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Is The New York Times Company slowly on its way to being taken over? The Ochs-Sulzberger family could be in for the fight of their media lives

Published: Tuesday, February 26, 2008


BY SDH
I am sure many have thought about it, many have even put word out, but at the end of the day, none have made a serious run at it. What am I talking about? Well the tightly held New York Times Co of course. If the majority owners aren't even willing to think about a sale, then any attempt to make an offer may be useless, unless you can go deep down in your pockets and the pockets of friends and come back up with a sum, the controlling Ochs-Sulzberger family can't refuse. See the key to break kung fu grips like these, is to make an offer that will spark in-fighting and somewhat destabilize the formation. Rupert Murdoch did this and won Dow Jones. Microsoft is trying the same thing with Yahoo! I love families like the Ochs-Sulzberger family, the Bancrofts and the Mohns who control German media giant Bertelsmann. They put out this image that says, "we cannot be bought". Well we all know the Bancrofts can be bought, but what about these other controlling families who keep their hands in the day to day of their companies? Some shareholders have been fighting the Ochs-Sulzberger family to loosen their grip on the company but the family never budges. Now hedge fund Harbinger Capital Partners has upped its stake in the company from 12 percent to about 19 percent and is fighting to get four board seats. The investment firm says it isn’t pleased with what they basically call ass dragging on the digital front by New York Times brass. Is this the prelude to an even bolder move? With four board seats, Harbinger will have a loud voice next to the Ochs-Sulzberger’s. Maybe it is time for a new time at the New York Times but what will it take for this to happen? My guess on what the Sulzberger family's anwswer would be.... "A Cold Day In Hell"

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Looking Back: Bertelsmann will never see another CEO like Thomas Middelhoff

Published: Monday, January 14, 2008



-BY SDH

Thomas Middelhoff, the former CEO of German media giant Bertelsmann AG was a German media exec with the makings of a U.S. media exec. He spent more time here in the U.S. than probably any other Bertie CEO has or will. He rubbed elbows with Hollywood trying to bring Bertie into the U.S. spotlight. However in the long run, Middelhoff was too out in the open and to ambitious to transform the company into a major digital player which every media company is trying to do now. Middelhoff was ahead of the game but like we said, got cut short by a reclusive, controlling family and a board of directors that just didn't get it, and to this day still doesn't get it. You can't be the CEO of a foreign media company and not work the elite circles in the media superpower that is America. We came across a Businessweek cover story on Thomas Middelhoff, and it reads like it would read if it was a story on Les Moonves, Bob Iger or even Phil Dauman. The Gulfstream Jet, the high profile events, Thomas Middelhoff wanted to bring Bertie out of the dark that it still sits in but, apparently the Mohn family likes to keep it in the dark. Don't get us wrong, Thomas Middelhoff like many other media CEOs made his blunders as well and is in no way perfect. But you have to wonder where would Bertie be today if he was allowed to take the company public and build its digital offerings? Will we ever read such a profile on new Bertelsmann CEO Hartmut "Hart" Ostrowski? Maybe not as he may turn out to be a Mohn Family puppet, and shun America. Middelhoff was pro America if not on a personal level then on a business level and that too could have been the recipe that did him in.
Thomas Middelhoff doesn't look up as his Gulfstream jet gains altitude over France's Cote d'Azur. He ignores views of the shimmering Mediterranean and the mist-shrouded Alpes-Maritimes. Instead, the chairman and CEO of Bertelsmann, the world's third-largest media company, is hunched over a pile of newspaper clippings, devouring the day's news from the entertainment and online world. And it has already been a long day. After waking at 5 a.m. in the rural German town of Gutersloh and taking a swim in his indoor pool, Middelhoff has hopped a plane for Cannes to give a pep talk to top executives of BMG Entertainment, Bertelsmann's music division. Then it's back to the airport in a Mercedes whose chauffeur seems to be on loan from Formula One.

Bertelsmann: A New Net Powerhouse? [BW Archives]

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