Comcast to acquire DreamWorks Animation


Tom Paine



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NBCUNIVERSAL ANNOUNCES DREAMWORKS ANIMATION ACQUISITION
(Comcast)

How the Comcast-DreamWorks deal came together so fast (LA Times)




-DreamWorks Animation valued at about $3.8 billion.

-"Acquisition builds on NBCUniversal’s presence in family and animation space. DreamWorks Animation to become unit of Universal Filmed Entertainment."

-Illumination Entertainment (unit of NBCUniversal) founder Chris Meledandri to "help guide the growth of the DreamWorks Animation business in the future."

-Jeffrey Katzenberg will become Chairman of DreamWorks New Media, which will be comprised of the company’s ownership interests in Awesomeness TV and NOVA.

-Agreement has been approved by the boards of directors of DreamWorks Animation and Comcast, and the controlling shareholder of DreamWorks Animation has approved the agreement by written consent.

-Transaction is expected to close by the end of 2016.


Update: WSJ reports that Dreamworks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg will step down from the company if Comcast acquires it. Presumably, this gives more substantiation to the entire acquisition scenario.

Comcast is reportedly in talks to buy DreamWorks Animation, the Wall Street Journal reports.


The reported price, if a deal occurred, would be more than $3 billion, a premium over the studio's current market value of $2.35 billion.

DreamWorks, founded in 2004 as a new kind of studio, has had some major successes, but is often perceived as too small for a stand alone studio. Like a small driller, it suffers if it hits a few dry wells. Last year a series of less than successful releases forced the company to cut 500 jobs, close its studio in Northern California and make management changes.

For Comcast, the deal would expand its successful animation business, with major implications for its theme parks and international expansion.

But the LA Times cautions that there have been several prior discussions by others with DreamWorks that ended without results.

The Journal suggests a deal would make Comcast a more formidable challenger to Disney in family entertainment, bringing back memories of its failed attempt to acquire Disney in 2004. Comcast reports earnings tomorrow, but rarely comments on breaking news at that time.


Links 4/27: Digital Ad Spending Surges to Record High; Amazon to open 2 NJ warehouses




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Oracle Combines Marketing Apps, Data Services (Fortune)

Digital Ad Spending Surges to Record High as Mobile and Social Grow More Than 50% (Ad Age)

Amazon to open 2 new facilities, provide 2,000 new jobs in N.J. (NJ.com)

Vox Media Names First CFO, Adds Former Yahoo President to Board (Bloomberg)

Venmo is growing ridiculously fast (Re/code)






Comcast earnings: Good sub growth and other items of interest




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Comcast posts earnings of 84 cents a share vs. 79 cents estimate (Reuters via CNBC)

Here's Why Comcast Just Reported Strong Earnings (Fortune)

Smit: Comcast Hasn’t Seen an OTT Model ‘That Really Hunts’ (Multichannel News)

Comcast Rising on Q1 Beat; What Might Synergies Be with DreamWorks? Asks B Riley (Barron's Tech Trader Daily)

Comcast raises trial data caps to a terabyte but won't commit to nationwide rollout (PCWorld)


Comcast reported in acquisItion talks with DreamWorks (Update: WSJ reports Katzenberg would step aside)


Tom Paine



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Update: WSJ reports that Dreamworks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg will step down from the company if Comcast acquires it. Presumably, this gives more substantiation to the entire acquisition scenario.

Comcast is reportedly in talks to buy DreamWorks Animation, the Wall Street Journal reports.


The reported price, if a deal occurred, would be more than $3 billion, a premium over the studio's current market value of $2.35 billion.

DreamWorks, founded in 2004 as a new kind of studio, has had some major successes, but is often perceived as too small for a stand alone studio. Like a small driller, it suffers if it hits a few dry wells. Last year a series of less than successful releases forced the company to cut 500 jobs, close its studio in Northern California and make management changes.

For Comcast, the deal would expand its successful animation business, with major implications for its theme parks and international expansion.

But the LA Times cautions that there have been several prior discussions by others with DreamWorks that ended without results.

