Entertainment Industry

Category: News of the World

Elisabeth Murdoch won't join the News Corp. board as planned

 Elisabeth Murdoch

The furor over Rupert Murdoch's management of News Corp. continues to reverberate. 

The mogul's daughter, Elisabeth Murdoch, had been scheduled to join her father and two brothers on the board of News Corp. after selling her British television production company to News Corp. earlier this year. However, on Friday, the company announced that those plans -- announced in March by Rupert Murdoch, chairman and chief executive of the media conglomerate -- had been put on hold.

"Elisabeth Murdoch suggested to the independent directors some weeks ago that she felt it would be inappropriate to include her nomination to the board of News Corp. at this year's annual general meeting," Viet Dinh, one of News Corp.'s independent directors, said in a statement distributed by News Corp. Dinh is chairman of the media company's corporate governance committee.

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Paul McCartney: 'Apparently, I have been hacked'

Speaking at the Television Critics Assn. press tour, Paul McCartney said, 'Apparently, I have been hacked.' Credit: Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

Rock star Paul McCartney said he expects to talk to British law enforcement authorities about phone hacking by British tabloids.

Speaking at the Television Critics Assn. press tour about a Showtime special he is participating in, McCartney said, "Apparently, I have been hacked."

The former Beatle did not say what paper he thought had hacked into his phones. His former wife Heather Mills told the BBC that she had been told that a reporter from the Mirror Group, parent of the Daily Mirror, had listened to her mobile phone messages.

The Mirror is owned by Trinity Mirror, one of Europe's biggest newspaper publishers.

Most of the hacking scandal has focused on News Corp.'s News of the World tabloid, which was shut down by its parent company after revelations of widespread phone hacking by operatives for the paper. Besides eavesdropping on voice mails of celebrities and members of the royal family, News of the World was found to have done the same to victims of crime as well.

McCartney said the hacking is a "horrendous violation of privacy," and he suspects that the people at the parent companies of these newspapers were aware of the practice.

"More people than we know knew about it," McCartney said.

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Piers Morgan rips Heather Mills in new hacking twist

CNN's Piers Morgan denies he hacked phones for Rupert Murdoch

News Corp. tells New York Post: Save any phone hacking information

-- Joe Flint

Photo: Paul McCartney answers a question via satellite during "The Love We Make" TCA session. Credit: Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

Parliament not done with News Corp.'s James Murdoch

James-murdoch1

News Corp. Deputy Chief Operating Officer James Murdoch has been called to give more information on the extent of his knowledge of phone hacking by journalists at the company's now-shuttered London tabloid News of the World and its other British papers.

In a closed meeting Friday, Britain’s parliamentary committee on Culture, Media and Sports decided to call Murdoch -- who is also over News International, the unit that houses the company's British newspapers -- and other former News International employees. Murdoch will provide written replies to questions, but has not been asked to again appear before Parliament.

At issue are remarks from former News International lawyer Tom Crone and a former News of the World editor Colin Myler as well as Jon Chapman, ex-legal affairs director. All three have offered up information that contradicts what Murdoch told Parliament earlier this month in regard to the extent of his knowledge about phone hacking being done by News of the World. The tabloid has been found to have hacked into voice mail accounts of not only public figures, but also victims of crime and terrorism. The extent of the hacking has outraged much of Britain and given News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch and his family a black eye.

The news that Parliament wants more answers from Murdoch comes just a day after the board of British Sky Broadcasting (BSkyB) held a meeting and did not make a move to push James Murdoch out as its chairman. News Corp owns 39% of BSkyB but had its plans to buy the rest derailed by the News of the World debacle.

In a new development Friday, Peta Buscombe, chairwoman of independent media watchdog Press Complaints Commission, announced her resignation after fierce criticism on her handling of the  complaints about tabloid phone hacking over recent years.  The PCC failed to act against the News of the World in 2009 when complaints emerged of phone hacking by reporters on the paper.

