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Business

Woo away, Disney! Woo!!

Disney Wooing Pixar Again
The Walt Disney Co. “definitely” wants to renew its relationship with Pixar Animation Studios, Disney Studios chief Dick Cook has told the London Times. “This has been probably the most successful relationship in the history of Hollywood,” Cook told the newspaper. “It’s definitely our desire to further the relationship with Pixar for years to come, and develop it even more, and we’re hopeful they feel the same way.” It has been more than a year since Pixar Chairman Steve Jobs angrily broke off contract-renewal talks with CEO Michael Eisner. Although he has reportedly met with the heads of other studios, he reportedly has been taking a wait-and-see approach to determine whether the company’s incoming CEO, Robert Iger, will be less intractable to his terms.

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Business

This will make Max happy!

The Wiggles Named Australia’s Wealthiest
SYDNEY, Australia – The Wiggles have sung and danced their way to the top of a list of Australia’s wealthiest entertainers, edging out Hollywood heavyweights such as Nicole Kidman and Russell Crowe.
The four Australian performers topped BRW Magazine’s list of Australia’s 50 richest performers in 2004 with an estimated gross income of $34.5 million, up from $10.7 million in the previous year.
Kidman almost doubled her earnings and was Australia’s second richest performer with $30 million, according to the magazine, which hit newsstands Thursday. She was followed by Crowe, who earned an estimated $20 million in 2004.
BRW managing editor Tony Featherstone said in an editorial that The Wiggles had topped the chart, which is based on the magazine’s estimates of their 2004 gross income, thanks to a great product and marketing.
“They got into the market early, they took time to understand their audience, not only children but the parents who pay for everything,” he said.
AC/DC were in fourth place, with an estimated income of $14 million.

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Business

Could a reconciliation be in the cards?

Disney, Pixar Talks Seen Likely After Eisner Exit
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Pixar Animation Studios Inc. likely will reopen talks on a distribution deal with the Walt Disney Co. now that Disney CEO Michael Eisner is set to depart in September, analysts said on Monday.
Eisner, who will be replaced by Disney President Robert Iger, was seen as the main stumbling block for Disney to renew its lucrative partnership with Pixar because of his turbulent relationship with Pixar Chief Executive Steve Jobs.
Pixar, which produced such blockbuster films as “Toy Story,” “Finding Nemo” and “The Incredibles” in its partnership with Disney, was also seen as holding a better bargaining position with Iger at Disney’s helm.
“I just think this puts a lot of pressure on the Walt Disney Company,” Fulcrum Global Partners analyst Rich Greenfield said. “Bob Iger, once he takes over, will be faced with this negotiation as one of his first acts as CEO … Disney needs (Pixar) very badly.”
Greenfield said Jobs would likely press his advantage to get better terms than he could have squeezed from Eisner. Pixar films have taken in about $3 billion at the box office worldwide, and Disney has had the bigger share of profit.
“The pressure is on Disney, not Pixar,” Greenfield said.
Last month, Jobs told analysts that Pixar “likely … will not forge a new relationship with Disney beyond our current deal,” but did not elaborate about how far talks with Disney had progressed or where else Pixar might look for a partner.
Pixar has pushed back its target date for finding a new distributor a number of times and said that “musical chairs” in Hollywood was part of the reason, giving some hopes that a new Disney deal was possible.
Anthony Sabino, a business and law professor at St. John’s University in New York, warned that Pixar would play an important part in helping Iger win the board’s confidence.
“One of his top priorities and maybe his top priority has got to be to reach out to Pixar and negotiate with them again,” Sabino said.
Lehman Brothers analyst Anthony DiClemente called the development at Disney “not … a huge surprise to Pixar investors” and in a research note said a deal was “less likely” between the two companies.
Pixar’s partnership with Disney expires with the June 9, 2006, release of its seventh film, “Cars,” and it must have a new distributor in place before its eighth film is released in summer of 2007.
Pixar spokesman Tom Sarris on Monday said the company had no further comment on the distributor search or about developments at Disney. Sarris would not say whether Jobs and Iger had ever met.
Shares of Pixar closed up $1.98, or 2.2 percent, at $90.96 on Nasdaq.

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Business

I never seem to get the big money jobs!!

