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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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apr_jun
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0531200.000
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(May 31, 1993) On Ramp to the Electronic Highway
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 52
Building the On Ramp to the Electronic Highway
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A $2.5 billion deal may launch an era of cooperation between
phone and cable firms
</p>
<p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT--With reporting by John F. Dickerson
and Thomas McCarroll/New York
</p>
<p> For years, cable-TV operators and telephone companies have
behaved like jealous rivals--spreading gossip about each other's
weaknesses, whining to regulators about monopolistic bullying
and watching with suspicion any attempt by one to poach on the
other's territory. The sniping has grown even shriller in recent
months as it became clear that the two industries were on a
collision course in their separate efforts to build the so-called
electronic super-highway--that futuristic information pipeline
over which people will soon order up everything from the latest
Hollywood movies to the hottest new video games.
</p>
<p> So it came as somewhat of a surprise when two of the biggest
players--Time Warner, the nation's second largest cable operator,
and U S West, the fifth largest telephone company--announced
last week that they were becoming digital partners. In a deal
that sent television-, telecommunications- and entertainment-industry
analysts scrambling back to their spread sheets, the two companies
announced a $2.5 billion strategic alliance in which U S West
will supply technological savvy (and an infusion of badly needed
cash) in return for 25.51% of Time Warner Entertainment, one
of the world's largest collections of entertainment copyrights,
including the film and TV properties of Warner Bros., HBO and
Lorimar. (Time Warner's music and publishing operations, which
include this magazine, are not part of Time Warner Entertainment
and thus are excluded from the deal.)
</p>
<p> The marriage of two such powerful partners is certain to accelerate
the conversion of modern cable TV into the two-way, interactive
system that will allow consumers to order movies, browse through
store merchandise, send pictures of the kids to Grandma, make
phone calls and request a wide variety of information services--all by pushing buttons on their TV remote controls. Time
Warner officials now say it will take five years--not 10,
as previously estimated--for these new services to be rolled
out to the company's 7.1 million cable subscribers.
</p>
<p> The deal is likely to reshape business alliances in both industries.
Cable and telephone companies that once viewed themselves as
fierce competitors are starting to eye each other as potential
mates. "You can bet every major cable operator is talking to
every phone company right now," says a cable-industry insider.
Meanwhile, the deal could shatter whatever solidarity still
exists among the so-called Baby Bells--the seven regional
phone companies that were created by the breakup of AT&T in
1984. Until now, each has enjoyed a monopoly on local telephone
service in its own region; long-distance phone companies had
to pay a hefty fee to, say, BellSouth, in order to connect
to a phone customer in Atlanta. But through its new alliance,
U S West will, in theory, be able to provide local phone service
to Time Warner cable subscribers outside the Western states,
threatening to grab a share of the long-distance connect charges
that account for a quarter of the Baby Bells' revenues and half
their profits.
</p>
<p> What makes the marriage of the two industries so compelling
is that each has something the other needs. The TV operators
have built extensive networks of coaxial cable with enough information-carrying
capacity (or bandwidth) to broadcast hundreds of TV channels
simultaneously. The phone companies badly need that cable to
replace their narrow copper wires, which can barely carry a
single TV station. At the same time, phone companies have sophisticated
switching and billing systems that the cable companies would
otherwise have to build from scratch.
</p>
<p> The rational solution would be to combine both operations into
a single system. There's one problem with that: it's illegal.
The Cable Act, for example, forbids telephone companies to own
more than 5% of a cable-TV programmer in their territory. The
cable companies, meanwhile, are not allowed to provide basic
telephone services through their coaxial lines.
</p>
<p> That's why previous efforts to merge TV and telephone interests
have been relatively modest. Earlier this year, Southwestern
Bell acquired two cable systems in the metro Washington area--far outside its operating region. Similarly, Pacific Telesis
took an option to buy a cable system in Chicago, although it
will need special permission to send cable programming to the
system by satellite. Cox Enterprises and Tele-Communications
Inc. (TCI), the world's largest cable-TV operator, joined forces
last year to buy Teleport, a company that provides a telephone
service not covered by the Cable Act: private branch exchanges
to business customers.
</p>
<p> What made the Time Warner-U S West merger possible was an accident
of geography: although U S West covers 14 states and Time Warner
has cable franchises in 36 states, there is almost no overlap
in the territories they cover. (Even so, the deal had to be
crafted to avoid various regulatory pitfalls.) The way the transaction
is structured, U S West pays Time Warner $2.5 billion over four
years--$1 billion to upgrade Time Warner's cable systems and
the rest to reduce its debt (which had ballooned to $16 billion
since the 1989 merger of Time Inc. and Warner Communications).
"What's driving this deal is technology, not finances," insists
Time Warner chairman Gerald Levin. The key technology, he says,
is the digital switch needed to route voice, text and video
to each subscriber's home. Time Warner had planned to build
the necessary switching system itself but realized about a year
ago it needed help. "We underestimated the skills required,"
says Levin. "I think the cable-TV industry has underestimated
the difficulty of entering the telecommunications business."
</p>
<p> For its part, U S West has made what some see as a prescient
investment in the movies and TV shows that will be carried over
the information highways no matter who owns them. According
to W. Russell Neuman, a communications expert at Tufts University,
U S West has profited from the lesson Sony learned when it lost
the VCR wars a decade earlier. Sony's Beta lost out to VHS because
its competitors made better deals with the folks who held the
intellectual-property rights--in this case, the movie companies.
That, says Neuman, is why Sony bought CBS Records and Columbia
Pictures. It's also why Toshiba and Itochu bought 12.5% of Time
Warner Entertainment in 1991.
</p>
<p> Although the reaction on Wall Street was largely positive, some
analysts focused on the assets Time Warner gave up. If U S West
and the Japanese investors exercise all their options, the company
could be left with barely more than 50% of the remaining stock
in its entertainment division, cutting into the windfall it
might otherwise realize should the new medium dramatically increase
the value of its movies and TV shows. "The question is whether
Time Warner is selling off its crown jewels in little pieces,"
says David Londoner, an analyst at Wertheim Schroder.
</p>
<p> Some consumer groups wondered about the wisdom of putting the
distribution system into the hands of the company that controls
the information carried over it. "We were told that telephone
companies would provide competition to cable companies," complains
Jeffrey Chester, director of the Center for Media Education.
"Instead of competition, what we are now seeing is the creation
of a media supermonopoly."
</p>
<p> But officials in the Clinton Administration were briefed on
the Time Warner-U S West deal before it was announced, and most
observers expect the government to ease restrictions against
cross-ownership, not tighten them. "If the law were changed
tomorrow," says TCI CEO John Malone,"I believe there would be
a wholesale merger of the telephone and cable companies." Some
think it has already begun. "The train is leaving the station,"
says Professor Neuman. "And everybody is scurrying to get on
board before it departs."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>