TV Guidance

TV Guidance

Jaime Weinman writes about all kinds of television and other kinds of popular culture. He does not write Gossip Girl episode reviews. Follow Jaime on Twitter: @weinmanj

Vertical Integration Gets Even More Vertical

by Jaime Weinman on Thursday, January 22, 2009 11:19pm - 3 Comments

The saga of “vertical integration,” that mysterious and weird process by which huge corporations co-ordinate the efforts of the networks they own and the production companies they also own, has taken another step forward with ABC’s announcement that they will be putting one guy in charge of their network and their studio.

The newly formed ABC Entertainment Group will combine ABC Studios and ABC Entertainment, with all operations of the two separate units reporting to Mr. McPherson. The new division’s primary mandate will be to develop and produce compelling programming for broadcast on ABC. However, when appropriate, the studio will look for outside opportunities.

I’ve been over the ups and downs of this process before on this blog, so I’ll be brief in summarizing them again. On the plus side, it gives a show more security because the network has a direct investment in its future. Even when shows are owned by the same company that owns their network, the relationship can still be the same as if they were separate entities, because the production company and the network are supposed to operate as separate entities. Even after networks were allowed to own their own shows, it was perfectly common for the production company to gouge a network owned by its own parent company, and vice versa. The streamlining of production and broadcasting is supposed to prevent this.

The downside is, well, just look at the decline of both NBC and Universal television since they merged together and lost their individual corporate identities.

Ah, well, we still haven’t quite made it to the future predicted by David Mirkin in Newhart 20 years ago, where all the networks would be run by one guy (the speeding-up is intentional):

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  • Clarence Seunarine

    “People have sex and then get killed Theatre”!?!? That is pure genius.

    Or isn’t that no called CSI or perhaps Law & Order SVU?

  • Mike

    Uhh…..why was it intentionally sped-up?

    And was that Ray Combs as the TV reporter in the middle?

    • Jaime Weinman

      I think Mirkin sped it up to make Michael’s stupid executive-speak sound even faster in this dream sequence. (He went on to do Get a Life, so he’s no stranger to low-tech gimmickry.) Or maybe it’s just that the episode ran long and this was a way to fit in a few more seconds.

      And according to TV.com the reporter was played by Bob Walton.

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