Iger to Succeed Eisner as Disney CEO
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – On Sunday the Walt Disney Company ended its contentious search for a new leader without leaving the house that Mickey Mouse built, naming current company president Robert Iger to succeed chief executive Michael Eisner, who will step down a year before he planned.
The company also said that Eisner — once the highest paid chief executive in the United States — will end his more than 20-year reign on Sept. 30, and turn over control of the vast entertainment conglomerate to his preferred successor, a former TV weatherman who worked his way to the top of Disney.
However, two former directors who led a 2004 shareholder protest, including namesake Walt Disney’s nephew Roy, were furious with the board’s choice, saying investors had been “conned.” They also accused the board of failing to find major outside candidates.
Eisner began his reign in glory, revitalizing a company whose business had turned flat. But he now leaves against a backdrop of embarrassing lawsuits from former Disney executives and a bitter shareholder protest that saw a 45 percent vote against him at the 2004 annual meeting.
The 63-year-old Eisner will remain on the Disney board until the company’s 2006 annual meeting.
Disney Chairman and former U.S. Senator George Mitchell said: “We definitely had choices — we made the right choice.”
On a conference call, Mitchell told reporters that Iger deserved partial credit for the company’s recent stock market gains and financial improvement after Disney hit a rut in the late 1990s.
Mitchell also said the process was thorough and the vote for Iger was unanimous despite “vigorous discussion” by directors.
LOYAL SUCCESSOR
Iger, 54, is a longtime media executive who began his career as a weatherman before starting a steady advance at television network ABC and then Disney.
The dapper Iger is credited with helping turn around ABC and managing much of Disney’s day-to-day operations, as well as a new focus on technology and expansion into Asia, where Disney is building one theme park and considering others.
But he has also been Eisner’s loyal lieutenant and hand-picked successor, and dissident shareholders Roy Disney and Stanley Gold have said Eisner influenced the process heavily — a contention the board has denied.
Iger had been the frontrunner, but the timing of the announcement came sooner than expected since the board had set a June 2005 target date to find a new chief. Eisner himself had said he would step down as CEO in September 2006.
Charles Elson, director of the Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware, said the board decision was not as transparent as he would have preferred and would not silence critics.
“Having gone within the company to someone closely associated with the current CEO, and that the current CEO will be there a bit longer, will only fuel dissent,” he said, referring to Eisner’s presence on the board for another year.
Eisner said on Sunday he would not seek to be renominated to the board after the 2006 annual meeting or seek the job of chairman and Mitchell said he would take Eisner at his word.
Disney shares fell between 1998 and 2002, but soared 43 percent in 2003 and another 19 percent in 2004. The shares are off about 1 percent so far this year.
DISSENT SIMMERS
Investors have no direct means to change management since that is the job of the board. Dissident shareholders could try to change the board, although not for another year, and analysts say the process would be long and expensive.
A spokesman for Gold and Disney declined to elaborate on their statement, which said, “(Disney) shareholders should seriously consider replacing this board and starting anew.”
But among other things, analysts say Iger had the potential to mend fences with Pixar Animation Studios Inc., the maker of “Toy Story” and “The Incredibles,” which is ending its profitable partnership with Disney.
“This was not a broken situation,” said Larry Haverty, a portfolio manager at Gabelli & Co., who has supported management for the last year or so. “I think that the board did the right thing.”
Iger has been president and chief operating officer of the company since January 2000. His career at ABC started in 1974 in New York as a studio supervisor. In 1996, he joined Disney after the company acquired Capital Cities/ABC.
Rivals for the Disney job apparently included Meg Whitman, eBay Inc.’s chief executive, who bowed out of the race, according to media reports.
Others considered as potential candidates included Peter Chernin, the chief operating officer of News Corp.; Viacom Inc. co-presidents Tom Freston and Leslie Moonves, and Yahoo Inc. Chief Executive Terry Semel.

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Business

This is just another reason for why Michael Eisner is going to meet Hitler when he dies.