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James Murdoch remains chairman of BSkyB

Has News of the World scandal put cloud over James Murdoch?

James Murdoch clears hurdle in bid to hold onto power at News Corp.

-- Janet Stobart, reporting from London

Photo: James Murdoch arrives for work in east London. Warren Allott / AFP / Getty Images

Has News of the World scandal put cloud over James Murdoch?

FALCON

There is a scene in the John Huston classic "The Maltese Falcon" in which Sydney Greenstreet's character Gutman has to choose between his right-hand man Wilmer or toss him to the cops so he can continue on with his quest for the priceless falcon statute.

Gutman mulls it over for a few seconds and then turns to Wilmer and tells him, "I am sorry indeed to lose you and I want you to know that I couldn't be fonder of you if you were my own son. But, well, by gad, if you lose a son, it's possible to get another and there's only one Maltese Falcon."

There is also only one News Corp., and that climatic scene may be popping into the head of watchers of Rupert Murdoch's media giant who are wondering what the News of the World phone hacking scandal will mean for the mogul's son James. The younger Murdoch has been seen as an eventual heir apparent to succeed his father at the top of the media giant, whose holdings include newspapers, the Fox network, the 20th Century Fox movie studio and the Fox News Channel.

Jamesmurdochcar Less than six months ago, James Murdoch was flying high. In March he was elevated to the position of deputy chief operating officer, a move interpreted by people inside and outside the company as a sign that he had become the chosen one of Murdoch's older children.

Now, though, his reputation as a decisive manager on the fast track is taking a beating. How the company responded to revelations that News of the World was routinely hacking into the voicemails of not only celebrities and the royal family but also victims of crime and terrorism and their family members has put News Corp. and the Murdochs in the cross hairs of regulators and lawmakers both in Britain and the United States, where the company is based.

The revelation of the hacking not only has led to the shutdown of News of the World but also derailed News Corp.'s plans to buy powerful British Broadcaster BSkyB outright. Two top executives -- Les Hinton and Rebekah Brooks -- were forced to resign, and the latter was subsequently arrested.

In the U.S., some members of Congress have called for investigations into whether News Corp. has engaged in any illegal activity here. On Friday activist group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics (CREW) asked for congressional hearings to determine whether News Corp. has violated the character requirements mandated by the Federal Communications Commission to operate television stations. News Corp. owns 27 television stations in the U.S. A News Corp. spokeswoman declined to comment on CREW's statement

Both Murdochs appeared before the British Parliament this week and tried to convince lawmakers that they were unaware of the extent of hacking going on at News of the World, while at the same time saying they were best prepared to clean up the mess. Rupert Murdoch had another mess to clean up, though, as his suit jacket got covered in foam when a spectator tried to throw a pie on him. Quick responses to the attacker by News Corp. Deputy General Counsel Janet Nova and Murdoch's wife Wendi prevented a bigger disaster.

Since the Tuesday Parliament meeting, a former News of the World executive and a former executive at the paper's parent News International said James Murdoch had been informed in 2008 of just how prevalent hacking was. On Thursday, a statement from James Murdoch was issued saying he stood by what he told Parliament.

John Whittingdale, head of the parliamentary committee that questioned the Murdochs, has said James Murdoch has been asked to clarify his comments. That sentiment was also echoed by British Prime Minister David Cameron.

With the imbroglio showing no signs of slowing down and likely to spread to the U.S., where much of News Corp.'s operation is based, James Murdoch may be tarnished somewhat, especially if he is found to have been not totally upfront with Parliament.

LIZMURDOCH The three adult children from Rupert Murdoch's second marriage -- Elisabeth, Lachlan and James -- have all been viewed as contenders to succeed their father at one time or another. Indeed, Lachlan once held the same title that James currently holds until he left News Corp. in 2005 after bumping up against then Chief Operating Officer Peter Chernin and Fox News chief Roger Ailes. Liz Murdoch, who for years ran her own production company, recently sold the company to News Corp. and is expected to join the company's board of directors this fall.

