment network that
today reaches more than 230 million homes in 77 countries, making
its name nearly as familiar as Mickey Mouse or Coca-Cola. No
sooner had Redstone added Viacom to the fold than he began to
prowl for a major movie studio. He held fitful talks with Paramount
chairman Martin Davis over the past four years, but until last
week none had come to fruition. Among other problems, Davis
was also shopping for an acquisition after the failure of his
1989 bid for Time Inc., which threatened its merger with Warner
Communications, and he was loath to surrender control of the
company.
</p>
<p> Redstone saw his chance earlier this year when Paramount's stock,
which had hit a high of 66 3/8 a share in 1989, continued to
languish after several years of up-and-down profits; it was
trading at 56 3/8 at the beginning of this month. Meanwhile,
Viacom class A stock climbed from about 49 a share in June to
more than 65, boosted in part by acquisitions that Redstone
made under a company stock-purchase plan. Davis also had to
worry about a less friendly suitor trying to take over Paramount.
"Martin heard footsteps," says a major Paramount shareholder.
Davis compares the deal to "going back to your childhood sweetheart.
Maybe she didn't look as attractive when you first dated, but
you tried all the others and you came back."
</p>
<p> Although Redstone insists that "Martin and I have been intimate
friends for decades," some executive-suite watchers predict
that relations between the two demanding men will be brutish
and short, with Davis, 66, leaving the merged company. Yet while
Redstone can explode with rage and send subordinates scurrying,
he has never been a tyrant who issues orders from behind closed
doors. He listens intently at management meetings, and subordinates
say he encourages them to speak their mind. "He wants everyone
in the room to kick the s--- out of an idea," says Tom Dooley,
a close assistant. "That's his sanity check. If it survives,
it's good."
</p>
<p> Several years after his close-call survival of the hotel fire,
Redstone could be heard occasionally brooding over the meaning
of a career that had left him atop a heap of movie theaters.
But with one of the world's largest media companies within his
reach, Redstone seems to have banished his existential anxieties.
The fire, he says, only scarred him physically. "I never felt
bad," he explains. "I've had no nightmares. I think of it only
at happy moments, like when I'm hitting the tennis ball."
</p>
</body></article>
</text>