Miramax’s Weinsteins, Disney Near Break-Up
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Brothers Bob Weinstein and Harvey Weinstein will meet with executives of Walt Disney Co. this week to iron out the details of their exit from Oscar-winning powerhouse Miramax Films, a source with knowledge of the talks said on Tuesday.
The brothers founded the Disney unit and guided it to best film Oscars — the top U.S. movie honors — for the likes of 2002’s “Chicago,” but have for years had a contentious relationship with Disney chief executive Michael Eisner.
The pair have been in talks to exit Miramax since last year, and it appears the Oscar ceremony this coming Sunday, Feb. 27, will be their swansong with Miramax, which is backing best picture nominees “The Aviator” and “Finding Neverland.”
“They are continuing negotiations this week,” the source said, “A deal is imminent.”
A Disney spokeswoman was not immediately available. Miramax would say only that there was nothing new to report in the ongoing negotiations.
Under plans being considered, the Weinsteins would leave their posts as co-chief executives but remain as consultants to help market certain upcoming films, the source said.
Some of those titles include comic book themed “Sin City” and kids’ movie “The Adventures of Shark Boy & Lava Girl” — both from director Robert Rodriguez — as well as drama “Proof,” starring Gwyneth Paltrow.
The Weinsteins would be free make their own movies and find a new distribution partner.
Disney would pay the Weinsteins around $100 million to settle their contract, which expires on Sept. 30, 2005, although a final amount has yet to be determined.
WHAT’S IN A NAME?
Disney would retain the Miramax library of some 800 films with titles that include 1998’s Oscar winner “Shakespeare in Love,” starring Paltrow, and director Quentin Tarantino’s popular “Pulp Fiction” and “Kill Bill: Vol. 1” and “Vol. II” titles. Libraries are a highly lucrative means of generating cash from sales of DVDs, videos and television rights.
Disney would retain the Miramax brand name, which the Weinsteins had sought to keep because it is based on their parent’s names, Miriam and Max.
Miramax would become a slimmer unit with an annual budget around $300 million, far less than the $700 million Miramax under the Weinsteins but closer to the budgets of the art-house movie wings of Hollywood’s other major studios.
Staff, which now numbers less than 300 people, would be cut, although a final number has yet to be determined, the source said.
The employee count has fallen steadily since Miramax said in August of last year it was laying off 13 percent of its then 485-member staff. Just last month, Miramax Chief Operating Officer Rick Sands left to join DreamWorks SKG.
The Weinsteins have been a major film force in New York, where Miramax is based, and in Hollywood for more than two decades. Based on the success of low-budget hits like “sex, lies and videotape,” the brothers sold their company to Disney in 1993 for around $75 million.
Since then the Weinsteins have increasingly pursued more expensive films like last year’s Oscar contender “Cold Mountain,” while Disney wanted the unit to stay closer to its low-budget, independent roots.
Tension between the Weinsteins and Disney came to a head last May when Disney refused to release Michael Moore’s controversial anti-Bush documentary, “Fahrenheit 9/11,” which Miramax had backed. The Weinsteins acquired the film from Miramax and found an independent distributor to release it.

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Business

Go Jay, go!!

Jay-Z Takes Over
For most people, retirement means a chance to kick back and take it easy. For Jay-Z, it means picking up a brand-new career where the old one left off.
The rapper turned impresario was officially dubbed president and CEO of Def Jam Records Wednesday by Island Def Jams Music Group chairman Antonio “L.A.” Reid.
Jay-Z, whose real name is Shawn Carter, will also continue to head up Roc-A-Fella Records, which he cofounded with Damon Dash in 1995.
Def Jam announced Wednesday that it had wholly acquired the label, which includes acts such as Grammy shoo-in Kanye West, Cam’ron and the recently jailed Beanie Sigel.
“After 10 years of successfully running Roc-A-Fella, Shawn has proven himself to be an astute businessman, in addition to the brilliant artistic talent that the world sees and hears,” Reid said in a statement. “We are fortunate that he has agreed to take over as president and CEO of Def Jam Recordings.
“I can think of no one more relevant and credible in the hip-hop community to build upon Def Jam’s fantastic legacy and move the company into its next groundbreaking era.”
Jay-Z, who is scheduled to take up the reins at Def Jam on Jan. 3, created shock waves when he announced that the Grammy-nominated The Black Album would be his final solo production.
The album debuted at the top of the charts, a feat Jigga made look easy during his tenure as a hip-hopster.
Jay-Z’s ongoing musical acclaim didn’t end with the success of The Black Album. Since cutting his solo career short, two of Jay-Z’s collaborative efforts have debuted at number one–Best of Both Worlds: Unfinished Business, with sparring partner R. Kelly, and the current number-one album, Collision Course, with Linkin Park.
To complete Jay-Z’s going-out-on-top extravaganza, he has been nominated for three Grammys–Best Rap Album for The Black Album and Best Rap Solo Performance and Best Rap Song for “99 Problems.”
BeyoncÈ’s beau was upbeat about the next stage in his career.
“I have inherited two of the most important brands in hip-hop, Def Jam and Roc-A-Fella,” Jay-Z said in a statement.
“L.A. Reid and the Universal Music Group have given me the opportunity to manage the companies I have contributed to my whole career. I feel this is a giant step for me and the entire artist community.”

