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In The Room
Dylan Byers Dylan Byers

Greetings from Las Vegas, and welcome back to In the Room. Bob Barnett, the legendary Washington superlawyer and power agent, has died at 79. A widely revered D.C. fixture famed for his cheery disposition, Barnett sherpaed presidents and lawmakers from their first political campaigns through their private-sector transitions. He negotiated book deals and television contracts for stars of the political-media arena, from the Obamas, Bushes, and Clintons to Bob Woodward, Wolf Blitzer, and George Will. And, quite frustratingly for my purposes, he was a master of discretion. You can look forward to many laudatory obituaries in this weekend’s papers, but until then, I’d point you to this 2008 profile in the Washingtonian, for which he agreed to be interviewed so long as the author agreed to keep the details of his office decor off the record.

In tonight’s issue, news and notes on how l’affaire Kimmel affects the Iger succession planning in Burbank. Plus, some palace intrigue from various corners of The Wall Street Journal. 🍸 Plus, on the latest edition of The Grill Room, Julia Alexander and I dove into the most pressing questions coming out of the Disney-Kimmel-F.C.C.-Trump drama and explored how the White House might try to expand its anti-press campaign to social platforms and independent creators. Follow The Grill Room on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you prefer to listen. 📝 Finally, if you haven’t filled out the latest Puck Private Conversation survey, powered by our partners at Orchestra, I invite you to do so here. This edition is all about the media business, and your answers will help fuel my reporting as well as conversations taking place across the industry. Mentioned in this issue: Dana Walden, Bob Iger, Josh D’Amaro, Rob Mills, Jimmy Kimmel, Brendan Carr, Rupert Murdoch, David Ellison, Jeffrey Epstein, and many, many more… Let’s get started…
  • Get me Rupert!: Since Trump’s jihad against the media looms large this week, allow me to call your attention to The Wall Street Journal’s deep dive into the White House’s effort to tamp down the Jeffrey Epstein story. Included therein is an account of the president’s failed attempt to persuade Rupert Murdoch to kill the Journal’s report on the 2003 birthday letter he allegedly sent to Epstein. From Air Force One, Trump called Rupert “and told him the story wasn’t true and that he should handle it. … After the article’s publication, Trump sued Journal publisher Dow Jones, parent company News Corp and several individuals including Murdoch for defamation, calling the letter ‘nonexistent.’”Of course, what we all really want to know is what happened after Trump’s call and before the article’s publication. The Journal does not divulge, but my well-informed guess is that Rupert told Trump he’d look into it, and then told Emma Tucker, the Journal’s editor, that it was really up to her (and the lawyers). By then, Trump had also called Emma, hoping to strike the fear of God into her. At best, he rattled her and inspired a lot of hand-wringing and second-guessing over whether to proceed. But in the end, Emma published the piece. And this week, the Journal, News Corp, et al. filed their motion to dismiss Trump’s suit. Bravo.
  • Emma’s number two: While we’re on the Journal, I’m told that deputy editor-in-chief Charles Forelle is leaving the paper amid reports of his romantic entanglement with former financial editor Marie Beaudette, who recently decamped to CNN. Both editors’ departures had been expected since the news of their relationship surfaced in Lachlan Cartwright’s Breaker, but many anticipated that Forelle would take the top job at Barron’s, another Dow Jones title. It’s no longer clear that he’ll be getting that job (a Dow Jones spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment). Meanwhile, no word yet on who will replace Forelle in the number two spot on the masthead.
  • Makan it rain: Earlier this week, I reported that David Ellison had hired Trump’s former D.O.J. antitrust chief Makan Delrahim to serve as Paramount’s chief legal officer—yet another sign that Ellison is very serious about acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery, even if he has yet to submit a formal offer. Presumably, they’ll be able to move that across the finish line now that Makan is in house. In the meantime, please enjoy my partner Matt Belloni’s recent take on the Ellison antitrust playbook, which Makan will now turbocharge.
  • A CBS-UFC symphony: CBS News’s 60 Minutes returns to television this week for its first season under the Skydance regime. In a somewhat cringeworthy display of corporate synergy, the season debut will feature a segment on Dana White, the C.E.O. of Ultimate Fighting Championship, for which Ellison just spent $7.7 billion to acquire the live rights. Per the press release, White will discuss “his friendship with Donald Trump, his sport’s place in the ‘manosphere,’ and his plans for a summer 2026 fight card on the White House lawn.”Sure, these cross-platform promotions happen all the time at big media conglomerates (the folks at NBCUniversal call it “Symphony,” so maybe this was Jeff Shell’s idea). Nevertheless, it all feels just a touch too soon, and a touch too icky, especially given all the drama that encircled 60 Minutes during the merger process. But as we now know, Ellison moves fast.
  • And finally…: It appears we finally have the financial contours of Trump’s TikTok deal, which will pass majority ownership of the U.S. business to a consortium that includes Larry Ellison and Rupert Murdoch, among others. Vice President J.D. Vance says the deal is valued at $14 billion, which sounds like a bargain. Though as Peter Kafka explains, that’s likely because ByteDance is reportedly going to keep half of the profits.

