Broadcasting & Cable

March 7, 1994

Cover Story:

"Richard Leibner has talent in a big way"

Former CBS News president Ed Joyce called N.S. Bienstock the "GM of talent agents" in the news business. Joyce and other TV news managers have also called Bienstock principal Richard Leibner a lot worse. But his clients love him, for he is largely credited with establishing dramatically higher salaries for television news talent. The most recent coup: Diane Sawyer’s roughly $6 million-a-year deal at ABC. The kicker: Bienstock had every other network, including Fox, trying to lure her away. In the following interview with BROADCASTING & CABLE’S Steve McClellan, Leibner is discusses the Sawyer deal, how Bienstock is expanding in the face of network belt-tightening, his company’s new link to Hollywood superagent CAA, and developing trends in the news business.

People say you’re a power broker in the television news business. Are you?

I just think I’ve been doing it for over 30 years. So I know a lot of people and I represent a lot of wonderful talent. That allows you to talk to the people who hire people and have access. That allows you an opportunity to get certain things listened to and, inevitably, done. I think the press builds us up as a power broker more than we are. It’s more a questions of respect and relationships.

But you don’t just haggle over money. Diane Sawyer will more than double her on-air exposure under the new deal you cut for her. You position clients and groom them for certain roles within the television industry. Don’t you therefore shape and influence the direction of news programs and news divisions?

But the decision to try and get Diane to strip a magazine in prime time for NBC was an offer that came from Andy Lack and Bob Wright and it was their perception and concept and their decision. It didn’t originate with me. It was not a demand; it was an offer that came from them.

Then ABC countered?

ABC’s response was to NBC’s concept, and it was to try to get everyone [involved with ABC News’s prime time magazines] to pull together and make them dominant in prime time. One of the things that has been difficult with the proliferation of the magazines is the competition—even within each news division—for stories. With one stripped program you eliminate wasted time and effort and pull together rather than have these separate fiefdoms within a shop beating each other up. That was at the heart of the NBC concept, and ABC saw some merit in it.

Before ABC countered, did it ask you, or Sawyer or both, what it would take to keep her from leaving and if so what did you tell them?

I don’t want to get that detailed. They came up with a package that evolved around a journalist who works hard and is a brilliant presenter and who stands in front of a broadcast.

Right. But ABC reorganized its prime time magazine division as part of its effort to keep Diane Sawyer. That’s not power brokering?

You don’t change the way you do business just to not lose someone—unless that person is a major contributor and has a vision of evolving even better and stronger product with a staff around them. In the end, ABC saw virtue in trying to get more cohesiveness between its shows. And they recognized Diane’s value as a worker as well as her marquee value.

What is Sawyer’s role going to be with Day One?

I’m not going to speculate on how that will evolve.

Will she take an anchor position?

I think anything is possible.

NBC still wants to launch a magazine strip in prime time. CBS and ABC each have three on the air and have plans for more. Is there a limit to how many of these shows they can do?

If you can do two 24-hour news channels and if you can have as much talk on the air as there is, then the dissemination and the telling of good stories by good producers and good talent are important. People don’t read the way they used to read. Someone is going to fill the void, so you hope the news division will have as many good news stories on the air as they can handle.

The CBS offer involved a plan to syndicate a Sawyer-hosted magazine in prime time access. Was it just too risky?

That was only part of it. When you go into syndication, so much time in the initial years is spent in the selling process. CBS could deliver its own stations at 7 p.m. Other stations probably had strong contractual commitments to other product, so the show would have ended up at 4 p.m. or 5 p.m. in many markets.

The show would have to be fed at 3 p.m. It was an issue of practicality as well—could you get the quality into it, especially going against more populist product? It was difficult.

How much of an advantage, or disadvantage, did ABC have as the incumbent in the Sawyer talks?

Relationships always give the incumbent the advantage. ABC is a strong organization. NBC has made it clear, under Andy Lack and Bob Wright, that they intend to build the news division. It’s a clear signal to everybody. They didn’t get Diane but they came close and Andy has said that the fact that they came so close has caused a kind of resurgence in the esprit de corps at NBC.

What put it over the top for ABC?

In the end the five years of relationship and the existing depth of the organization are what did it.

How frequently do you get involved in a negotiation about the type of program, or role in a program your client will have, as opposed to just placing your client at x, y or z news organization? Most of the time?

Whenever somebody goes to the network or somebody’s contract comes up, you talk about what their continuing role is going to be if they are a quality broadcaster. It comes up all the time. You want to see people get recognition and prominence for what they’ve done.

Yet you deny playing a role in influencing the shape of or the direction that certain news programs or news divisions take?

In the end it’s the talent. You have to represent the right people.

Who got involved in the Sawyer talks on the network side?

At ABC, Roone Arledge was the point person and Bob Iger got involved at the end so that Diane knew the network was really committed to what they were talking about.

At NBC?