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Business

Their new CD is superb!!!

U2 Talk iPod Strategy
Band’s partnership with Apple has deep roots
For two weeks before MTV debuted U2’s video for the new single “Vertigo,” fans had a chance to see the band perform the song on TV — in an iPod commercial. The members of U2 are passionate proponents of Apple’s iPod — “It’s the most interesting art object since the electric guitar in terms of music,” says Bono — but the band’s new partnership with Apple Computer still qualifies as a surprise. In their twenty-five-year history, U2 have never licensed their music for commercial use or even accepted tour sponsorship.
With radio playlists strictly formatted and MTV showing more reality-TV shows than videos, many bands are looking for new ways to bring their music to the public. And so U2 launched the first single from their upcoming album, How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, with an iPod ad rather than a video. Apple is also releasing a special black U2-edition iPod for $349 with band autographs laser-engraved on the casing. Buyers get a fifty-dollar discount on The Complete U2, a $149 iTunes download package that includes more than 400 songs. “I see this as the beginning of a new era in the distribution of music,” says U2 guitarist the Edge. “We’re happy to be part of history and the future.”
The U2-Apple partnership has deep roots. In early 2003, when U2 first heard that Apple was planning to launch an iTunes music store, the band met with Apple founder Steve Jobs at the home of Jimmy Iovine, the co-chairman of U2’s label, Interscope Records. “Jimmy is a visionary and believes artists should meet with technologists,” says Bono.
iPod ads have been helpful in album sales before, most notably for Jet, whose single “Are You Gonna Be My Girl” garnered widespread TV exposure before storming radio. U2 manager Paul McGuinness says, “The commercial was an attractive idea because iTunes was already selling our music, and the amount Apple will spend for airtime is out of reach for the record business.” The band accepted no money for the ad but will get royalties on the U2 iPod.
And music execs are eager to see more of these partnerships. In September, the industry held its first-ever “upfront” — a conference where the major labels showcased upcoming albums for representatives from corporations such as Procter & Gamble, Pepsi and Mercedes-Benz. “Target your brands with our bands,” said Atlantic chairman Jason Flom, showing a video featuring bands on his artist roster that might appeal to baby-boomers (Phil Collins, the Doors) or soccer moms (Matchbox Twenty, the Corrs).
Commercials aren’t the only route. Shows including The O.C. and One Tree Hill put music from new bands in every episode. When video-game maker Electronic Arts featured songs from Good Charlotte and Blink-182 in its sports games, it helped to break those bands. “We know there are other avenues to talk to consumers about music and other places to market to them,” says Phil Quartararo, executive vice president of EMI Music North America. “Kids hear music on the radio, phone, iPod, video game and the Internet, so we have to go to where the consumers are.”
As for U2, it’s unclear whether their partnership with iPod will result in significantly increased exposure. After all, the band has already sold more than 120 million records worldwide. “U2 is an established act for radio and video, which is still the main driver,” says Quartararo. But some think that the glow from Apple’s hot product will reflect well on the band. “Whenever you’re the first to do something, there’s a hipness factor,” says Bob Chiappardi, president of Concrete Marketing, a music-promotion firm. “It’s a win-win situation.” If it goes well, look for other bands to beg Apple for their own iPods too.

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Business

All prices in U.S. Dollars.

