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Word: studioful (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...sour business deals do, with bold rhetoric and grand strategies. Norio Ohga, the part-time symphony orchestra conductor who has been Sony's CEO since 1989, believed in a "synergy" between Sony's core business, producing "hardware" such as VCRS and camcorders, and Hollywood's "software" -- movies. Owning a studio, Sony thought, would help give the company the clout to set the industry standard for the next generation of digital video technology. In the early 1980s Sony's Betamax format of analog videotapes lost out to VHS, so Sony was determined not be left behind again. But Sony's strategy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: So Many Dreams So Many Losses | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

...America did Hollywood better than Hollywood. In the company's postmodern Manhattan headquarters, designed for AT&T by architect Philip Johnson, the sushi bar in a private corporate dining room had a tiny stream running through its marble counter. The $100 million makeover of Sony's Culver City studio lot included pillars adorned with elaborate murals. A fleet of corporate jets sat in the hangar, and fresh cut flowers were delivered daily to executives. The corporate culture seemed to say that to pamper is to prosper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: So Many Dreams So Many Losses | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

...Pictures back in 1989, propelled by a romantic notion that constructors of compact discs and , television sets could marry makers of music and movies. Last week Sony sobered up. The firm took a $2.7 billion write-off -- one of the steepest in Hollywood history -- on its money-losing film studio and reported a second-quarter loss of $3.2 billion. "If we didn't do it once and for all now, we would continue to face losses in our entertainment business," said Tsunao Hashimoto, Sony's executive deputy president. That was the practical assessment. Hollywood's goes something like this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: So Many Dreams So Many Losses | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

...which has an 80% stake in the Rockefeller Group, owner of New York's Rockefeller Center, threatened to default on its $1.3 billion mortgage, taken out five years ago when borrowing was easy. Matsushita, meanwhile, is locked in a struggle with the American executives who run MCA -- the film studio it bought for $6.1 billion in 1990 -- over the Americans' demand for more authority and investment capital. Last week the company reportedly hired Hollywood agent Michael Ovitz and media dealmaker Herbert Allen to help make peace and to "re-evaluate" MCA's assets; one option would be to sell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: So Many Dreams So Many Losses | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

...manage the studios, Schulhof quickly hired Jon Peters and Peter Guber, independent producers who had also never run a major studio. In retrospect, the amounts the Sony team spent verge on the hilarious. The company paid $200 million to buy the Guber-Peters company and gave the two men annual salaries of $2.7 million, as well as $50 million in deferred compensation. Sony then shelled out assets worth $500 million to settle a lawsuit that had been filed by Warner Bros., which had Guber and Peters under contract. "This was an obscenely expensive arrangement," says Porter Bibb, an analyst...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: So Many Dreams So Many Losses | 11/28/1994 | See Source »

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