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Original link to Gizmodo: Spielberg and Scorsese May Have Just Saved TCM From Zaslav’s Destructive Warpath
Directors Martin Scorsese (L) and Steven Spielberg attend the 12th Annual AFI Awards held at the Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills on January 13, 2012
Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg, along with Paul Thomas Anderson, will now be part-time stewards of Turner Classic Movies alongside Warner Bros. film execs Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy. Photo: Frazer Harrison (Getty Images)
Cinephile’s cherished Turner Classic Movies was slated to be Warner Bros. Discovery’s latest amputation of beloved content. Out of the blue, famed directors Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, and Paul Thomas Anderson stepped up to bat for the classic cinema channel. Now it seems the three have managed to hold Warner Bros. CEO David Zaslav back, so long as they stay on to curate and promote TCM content.
According to Variety, the three famed directors will now be the public curators of TCM. In addition, Charles Tabesh—the longtime executive in charge of TCM’s programming lineup—will stay on after initial reports claimed he would get the boot. He will now be reporting to Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy, dual CEOs of Warner Bros. Film Group.
In a joint statement, Spielberg, Scorsese, and Andersen said they are already working with De Luca and Abdy. They also dropped a tithe at grand lord Zaslav’s feet, saying that this arrangement reflects the CEO’s “commitment to honoring the TCM legacy while also involving us on curation and programming.” The three said that the whole team is going to work on “preserving TCM’s mission of celebrating our rich movie history while at the same time ensuring that future generations of filmmakers and film lovers have TCM as a valuable resource.”
The two Film Group execs alongside the directors will all share in the curation duties. In that shared statement, De Luca and Abdy said they intend to “enhance TCM’s on-air programming.” There are very few content streams that try to curate and collect classic cinema. There’s Gizmodo’s own pick The Criterion Channel, but TCM streaming on Max is also a strong source for looking at the films of yesteryear. Without defunct services like Filmstruck, there truly are limited options for cinephiles who lack a large video collection.
Apparently, it takes three Hollywood heavy hitters to stymie Zaslav’s post-merger cost-cutting crusade. IndieWire first reported last week that the directors scheduled an emergency call with Zaslav to contest the layoffs and lead the charge for TCM’s future. The three originally claimed they had been “encouraged” by those discussions, but as is always the case in Hollywood, good feelings don’t necessarily result in positive outcomes. In this case, it seems that clout has won out.
Zaslav’s tenure has seen massive disruptions for Warner Bros. Discovery’s massive content slate. There was the Batgirl movie debacle, major cuts to the company’s animated content, not to mention the controversial move to combine HBO and Discovery content into one streaming service called “Max.” Despite becoming the de-facto antagonist to writers and fans alike, Variety reported Wednesday that Zaslav has been invited to join the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences. Welcome to the big time, Zaz.
Irony…or hypocrisy?
On June 1, 2021, it was announced that the merged company would be known as Warner Bros. Discovery, and an interim wordmark was unveiled with the tagline “The stuff that dreams are made of”—a quote from the 1941 Warner Bros. film The Maltese Falcon. Zaslav explained that the company aimed to be the “most innovative, exciting and fun place to tell stories in the world”, and would combine Warner Bros.’ “fabled hundred-year legacy of creative, authentic storytelling and taking bold risks to bring the most amazing stories to life” with Discovery’s “integrity, innovation and inspiration.”
While I’m not entirely convinced that Zazlav won’t eventually get rid of TCM eventually it’s good to see him held back momentarily by directors who do care at least out of fear of bad PR.
It’s inexplicable how, thanks to the merger, WB Discovery now has control of this entire vast library with a delivery method already in place and would even consider shutting it down. Is TCM that big (if at all) a money pit? I wouldn’t think so: it’s got to be in the realm of reality show/talk show budget, all rights holder monies aside.