Television executive Peter Liguori was named the new chief executive of
Tribune Co. Thursday, taking the reins of the reorganized Chicago-based media
company weeks after its emergence from bankruptcy.
In a widely expected announcement, Liguori, 52, a former top executive at
Fox Broadcasting and Discovery Communications, was confirmed by Tribune Co.'s
new seven-member board, which met for the first time Thursday in Los Angeles.
In Chicago, Tribune Co. owns the Chicago Tribune, WGN-Ch.9 and WGN-AM.
"It can be daunting; I tend to view it as being exciting," Liguori said
in an interview about his new job. "It's just a company of tremendous media
assets with big iconic brand names, and many of those names are in major
markets."
Liguori said he looked forward to leading Tribune Co. into a new era,
focusing on content development across all media platforms. And despite
speculation by analysts and industry insiders that the company was unlikely to
retain its full portfolio of TV stations and newspapers, Liguori said he is
hoping to keep Tribune's broadcasting and publishing businesses together under
one roof.
"I don't care if it's newspapers or TV or digital operations or our other
media assets: I'm hoping to make them work together," Liguori said. "And I'm
really interested in building the company through innovation and through
commitment to our mission of creating compelling content and best-in-class
services."
Liguori replaces Eddy Hartenstein, who has been CEO of Tribune Co. since
May 2011. Hartenstein will remain on the board and continue as publisher of
the Los Angeles Times. He also will serve as special adviser to the office of
CEO, according to Liguori.
"Eddy has done an exemplary job taking this company through some very,
very rough times," Liguori said. "He has done a very good job as the publisher
of a key asset, and I will benefit from having his advice and counsel and
institutional knowledge at my side."
Tribune Co. filed for bankruptcy protection in December 2008, saddled
with a total of $13 billion in debt after real estate investor Sam Zell
completed his $8.2 billion buyout less than one year earlier. It emerged from
Chapter 11 on Dec. 31, 2012, with a healthy balance sheet, owned by its senior
creditors: Oaktree Capital Management; Angelo, Gordon & Co.; and JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
Bruce Karsh, president of Los Angeles-based investment firm Oaktree, the
largest Tribune Co. shareholder with about 23 percent of the equity, was named
chairman of the new board, which also includes Liguori; former Yahoo interim
CEO Ross Levinsohn; entertainment lawyer Craig Jacobson; Oaktree managing
director Ken Liang; and Peter Murphy, a former strategy executive at Walt
Disney Co.
A Bronx native and Yale graduate, Liguori is a former advertising
executive who transitioned into television more than two decades ago. He is
credited with turning cable channel FX into a programming powerhouse during
his ascent to entertainment chief at News Corp.'s Fox Broadcasting. More
recently, he was chief operating officer at Discovery Communications Inc.,
where he helped oversee the rocky launch of the Oprah Winfrey Network. He
became interim CEO in 2011 after the previous executive was forced out; he
left the company when Winfrey made herself CEO of OWN. Liguori has been
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News Column
Liguori Named CEO of Tribune Co.
Jan. 18, 2013
Robert Channick
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