Andy Lack took his concept of a stripped magazine to Bob Wright, who got involved. I’m sure decisions of this magnitude that involve three or four hours of prime time are discussed even above those levels.

Are they borrowing a page from syndication, which has launched several hugely successful first-run magazine strips?

Syndication is different. I think part of it is borne out to some degree by the economics—the cost of producing hour shows at 10 p.m., the network share of the marketplace is declining and the fact that a news show can be successful with a lower share and rating than an entertainment show.

And the network also owns the programming.

Right. And NBC’s deep involvement in international satellites and programming abroad [e.g., the recent acquisition of the Super Channel] also makes the expansion of news very attractive because they have programming overseas to fill with.

Did Rupert Murdoch get involved in the talks with Diane Sawyer?

Mr. Murdoch was very interested and spoke to Diane. He’s a very hands-on guy.

Howard Stinger was the point person at CBS?

Yes.

In his published memoir, former CBS News president Ed Joyce said your bankroll-busting contract deals for talent in the early 1980s forced him to close news bureaus.

Comment?

If I’m proud of anything in my career, I think this organization helped establish the wage scale in network news and a fairer share for talent. We never closed a deal with a gun in our hands and the companies make significant profits and our job is to get a fair share of income for our clients. If I’d like to see anything in my epitaph it would be, "He and his company were pivotal in establishing the wage base for people at all levels in this industry."

You’ve also entered a joint venture with Hollywood talent agency CAA. How did that come to be?

They wanted to get into reality programming. We do so many individuals, and so much of the programming goes on on the West coast, that we were interested in being able to better represent our clients because the business was moving more and more toward programming and not just in the news divisions.

What are the goals?

To package concepts and programming and get them on the air. Not to produce them, but to package them and put them together or match our talent with projects or things CAA is aware of on the West Coast.

When will the venture with CAA announce its first project?

Probably in the next few months, but I can’t be more specific than that right now.

Have the ownership changes in network television—and the belt tightening—made your job more difficult?

Yes. The proliferation of news magazines has helped open the doors again. The number of quality, experienced electronic journalists and producers is limited. We’re expanding in other directions as well. We used to be exclusively in the news business; now we are in news and information, including talk and information programming in syndication. Bill O’Reilly at Inside Edition is a client. So is Linda Bell Blue, executive producer at Hard Copy. We represent producers Ed and Debbie Glavin at Jenny Jones; Mary Duffy [senior producer] at Montel Williams’ [executive producer] Gail Steinberg and [supervising producer] Stu Krasnow at Ricki Lake.

Are you making other forays into first-run and cable?

Dennis Prager will likely be on television next year [via syndication and Multimedia Entertainment]. He’s a client. We also represent J.B. Blunk, who is working on the programming for FX, Fox’s cable service. So we’re moving with the industry. We’ll always be the news specialists, but we’re broadening out to information and reality programming in a response to the changes in the industry.

How does CNN compare with the big three from a negotiating standpoint?

CNN does not pay what the other three pay. They have a different approach to the business, obviously. The original CNN hire was Dan Schorr. I did that deal with Reese Schonfeld and Ted Turner and finished it two days before the cable convention where Ted announced he was going to do CNN. That morning, in fact, I was on the phone with Dan and Ted going over the conditions under which Dan would work editorially. They were established that morning on the back of a piece of hotel stationary.

Murdoch got into sports with the stroke of a pen. Can he do the same with news?

I think the transition into the news business is not an easy one. Because most of their affiliates are 10 p.m. news-oriented. Fox needs more affiliates involved in news, and once that happened the next steps toward more network news can occur.

 

Broadcasting & Cable

March 7, 1994

By: Steve McClellan

"Bienstock: Agent to the news stars"

N.S. Bienstock was founded after World War II by Nate Bienstock, an insurance salesman who specialized in writers and journalists. At the time, agents were not terribly interested in representing newscasters. The industry was in its infancy and newscasters couldn’t command very high salaries. But Bienstock agreed to represent those who bought insurance from him.

In 1965, the ailing Bienstock sold his company to Richard Leibner and Leibner’s father, Sol. The connection was the writer John Steinbeck: Bienstock was his insurance agent and the elder Leibner his business manager. In the mid-1970s, Leibner’s wife, Carole Cooper, joined the company, specializing in local news talent (although she helped put together the Diane Sawyer deal.)

The deal that put the company on the map came in 1980, when Richard Leibner negotiated Dan Rather’s contract to stay at CBS and become anchor of the Evening News for a then-unprecedented $1.6 million a year. Since then, the company has built a client roster of more than 300 network and local newscasters. The list includes CBS notables Mike Wallace, Steve Kroft, Andy Rooney, Paula Zahn and Bob Simon; NBC’s Maria Shriver, Faith Daniels, Mike Schneider and Mike Leonard; and ABC’s Tom Jarriel, Judd Rose, Victor Neufeld, Nancy Collins and John Stossel. At CNN, clients include Lou Waters, Susan Rook, Bruce Morton and Jeanne Meserve.