Wal-Mart Wants $10 CDs
Biggest U.S. record retailer battles record labels over prices
Wal-mart wants every CD you buy to cost less than ten bucks. And the nation’s largest retailer — which moved a quarter of a trillion dollars’ worth of goods last year — usually gets its way. Suppliers who don’t accede to Wal-Mart’s “everyday low price” mantra often find their products bounced from the chain’s stores, excluded from being sold to the 138 million people who shop at a Wal-Mart store every week.
In the past decade, Wal-Mart has quietly emerged as the nation’s biggest record store. Wal-Mart now sells an estimated one out of every five major-label albums. It has so much power, industry insiders say, that what it chooses to stock can basically determine what becomes a hit. “If you don’t have a Wal-Mart account, you probably won’t have a major pop artist,” says one label executive.
Along with other giant retailers such as Best Buy and Target, Wal-Mart willingly loses money selling CDs for less than $10 (they buy most hit CDs from distributors for around $12). These companies use bargain CDs to lure consumers to the store, hoping they might also grab a boombox or a DVD player while checking out the music deals.
Less-expensive CDs are something consumers have been demanding for years. But here’s the hitch: Wal-Mart is tired of losing money on cheap CDs. It wants to keep selling them for less than $10 — $9.72, to be exact — but it wants the record industry to lower the prices at which it purchases them. Last winter, Wal-Mart asked the industry to supply it with choice albums — from new releases from alternative rockers the Killers to perennial classics such as Beatles 1 — at favorable prices. According to music-industry sources, Wal-Mart executives hinted that they could reduce Wal-Mart’s CD stock and replace it with more lucrative DVDs and video games.
“This wasn’t framed as a gentle negotiation,” says one label rep. “It’s a line in the sand — you don’t do this, then the threat is this.” (Wal-Mart denies these claims.) As a result, all of the major labels agreed to supply some popular albums to Wal-Mart’s $9.72 program. “We’re in such a competitive world, and you can’t reach consumers if you’re not in Wal-Mart,” admits another label executive.
Tensions are not as high now as they were last winter, but making sure Wal-Mart is happy remains one of the music industry’s major priorities. That’s because if Wal-Mart cut back on music, industry sales would suffer severely — though Wal-Mart’s shareholders would barely bat an eye. While Wal-Mart represents nearly twenty percent of major-label music sales, music represents only about two percent of Wal-Mart’s total sales. “If they got out of selling music, it would mean nothing to them,” says another label executive. “This keeps me awake at night.”
Wal-Mart would not directly comment on tensions with the labels, but Gary Severson, Wal-Mart’s senior vice president and general merchandise manager in charge of the chain’s entertainment section, did allude to the dispute about music prices. “The labels price things based on what they believe they can get — a pricing philosophy a lot of industries have,” he says. “But we like to price things as cheaply as we possibly can, rather than charge as much as we can get. It’s a big difference in philosophy, and we try to help other people see that.” Virtually no industry executives would publicly comment about their company’s relationship with Wal-Mart. But off the record, many record-industry executives shared their concerns. “I don’t think there is a music supplier in America who really enjoys doing business with Wal-Mart,” says one major-label rep.
No one in the music business ever expected Wal-Mart to become the most powerful force in record retailing. In the past, the business was shared among smaller local and regional chains such as Musicland, which once had an estimated ten percent of the market. But as Wal-Mart and other national discount operations such as Target and Best Buy have grown — approximately half of all major-label music is sold through these three — an estimated 1,200 record stores have closed in the past two years, according to market-research firm Almighty Institute of Music Retail. Last February, Tower Records, with ninety-three stores, declared bankruptcy and is now up for sale; Musicland has already changed owners, with many local outposts shuttered.
Wal-Mart is like no traditional record seller. Unlike a typical Tower store, which stocks 60,000 titles, an average Wal-Mart carries about 5,000 CDs. That leaves little room on the shelf for developing artists or independent labels. There’s also scant space for catalog albums, which now represent about forty percent of all sales. At a Wal-Mart Supercenter in Thorton, Colorado, for example, there were no copies of the Rolling Stones’ Exile on Main Street or Nirvana’s Nevermind. While most of the latest hits were priced at $13.88, some records — from the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack to the latest by Yellowcard — were displayed for $9.72. Says Severson, “Paying fifteen dollars for a piece of music is a difficult value equation for customers.”
For the music industry, having such a dominant retailer is like being stuck in a bad marriage. Whereas traditional music retailers took advertising money from the labels to push new releases in Sunday newspaper circulars, Wal-Mart barely advertises locally. It relies on national campaigns, where it promotes its own low-price policy. “Wal-Mart has no long-term care for an individual artist or marketing plan, unlike the specialty stores, which were a real business partner,” says one former distribution executive. “At Wal-Mart, we’re a commodity and have to fight for shelf space like Colgate fights for shelf space.”