The Journal suggests a deal would make Comcast a more formidable challenger to Disney in family entertainment, bringing back memories of its failed attempt to acquire Disney in 2004. Comcast reports earnings tomorrow, but rarely comments on breaking news at that time.


Links 4/26: Alibaba’s financial spinoff now world’s most valuable private internet company; Comcast earnings out in morning




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Alibaba’s financial spinoff is now the world’s most valuable private internet company (Quartz)

Comcast Q1: NBCU Film Weak, TV Ads Gain; Theme Parks Strong (Investor's Business Daily)

Comcast-backed start-up NextVR uses NAB to show it can take pay-TV viewers to the game (Daniel Frankel/ FierceCable)

Comcast WiFis with Wawa (Multichannel News)
Comcast/Wawa WiFi deal, though sponsored through Comcast Business, probably first time its offered consumer-reaching service beyond its footprint.

Time Warner's Turner Appeals to Film Nerds With Web-Only Service (Bloomberg)

ServiceMax brings performance metrics to field service (Diginomica)

Zuora moves to the center (Denis Pombriant/Enterprise Irregulars)


Philly Tech People News 4/26/2016: Tirico leaving ESPN for NBC Sports




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Mike Tirico is leaving ESPN for NBC Sports (Washington Post)

Jarecke-Cheng Named Global COO of Publicis Healthcare Comms. (O'Dwyer's)


Sungard Availability Services Appoints Randy J. Hendricks to Board of Directors (PR Newswire)
Exec at Workday.

Diez, after $20M PointRoll sale, heads to NY (Philly Deals)

Aqua America Welcomes New Chief Information Officer (Aqua America)


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Workday names Sisco CFO (ZDNet)


eMoney Advisor's CEO, Ed O'Brien, Named One of 25 of the Most Influential People in the Financial Advisory Industry (eMoney Advisor)


Fingerpaint Founder Ed Mitzen Named Industry Person of the Year at 2016 Med Ad News Manny Awards (Fingerpaint)
Fingerpaint is based in upstate New York, but has a significant Philly presence.

Thomas M. Montgomery Elected Senior Vice President and Comptroller (Ametek


Links 4/26: Regulators Approve Charter Communications Deal for Time Warner Cable; Microsoft, Dell reveal IoT plans



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Regulators Approve Charter Communications Deal for Time Warner Cable (NY Times)

Set Top Box Death Watch—Are You Kidding? (Rob Frieden / TeleFrieden)


Gannett Offers to Acquire Los Angeles Times Owner Tribune in $815M Deal (Hollywood Reporter)
People in Allentown can look forward to a slimmed-down Morrning Call if this deal goes through.

Newsonomics: After Gannett’s $815 million Tribune bid, here are eight things to look out for (Ken Doctor/Newsnomics)


SAP HANA enterprise cloud might even turn a profit in 2017
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After 16 Quarters Of Revenue Declines, When Will IBM Bounce Back? (Investor's Business Daily)


Microsoft extends the ‘Internet of Things’ to jet engines, refrigerators and more
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Dell Teams with GE, Microsoft, OSIsoft, PTC, SAP, Software AG and Others to Advance the Internet of Things (ARC Advisory Group)


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Electric Car Maker Fisker Has a New Name
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Uber drivers in N.J. want more flexibility (NorthJersey.com)


Uber has become the symbol of everything right and wrong with Silicon Valley today (Business Insider)



Remember the Inky / Daily News Android tablet?


Tom Paine



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Remember the days when the Inky/Daily News had its own tablet? (I can't remember under which reincarnation).

I wonder how many they sold? There are still probably some sitting in inventory somewhere.

It still lives on the Philly.com website.





Lutron President: The Best Leadership Advice I Ever Received (Fortune)

Lutron, based in Coopersburg Lehigh County PA, has become a star of the IoT world after more than 50 years in business.

Lutron has also made its Caséta Wireless system compatible with the Amazon Echo family of products.


Pepper Hamilton, Reed Smith end merger talks (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Fox, Disney, CBS, Time Warner, Viacom protest proposed FCC set-top box rules (LA Times: Company Town)