And now, to Burbank…

Walden, Revisited

Walden, Revisited

The Kimmel maelstrom touched all corners of the known media universe. But for the Toscana crowd, one question rose above the rest: Did it shake up the Iger succession race?

Dylan Byers Dylan Byers

This week, after I wrapped up my umpteenth media appearance waxing philosophical on the Disney-Jimmy Kimmel-F.C.C.-Trump drama, and the attendant implications for free speech, regulatory overreach, and corporate responsibility in an era of encroaching autocracy—you know, the important stuff—a denizen of the Toscana crowd reached out with a more pressing inquiry regarding the fate of the Republic: How does this affect the Iger succession plan?

Yes, sigh, it’s an industry town, but these myopic preoccupations aren’t without their significance. For those in the business, the most intriguing subplot of l’affaire Kimmel was how it affected The Walt Disney Company—a venerated, century-old, family-values brand that has somehow repeatedly found itself at the center of the Trump-era political vortex—as well as the players involved. Zeitgeist-level fuck-ups like these are trials by fire for executives, and have a way of defining and redefining reputations. Given the stakes, the public scrutiny here seemed to fall almost entirely on Bob—a universally revered figure during his first term as C.E.O. who has had a harder go of it in his second. And while most of Iger’s challenges stem from navigating the business through this transformational moment in media, it’s obvious that his handling of the political dynamics has put a slight blemish on that once inviolable legacy. Iger, you’ll recall, was the first media executive to greenlight a multimillion-dollar settlement with Trump over a lawsuit Disney very well could have won, ostensibly because it would have cost a lot more (money, time, and potential reputational damage) to fight him. But, as the Kimmel saga demonstrates, Trump’s street levy is a recurring tax. In the end, Iger changed course, determining that it was riskier to capitulate than to give his late-night host free rein to push back against Trump—which Kimmel is doing, with admirable abandon, and will soon be doing again on Sinclair- and Nexstar-owned stations. But as my partner Matt Belloni has noted, Iger’s initial mishandling of this admittedly difficult situation misjudged the brand-damaging backlash to Disney. And beyond doing the right thing in the moment, it’s a C.E.O.’s job to see around those corners.

“...it’s close to a wash.”

But Bob wasn’t the only person in the room. Dana Walden, the Disney Entertainment co-chair and TV chief, who is on the shortlist to replace Iger as C.E.O., was intimately involved in the decision to preempt Kimmel as well as the subsequent negotiations over how to bring him back on the air. Indeed, while myriad lawyers and agents always hover around such negotiations—in this case, late-night executive producer Rob Mills was also involved—the reality here, I’m told, is that this was really a three-way discussion between Bob, Dana, and Jimmy.

In an alternate universe, where Jimmy did not come back and the backlash swelled to even more epic proportions, you can imagine Bob sending Dana out to take the reputational fire. In this case, she seems to have avoided that fate by delicately and deftly placating all sides and negotiating Jimmy’s return. Nevertheless, her role in the initial decision to preempt the show will stick to her and Iger, alike. “That she didn’t stand up for First Amendment principles is a huge negative in Hollywood,” one media executive observed. How does that affect her succession chances? An informal survey of nearly a dozen current and former Hollywood executives suggests it’s probably net neutral. “Surprising misstep for Bob,” one of them observed, “but maybe this was a dress rehearsal for Dana?” Probably. In any event, with Iger taking the heat and Jimmy back on the air, she seems to have dodged that outcome while simultaneously demonstrating that she’s still learning the ropes. “That place is just not ready for primetime without him,” said another very senior media executive. The episode may also highlight a larger vulnerability. Among the internal candidates for Iger’s chair, at least according to the conventional wisdom, the real bakeoff is between Walden and parks chief Josh D’Amaro. As I’ve noted before, the theme parks business is not nearly so exposed to this sort of mishegas as the entertainment business. (Obviously, the alligator attack at Disney World is a notable exception.) If there’s a Brendan Carr of the global attractions trade, I couldn’t name him. And there’s no Penske Media for theme parks, either. (Theme Park Magazine and Amusement Today are likely not on your digital coffee table.) What the Kimmel affair really demonstrated is just how proximate Dana is to the trickiest aspects of the position. Whether that’s an advantage or a vulnerability is up to James Gorman and the board to determine. There’s a latent element of sexism in the entire Disney succession drama, whether anyone wants to acknowledge it or not. A potential Walden appointment would be historically significant, of course, but it’s facile and lazy to give her credit for simply surviving a widespread media crisis. After all, a White House–inflected late-night skirmish isn’t really any harder to manage than a very public and very prolonged succession bake-off. In the end, Walden might not have gotten it right on the first try with Kimmel, as often happens when the C-suite is forced to intervene in these matters, but she resolved to nail it in the end. Will that resilience be rewarded? Or will it be a superficial bona fide amid a search process that has presumably focused on far more profound issues—such as, you know, the future of Disney in an unprecedentedly transformative time for the industry? “In the end I think it’s close to a wash,” one Hollywood executive said of Dana’s handling of the Kimmel drama. “You could argue maybe net negative or positive but not by much. But also, I personally believe that Josh gets the job regardless.”
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