While Lachlan Murdoch remains on the board, he lives in Australia, where he is now interim chief executive of the Ten Network, one of Australia's largest television companies.

Elisabeth Murdoch is often viewed as the most savvy of Rupert Murdoch's older offspring. It was she who persuaded the mogul to bring the show "Pop Idol" from Britain to Fox, where it became "American Idol" and the biggest show on television.

But News Corp.'s deal to buy Liz Murdoch's production company Shine for nearly $675 million is not without controversy. News Corp. shareholder Amalgamated Bank has filed a suit over the sale, claiming that Liz Murdoch got a sweetheart deal that did not get proper scrutiny from the board of directors.

Although speculation that the News of the World debacle has put a big roadblock in James Murdoch's aspirations, there is a contrary school of thought that his father will be very protective of his youngest son. Earlier this week, News Corp.'s board of directors issued a strong statement of support for present management.

Of course, any move right now that would alter the executive ranks might send the wrong signal to Wall Street and be seen as an admission that the company expects even more damaging revelations to emerge about the hacking scandal in the months ahead.

Even if James Murdoch stays put as deputy chief operating officer, the value of Chase Carey -- News Corp.'s president and deputy chairman -- is on the rise. Carey is held with high regard by Wall Street for his business acumen and is one of the few in the executive ranks to have not been caught up in the News of the World mess.

While Carey is not seen as having Rupert Murdoch's vision, that vision has not been 20/20 as of late. Neither of the last two big deals News Corp. made -- the purchase of Myspace and the Wall Street Journal -- have turned into Maltese Falcons. Myspace was bought by News Corp. for almost $600 million and sold for $35 million. Wall Street Journal parent Dow Jones was acquired for $5.6 billion and the company later took a write-down of $2.8 billion on the purchase.

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News Corp. tries to build good will in wake of scandal

Murdoch endures verbal and physical blows at hearing

News Corp. board signals support of management

Critic's notebook: The clueless Rupert Murdoch

-- Joe Flint

Photos: Top: Humphrey Bogart as Sam Spade (on floor), Elisha Cook Jr. as Wilmer Cook, Peter Lorre as Joel Cairo and Sydney Greenstreet as Casper Gutman in "The Maltese Falcon." Credit: UCLA Film & Television Archive. Right: James Murdoch. Credit: Sang Tan / Associated Press: Left: Elisabeth Murdoch. Credit: Tim Matthews / Allstar. 

News Corp. tries to build good will in wake of hacking scandal

Looking to build some good will with British lawmakers, News Corp. said it would no longer pay legal bills for Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator that was convicted in 2007 of hacking into phones for the media giant's now shuttered News of the World tabloid.

That News Corp. was still covering Mulcaire's legal tab was a subject of much interest to Parliament's Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee, which on Tuesday grilled News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch and his son James, who is the company's deputy chief operating officer. Not only did the two endure verbal attacks during the hearing, but Rupert Murdoch also was pelted with foam by a spectator who then bore the brunt of the mogul's wife Wendi, who flung herself on the attacker and landed a blow.

In a statement, News Corp.'s Management and Standards Committee, which is the company's in-house watchdog, said it had decided to "terminate any arrangement to pay the legal fees of Glenn
Mulcaire with immediate effect." News Corp. also retained Harbottle & Lewis to answer questions from the Metropolitan Police Service and Parliament.

The moves are two of many the company has made in the last few days as it tries to put out a fire that threatens to tear through the global media conglomerate. News of the World was found to not only have hacked into the voice mails of celebrities and the royal family, but even victims of crime. Murdoch and his son tried to apologize to Parliament for the actions of News of the World while at the same time claiming to have no knowledge just how corrupt the culture within the paper had become. 