In the same way that Wal-Mart made it difficult for local mom-and-pop retailers to compete with its low prices, it has hurt smaller music stores. “When you’re buying CDs for twelve dollars and selling them for ten like Wal-Mart, it makes the rest of us look like we’re gouging the customer, when we’re not,” says Don Van Cleave, head of the Coalition for Independent Music Stores, a retail consortium. “It’s supertough to compete with that price point.” Even online, Wal-Mart sells songs for eighty-eight cents, compared with ninety-nine cents at the market leader, Apple iTunes Music Store.
Getting Wal-Mart excited about carrying a record is at the top of every label’s to-do list, but it’s harder than it sounds. There is an immense cultural chasm between slick industry executives and Severson’s team of three music buyers at Wal-Mart headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas. Only one of the three had ever worked in music retailing — until that person moved to a new division in August and was replaced by someone who previously bought Wal-Mart’s salty snacks. (Wal-Mart also relies on buyers at its two distribution companies, Handleman and Anderson Merchandisers, who purchase records as well as stock the Wal-Mart stores.)
“Content-wise, Wal-Mart is limited about what they sell,” says one label chieftain. “Wal-Mart is Middle America’s shopping headquarters, with different buying habits and consumer tastes than those who live in Manhattan and L.A.” When founder Sam Walton christened the first Wal-Mart in 1962, music was never a priority — it wasn’t an everyday, easy-to-stock product like light bulbs, since the Top Ten changed so much. The chain also had specific objections to music. Walton wanted all stores to remain family-friendly, and in the rural South, rock & roll had the potential to turn away many customers. In 1986, the Rev. Jimmy Swaggart led one such campaign to ban music from Wal-Mart, saying rock fostered “adultery, alcoholism, drug abuse, necrophilia, bestiality and you name it.” Albums and magazines about rock (including Rolling Stone) were temporarily pulled from the Wal-Mart shelves.
Wal-Mart’s wariness about music ended once the music industry adopted a voluntary advisory sticker on albums deemed to contain adult language or sexual content. Today, before any new album is released, someone at each label is charged with asking, “Do we have any Wal-Mart issues?” If an advisory sticker is placed on an album, the label will put out a clean version about ninety percent of the time. Since the edited version of a hit record usually averages only about ten percent of a record’s total sales, they do it mostly to keep Wal-Mart happy.
Wal-Mart has loosened up a bit, too. Eminem’s albums, stickered or not, are not carried by the chain, but it does sell the 8 Mile soundtrack. And it carries an edited version of 50 Cent’s debut. Since the labels are so adept at self-policing, though, censorship controversies are now rare. “There have been examples in the past, but it’s not a current issue,” says Severson.
Wal-Mart has also urged the labels to create exclusive new products that would lower music prices. In a short-lived test, Universal excerpted seven songs from existing albums by acts such as Sum 41 and Ashanti and sold them at Wal-Mart for $7. Few other labels wanted to participate. “They proposed it to a bunch of artists and managers, but everyone was worried that we are sending a message that instead of the sixteen-track album we sold, those nine extra songs were filler,” says a label executive.
Some record executives think they can survive Wal-Mart’s push. They argue that the hottest acts will always command a premium price. “50 Cent sold 7 million copies,” says one rep, “and I guarantee that many of those sold for fifteen, sixteen dollars.” And they believe that Wal-Mart will want to carry those hits because they draw customers. “If they can’t find a record at Wal-Mart, people will go elsewhere,” says one executive. “We should play hardball.” But each label is watching the others to see if any make major concessions to Wal-Mart’s demands for lower prices. A label that gives in could gain shelf space at the expense of another. “If you lose an account, one of your rivals could get more product in the store and get one up on everyone else,” says a major-label rep. “You have to tread cautiously.”
The tug of war between the labels and Wal-Mart isn’t going away soon. The chain is aggressively opening new stores — fifty-seven in October — including some in urban areas. So unless it makes good on its threat to cut back on its music section, it will continue to grow as the top record store and become even more powerful. Laments one industry rep, “There is some impending doom associated with us not helping them.”
Price War: Does a CD have to cost $15.99?
Major labels insist that the low prices mass retailers such as Wal-Mart and Best Buy demand are impossible for them to achieve. But Best Buy senior vice president Gary Arnold counters, “The record industry needs to refine their business models, because the consumer is the ultimate arbitrator. And the consumer feels music isn’t properly priced.” Labels point to roster cuts and layoffs as evidence that they can’t sell CDs cheaper.
This breakdown of the cost of a typical major-label release by the independent market-research firm Almighty Institute of Music Retail shows where the money goes for a new album with a list price of $15.99.
$0.17 Musicians’ unions
$0.80 Packaging/manufacturing
$0.82 Publishing royalties
$0.80 Retail profit
$0.90 Distribution
$1.60 Artists’ royalties
$1.70 Label profit
$2.40 Marketing/promotion
$2.91 Label overhead
$3.89 Retail overhead

