November 18, 2024

Media Decoder Blog: CNBC to Purchase ‘Nightly Business Report’

“Nightly Business Report,” the pioneering public television series that has struggled financially in recent years, is getting a new deep-pocketed commercial owner, the 24-hour business cable channel CNBC, a unit of Comcast’s NBCUniversal.

CNBC announced Thursday afternoon that it would purchase the rights to the show, available in 96 percent of U.S. television homes, from investment firm Atalaya Capital Management, for an undisclosed price. CNBC will begin producing the program — which today originates from Miami, with bureaus in New York and Washington, and has been sold twice in recent years — from its Englewood Cliffs, N.J., headquarters on March 4.

The show will keep its format and be anchored by CNBC’s Tyler Mathisen and Susie Gharib, the current co-anchor; CNBC officials said Ms. Gharib is under contract through the end of the year. Her co-host, Tom Hudson, will depart, as will the rest of the current staff of 18 full-time employees.

In a telephone interview, Rick Schneider, the president and chief executive of Miami public station WPBT, where the show is based, called the new owners “a good thing for the program and for the public television system.” He said the deal not only would ensure the show’s survival, but “it will likely be enhanced. NBR has always lacked having a major news-gathering organization behind it.”

The purchase is the third change of hands for “Nightly Business Report” since August 2010, when Mykalai Kontilai, an entrepreneur and former mixed martial arts manager, bought it from WPBT, where the program began in 1979, before the era of 24-hour cable business news.

Atalaya Capital Management, which had backed Mr. Kontilai’s purchase, took over the program in November 2011, after few of Mr. Kontilai’s ambitious plans to expand were achieved. In recent months, Atalaya has been searching for a buyer.

In a telephone interview, Nikhil Deogun, CNBC’s senior vice president and editor in chief for business news, called “Nightly Business Report” “a great brand with a long tradition of business news.” He said that the show’s audience “has very little duplication, as best we can tell” with the CNBC audience, adding that the program will provide additional opportunities for CNBC’s roster of journalists.

PBS withdrew its financial support of “Nightly Business Report” in 2011 and stopped distributing it. Ratings have been drifting lower and the show’s sole financial underwriter, Franklin Templeton Investments, ended its support in August. In December, the program closed its Chicago bureau and laid off several employees, its second round of layoffs since 2010.

Mr. Deogun said CNBC will seek new underwriters, adding that parent NBCUniversal “has a great sales team.”

American Public Television, an alternative program delivery service, distributes the show to 180 public television stations nationwide and will continue to do so.

In a Thursday memo to employees, Mr. Schneider wrote, “This is a difficult day in the history of WPBT,” given the staff layoffs. But, he added, “It has been clear for months, even years, that the existing business model for NBR was unsustainable as national production underwriting dried up. Atalaya deserves credit for funding the series since Franklin Templeton sponsorship ended last August.”

Ms. Gharib, in a telephone interview, called the news “bittersweet” because the rest of the staff would be departing, but said, “finally NBR is getting the resources that we needed so badly. I feel good that CNBC sees value in ‘Nightly Business Report.’ It’s a testament to the high level of the program.”

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/21/cnbc-to-purchase-nightly-business-report/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Economix Blog: The Search for an Era of Labor Peace

When the Boeing Company announced its far-reaching, precedent-setting agreement with the machinists’ union last week, all the talk was about the ushering in of a new era of labor peace between a company and union that were long known for their horrendous labor relations record. That record included five strikes since 1977, among them a 58-day walkout in 2008 that cost Boeing $1.8 billion.

When I wrote about the Boeing deal, I realized that there were some uncanny parallels with another far-reaching contract — and far more precedent-setting one — reached in 1948 between General Motors, then by far the nation’s largest company, and the United Automobile Workers.

Both Boeing now and General Motors then were eager to ramp up production, but both companies worried that another round of painful strikes would throw a wrench into their expansion efforts. In late 1945, a 113-day strike by 175,000 workers had paralyzed G.M., with the union demanding hefty raises not just to enable workers to keep pace with raging inflation, but to help stimulate the overall national economy. One of the strike’s slogans was “Purchasing power for prosperity.”

G.M.’s president at the time, Charles E. Wilson, feared another walkout by the militant U.A.W., then headed by Walter Reuther, especially because G.M. had ambitious plans to invest $3.5 billion — about $30 billion in today’s dollars — to expand production to take advantage of the huge pent-up consumer demand from World War II and the flood of Americans moving to the suburbs.