Parliament members were not buying it though and many attacked the Murdochs for their handling of the crisis. Rupert Murdoch claimed he was unaware of what has going on at the paper, which Parliament member Tom Watson said "is revealing in himself what he doesn’t know and what executives chose not to tell him.”

Despite his lack of knowledge about the day-to-day operations of News of the World, Murdoch told the committee he was "the best person to clean this up."

The hacking debacle not only cost News Corp. the 168-year-old News of the World, it also derailed the company's plans to buy outright the powerful British broadcaster BSkyB. Two top executives at the company -- Les Hinton and Rebekah Brooks, each of whom had stints overseeing News of the World -- have had to resign, and Brooks was subsequently arrested. The imbroglio has spread to Scotland Yard, where two top officials also quit because of their close ties to News of the World.

In the United States, there continues to be a probe into whether there were attempts by News Corp. operatives to hack into voice mail accounts of 9/11 victims and their families, a claim that has yet to be substantiated. Asked about it by Parliament, Rupert Murdoch said there was no evidence of that. 

Still, analysts are concerned that if News Corp. is found guilty of wrongdoing overseas or of violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, it could affect the company's vast holdings here, which include television stations licensed by the Federal Communications Commission as well as the 20th Century Fox movie studio, the Fox network and the Fox News cable channel.

Some lawmakers and advocacy groups are also looking to turn the heat up on Murdoch and News Corp. Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg (D-N.J.) on Wednesday sent a letter to the FBI and the Department of Justice to remind the two agencies that News Corp. has been accused of bad behavior here in the past.

In an amended complaint filed in 2006 in a New Jersey federal court, a marketing company called Floorgraphics sued a unit of News Corp., alleging among other things that News Corp.'s News America hacked into its computer systems and took sensitive information. The suit was later settled and News Corp. ended up buying Floorgraphics in 2009.

Lautenberg said in his letter that in 2005 he was informed by Floorgraphics that the FBI and Secret Service launched an investigation into the company's allegations against News America. "I wanted to make sure that you were fully aware of the case of Floorgraphics and News America as it may be relevant to your current investigation," Lautenberg wrote.

The News of the World flap has so overwhelmed News Corp. that the company has four crisis communications consultants working with it. Besides longtime advisors Rubenstein Communications and Washington firm Glover Park, News Corp. has also retained the firm Edelman to advise it on its proceedings in Britain and Sard Verbinnen & Co., a financial communications firm.

News Corp.'s stock, which has taking a beating over the last week, was up for the second day in a row and was at 16.46 in midday trading.

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Murdoch endures verbal and physical blows at hearing

News Corp. board signals support of management

Critic's notebook: The clueless Rupert Murdoch

-- Joe Flint 

News Corp. board of directors signals support of Murdoch and management

News Corp. board of directors signals support of Murdoch and management

News Corp.'s board of directors said it was standing behind Rupert Murdoch and his management team.

Looking to put to rest rumors and speculation that an executive shake-up is in the works at embattled News Corp., Viet Dinh, an independent director of the media conglomerate, issued a statement on behalf of the board saying, "We are united in support of the senior management team to address these issues."

The statement came just hours after the board had retained the New York law firm Debevoise & Plimpton to represent itself.

While that move was seen as a sign of a split in the board of News Corp., as likely a scenario is that the independent members of the board need their own counsel should there be shareholder lawsuits filed against the company in the wake of the scandal.

The board said it and News Corp. were "shocked and outraged by the allegations concerning the News of the World" and that the two were "singularly aligned and committed to doing the right thing."

News Corp.'s stock and market capitalization have taken a pounding over the last week as more details of the extent of the phone hacking by News of the World was revealed. The company also had its plans to buy British Sky Broadcasting derailed and key executives have resigned, including one -- former News International head Rebekah Brooks -- who was ultimately arrested.