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Business

Somehow, this will all end up costing you and I money!

Sony Closer to Content/Gadget Vision with MGM Deal
TOKYO (Reuters) – With its acquisition of Hollywood film studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Sony Corp is one step closer to its vision of linking hardware and content, and to winning the key battle for the next generation DVD.
Sony’s acquisition of MGM will create the world’s largest film library of about 7,600 titles and would appear to fit nicely into Sony’s overall strategy of creating synergies between its consumer electronics and movies, music and games.
A group headed by Sony Corp of America has agreed to buy MGM, the 80-year-old studio that owns the James Bond, Pink Panther and Rocky movies, in a deal worth about $4.85 billion including the assumption of about $2 billion of debt.
Analysts and investors are worried about the potential damage to Sony’s balance sheet and have doubts about when and how the synergies between movies and electronics will be achieved. But they say the reasoning behind the acquisition was sound.
“The MGM library is a rich source of content and potential profits for Sony,” said Kiyoshi Yamanaka, a fund manager at T&D Asset Management.
Sony also announced on Tuesday that it had reached an agreement with U.S. cable TV operator Comcast Corp. to offer Sony and MGM movies over Comcast’s video-on-demand systems and on new cable channels that it would form with the Sony group.
This means Sony will also be able to generate cash flow by selling the Sony and MGM library of films on cable TV, in addition to the revenues produced by retail sales of DVDs.
Sony does not provide a breakdown of its DVD sales, but the company’s music division recorded an operating profit of 35 billion yen ($318 million) in the previous business year to March 31, on sales of 756 billion yen, or about 10 percent of the group’s total.
DVD FORMAT BATTLE
Sony acquired Columbia Pictures in 1989 for $3.4 billion, which at the time was the largest ever acquisition by a Japanese firm. That deal caused numerous headaches for Sony due to losses from large budgets and box office duds.
The MGM purchase could help stabilize earnings in its movie division, and may also advance Sony’s cause in the battle to establish a format called Blu-ray as the industry standard for the next generation of DVDs.
“One of the important aspects of this deal with MGM is that it may help Sony prevail in the DVD format war,” T&D Asset’s Yamanaka said.
Sony knows how important formats are, having lost out to Victor Co. of Japan Ltd. (JVC) in the famous fight over videotape formats more than two decades ago, with JVC’s VHS system becoming mainstream at the expense of Sony’s Betamax.
Sony’s consortium is up against a format called HD DVD, which is endorsed by Japan’s NEC Corp. and others.
Both HD DVD and Blu-ray technologies use blue laser light, which, with a shorter wavelength than red light used in conventional DVD recorders, can read and store data at much higher densities needed for high-definition recordings.
Sony would also look to use its larger library to capitalize on the spread of broadband Internet access worldwide, UFJ Tsubasa Securities analyst Kazuya Yamamoto said
“Delivering movie content to the home online could become a lucrative business in the future as broadband access expands. Holding movie contents will become more valuable in that light,” Yamamoto said.

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Business

Charlize, J’adore!!!!

Charlize Theron to be new face of Christian Dior’s fragrance J’adore
NEW YORK (AP) – Add Christian Dior to the list of Charlize Theron fans. The company announced Thursday that the Oscar winner will be the new face of J’adore, the designer’s fragrance that debuted in 2000.
Theron will start appearing in print ads and TV commercials next month -about the same time that ads for Chanel No. 5, featuring another Oscar winner, Nicole Kidman, debut.
“Ms. Theron was chosen because she represents modern femininity and embodies the spirit and energy of Dior. She is a classic beauty,” said Pamela Baxter, president and CEO of LVMH Perfumes and Cosmetics, Dior’s parent company.
The advertising deal with Theron is the first one between the beauty brand and a celebrity. Dior’s artistic director John Galliano oversaw all aspects of the ad campaign.