Fearing new union conflagrations, both Boeing and General Motors agreed, in essence, to buy labor peace by offering unusually generous contracts.

In 1948, G.M. signed a two-year contract — often called a “grand bargain” — that offered the auto workers an 11 percent raise over two years, an annual cost-of-living adjustment to help workers keep up with inflation and a newfangled notion: an additional 2 percent annual raise, called the annual improvement factor, intended to let G.M.’s workers profit from the company’s steadily improving productivity. (I write about this landmark contract in my book, “The Big Squeeze, Tough Times for the American Worker,” pages 73-76.)

Boeing, too, has been eager to expand, with its current backlog of 3,500 planes valued at $273 billion. (Like General Motors, it should be noted Boeing worried that a new, prolonged strike would give a big boost to its competitors, especially Airbus.)

Boeing’s four-year contract — its grand bargain with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers — contained many elements similar to those in the 1948 G.M. contract: annual wage increases of 2 percent, cost-of-living adjustments, a productivity incentive program intended to pay bonuses of 2 percent to 4 percent. In addition, Boeing gave the union something it badly wanted — it pledged to add several thousand jobs in Washington State (rather than another state) as it moves to expand production of its 737 Max passenger jet to 42 aircraft a month from 35 a month.

Tom Wroblewski, president of the machinists local that represents Boeing workers in Washington State, spoke for both sides when he said the agreement “signals the start of a new relationship that can both meet our members’ expectations for good jobs, while giving Boeing the stability and productivity it needs to succeed.”

For Boeing, one big, additional benefit of the “grand bargain” is that the newly happy machinists union has promised — assuming the rank and file ratifies the deal — to push the National Labor Relations Board to drop its complaint against Boeing for building a $750 million assembly plant in South Carolina rather than Washington State, a complaint originally brought at the machinists’ behest.

(I should note that Boeing, like G.M. six decades ago, can afford to be generous to its workers because it is in an oligopoly situation with few competitors, making it easier to pass on increased labor costs to its customers.)

Because G.M. was the largest and most influential company in the nation, its 1948 contract generated a cascade of large me-too raises at companies across the United States. Not only that, its two-year bargain for labor peace was so successful that it caused G.M. and the auto workers to reach an even more generous five-year contract in 1950 that assured five years without strikes. In that agreement, G.M. promised the auto workers the highest employee pensions in the country. (In the new Boeing deal, the company — at a time when many companies are freezing traditional pensions and not giving them to new hires — agreed to make its pension formula more generous for current employees and to continue providing traditional pensions to new hires.)

Like G.M.’s 1948 agreement with the U.A.W., its 1950 contract caused a flood of copycat deals in which hundreds of other companies agreed to provide generous raises and benefits in exchange for years of labor peace — a wave of contracts that went far to create America’s great middle class during the 1950s. As Nelson Lichtenstein wrote in his biography of Walter Reuther, “The Most Dangerous Man in Detroit,” Business Week hailed the 1950 deal as “industrial statesmanship of a very high order” and The Washington Post declared it “a great event in industrial history.”

Professor Lichtenstein, a labor historian at the University of California, Santa Barbara, sees the Boeing deal as far different from the G.M. deal in one important respect. He does not believe other companies are going to rush to copy the Boeing deal. Indeed, Boeing signed its generous contract in an era when many companies are reluctant to deal with labor unions, and those that do often seem to be demanding concessions.

Professor Lichtenstein said, “This kind of successful private-sector bargaining is so unusual today — and the Boeing situation is so different from the rest of the economy — that it will set no ‘pattern.’”


This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: December 5, 2011

An earlier version of this post misstated the terms of Boeing’s new contract with the machinists’ union. It is a four-year contract with the union, not a six-year contract.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=de6551252523119d7b8e0f8afc9cdef0

Square Feet: Ambitious Plans for a Building Where Sears Served Atlanta

But now there is a plan to salvage the space. A prominent Atlanta-based developer, Jamestown Properties, which owns Chelsea Market in Manhattan, bought the building from the city last month for $27 million. It expects to spend $180 million to convert it to a mixed-use cluster of restaurants, apartments, office space and perhaps even a rooftop amusement park, all renamed Ponce City Market, by early 2014.