Earlier Tuesday, Murdoch and his son James appeared before Parliament to apologize and try to make clear that they were unaware of the extent of the hacking going on by News of the World operatives. Besides members of the royal family and celebrities, the paper has been accused of hacking into voice mails of crime and terrorism victims and their families.

Asked if he was to blame, Rupert Murdoch said "No." When asked who should take the fall, Murdoch replied, "the people I trusted and the people they trusted."

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News Corp. board members hire their own law firm

Murdoch endures verbal and physical blows at hearing

Standards & Poor's warns of possible News Corp. downgrade

-- Joe Flint

Photo: News Corp. headquarters in New York. Credit: Stephen Yang / Bloomberg

Murdoch's newspaper holdings go from Trojan horse to Achilles' heel

Rupertmurdoch1Story News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch has always used his newspapers like a Trojan horse.

Now they've turned out out to be more his Achilles' heel.

The scandal in which operatives of News Corp.'s News of the World tabloid stand accused of hacking into the phones of not only celebrities and members of the royal family, but also victims of crime and terrorism has torn through the company and threatens Murdoch's empire. 

The imbroglio has already resulted in the shuttering of News of the World, resignations of two Murdoch associates and the arrest of one of them, and the collapse of a $12-billion deal to buy outright the powerful British Sky Broadcasting satellite TV service. In the last few days, the commissioner and assistant commissioner of Scotland Yard were also brought down by the fiasco.

On Tuesday, Murdoch and son James testified before Britain's Parliament and endured verbal blows and -- in the case of Rupert Murdoch -- a physical attack.  Media analysts are hoping the phone-hacking debacle will finally convince the 80-year-old mogul that it is time to stop the presses that have put the entire company in peril.

Wall Street has never been on the same page as Murdoch when it came to the value of owning newspapers.  "Investors hate everything to do with the newspaper business," said Rich Greenfield, an analyst with BTIG. "It is perceived to be the worst asset within News Corp."

But watchers of Murdoch and his empire counter that it was News Corp.'s newspapers that gave the mogul access to the halls of power. Politicians would seek to curry favor in exchange for endorsements. Politicians kowtowed to the press baron and his papers in exchange for endorsements. Once inside those corridors of power, Murdoch's newspapers could also go on the attack, laying waste to any opposition.

"The newspapers brought Rupert Murdoch social standing, position and enormous power — and enabled him to build an empire," said James O'Rourke, a professor of management at the University of Notre Dame.

The clout the newspapers have has given Murdoch power around the globe and has helped News Corp. in ways that bottom-line-focused Wall Street sometimes overlooks.

"There is no question — circulation equals reach, which equals influence, which soon equals access," said Frank Sesno, a former senior executive at CNN who is now director of George Washington University's School of Media and Public Affairs.

Now it's the politicians who are on the attack, and what always turned out to be Murdoch's strength -- access to power -- has become his weakness, perhaps the News Corp.'s fatal, final flaw.

For more on the disconnect between Wall Street and News Corp. when it comes to newspapers, please see the story in Tuesday's Los Angeles Times.

-- Joe Flint

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Murdoch endures verbal and physical blows at hearing

Standards & Poors warns of possible News Corp. downgrade

News Corp. taps Lord Grabiner for probe

Top News Corp. execs resign in wake of scandal

 Photo: Rupert Murdoch. Credit: Ki Price/AFP/Getty Images





Rupert Murdoch attacked at Parliament, appears unharmed

Photo: A man, at left, tries to attack News Corp Chief Executive and Chairman Rupert Murdoch with a white substance during a parliamentary committee hearing on phone hacking at Portcullis House in London on Tuesday. Credit: Reuters News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch endured not only verbal blows but also an attempted physical attack Tuesday during his historic appearance before a committee of the British Parliament to account for the alleged illegal activities of reporters at his newspapers accused of hacking people's cellphones.

The hearing was interrupted when it appeared that someone tried to strike the 80-year-old Murdoch, perhaps with shaving cream.