“That’s a big hunk of building, and it’s been dead space for so long,” said David F. Haddow, a consultant and architecture professor at Georgia Tech. “But it’s not going to be easy.”

Others have tried before. The city bought the building for $12 million in 1990 — “the deal of the century,” Maynard Jackson, the mayor at the time, said — but ended up using only 10 percent of the space, mostly for police offices and storage. Then, in 2006, a well-connected former state lawmaker introduced a plan to build apartments there, but that idea fell victim to the economy.

The real estate market in Atlanta is still sluggish. But supporters say the project has a better chance than most. City Hall East is at the junction of four fashionable neighborhoods: Midtown, Virginia-Highlands, the Old Fourth Ward and Inman Park. In a city known for glittery newness, the 1926 building is raw, historic and authentic.

So the conventional wisdom among civic leaders is: right building, right place, right developer. But is it the right time?

“There are clearly challenges,” said David Bennett, a senior policy adviser to Mayor Kasim Reed who helped broker the deal. “There is a 20 percent vacancy rate in Atlanta in the office market, the condo market is in disarray and even the commercial market is down quite a bit.”

The city is so invested in the outcome that Mayor Reed spoke at the purchase ceremony, predicting that a successful development could have a $1 billion economic impact. A kickoff celebration in October will feature a concert by the Indigo Girls and catering by a who’s who of Atlanta chefs.

“We see this as being transformational for that area of Atlanta,” said Ernestine Garey, the executive vice president and chief operating officer for the Atlanta Development Authority. “It is a huge, huge opportunity.”

Early blueprints make Ponce City Market look not unlike Chelsea Market, the renovated biscuit factory that leases space to the Food Network and other technology and media companies. It will contain high-ceilinged office space, a range of restaurants, a food market, apartments, exhibition spaces, a skywalk and perhaps even an amusement park, Jamestown says.

The plan calls for reducing the building’s square footage by nearly half, to 1.2 million square feet, constructing a parking garage with at least 2,000 spaces inside the structure and demolishing many internal walls and ceilings. But Jamestown says it will preserve the exterior and as much equipment as possible from the original Sears department store and distribution center. A giant electrical panel will become the backdrop for a bar, and a train trestle will be repurposed as a pedestrian walkway.

“We think the history is really central to the culture we’re trying to create,” said Michael Phillips, a managing director of Jamestown. “We’re trying to keep the spirit of this place alive and to keep it true to its Southern roots.”

In its heyday, Sears shipped to customers across the Southeast. Older Atlantans remember picking up furniture or clothes there. “That’s where everybody shopped,” Trudie Wade, an Atlanta resident who worked at the Sears in the 1970s, says in a video that Jamestown produced about the building’s history. “It was huge. I was like, ‘Oh my God, it’s such a huge store that we’re going to get lost in here.’ ”

Other cities have refurbished Sears stores and distribution centers. In Seattle, a former Sears is now the headquarters of Starbucks. In Dallas, one has 400 apartments and a nightclub. In Boston, one has an REI, a Best Buy and a movie theater.

But Atlanta’s Sears center has its own difficulties because it was vacant so long. The city spent months removing and auctioning the office equipment that had piled up inside over the years, raising more than $100,000.

Architects are still figuring out how to avoid damaging a sewage system from the early 1900s that runs directly through the building’s lower floors. Although it retains its elegant maple flooring and tall glass windows, parts of the building have fallen into disrepair.

“The office spaces quite literally looked like terrorists had run in the front door and people had fled out the back door in a panic,” Mr. Bennett said. But Jamestown says it has faced obstacles with historic buildings elsewhere: Chelsea Market; the former Port of New York Authority at 111 Eighth Avenue, now owned by Google; and Warehouse Row in Chattanooga all required substantial overhauls.

For the 64 years that Sears owned City Hall East, the building was treated “like a Rolls-Royce,” said Jim Irwin, a vice president at Green Street, a subsidiary and development arm of Jamestown.

Tenants are already signing up. Anne Quatrano, an Atlanta chef and restaurant owner who has worked with Jamestown before, said she planned to open a po-boy shop at Ponce City Market.

“It’s a little scary,” Ms. Quatrano said of the building’s uncertain prospects. But if you like the building, the developer and the history of the neighborhood, she said, then you have to trust that customers will come.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=fb8c1d8c642f86ba18eac94e8ea6b522