The crowd gasped, and his son James Murdoch -- who was sitting next to him at the witness table -- leaped to his father's defense. Rupert Murdoch's wife, Wendi Deng, who was sitting behind the mogul, jumped up and reached out to slap the offender. 

Murdoch's glasses appeared to come off and his ever-present gray-haired bodyguard jumped to help police apprehend the person trying to accost the mogul.

PHOTOS: British phone-hacking scandal

The disruption occurred during the final questions. The television feed did not show what exactly happened, but a CNN reporter in London said the offender, a young man, approached Murdoch and splashed his face with some substance, perhaps shaving cream, and accused him of being "a greedy billionaire."

Murdoch and his son appeared uncomfortable in the opening minutes of Tuesday's hearing, with Murdoch sometimes cupping his hand to his ear to better hear questions and interrupting his 38-year-old son.

"This is the most humble day of my life," the powerful mogul said.

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Standard & Poor's warns of possible News Corp. downgrade

RupertReadingFinalEditionWith fallout from the News of the World phone hacking scandal far from contained, corporate ratings firm Standard & Poor's on Monday said that it was putting Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. on its "CreditWatch" list, which could result in a possible credit downgrade. 

 
The move would be costly for a company that has already seen $8 billion in market value evaporate during the two weeks since the scandal first blew up. 

News Corp. shares tumbled further Monday, closing at $14.97 a share. That is a 17% decline since July 5 when the scandal began to mushroom.

Losing its BBB+ credit rating would result in higher borrowing costs for News Corp. 

Standard & Poor's attributed its action Monday to "the increased business and reputation risks associated with broadening legal inquiries" and investigations, including one by the FBI, into possible criminal behavior by News Corp. journalists and executives.

"In our opinion this and other recent developments materially increase the reputational, management, litigation, and other risks currently faced by News Corp. and its subsidiaries," Standard & Poor's credit analyst Michael Altberg said in his company's release.

The ratings firm also pointed to a "weakening of the company's executive bench strength."

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Top News Corp. exec Les Hinton latest to fall in hacking scandal

Ln5jndnc Les Hinton, one of the most senior executives at News Corp. and a longtime lieutenant of Rupert Murdoch, is leaving the company in the wake of the News of the World phone-hacking scandal that is tearing through the media conglomerate.

Hinton, chief executive of News Corp.'s Dow Jones & Co., which is the parent to the Wall Street Journal, had previously served for more than a decade as head of News International, the News Corp. unit that housed News of the World.

News Corp. has been rocked by allegations of massive phone hacking done by News of the World reporters and operatives of voicemail accounts of not only celebrities and members of the royal family, but also victims of crime and terrorism. Next week, Murdoch and his son James Murdoch, who oversees all of News Corp.'s European operations, are expected to appear before the British Parliament to address the hacking scandal.

The exit of Hinton follows by only hours the departure of Rebekah Brooks, his successor at News International. Brooks, whom Murdoch stuck by for several days, finally submitted her resignation Friday, saying she had become a distraction to the company's efforts to clean up the mess from the hacking debacle.

"Les and I have been on a remarkable journey together for more than 52 years. That this passage has come to an unexpected end, professionally, not personally, is a matter of much sadness to me,” Murdoch said in a statement, adding that "few individuals have given more to this company than Les Hinton."

Hinton, who worked for Murdoch for over 50 years, said he has "watched with sorrow from New York as the News of the World story has unfolded." He claimed he was "ignorant of what apparently happened" but added that ultimately "it is proper for me to resign from News Corp. and apologize to those hurt by the actions of News of the World.”
 
Brooks and Hinton are the latest casualties of the News of the World scandal. The paper itself was closed earlier this week and News Corp. also pulled the plug on its ambitions to acquire the 60% stake of British Sky Broadcasting it didn't already own.

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Rebekah Brooks quits as head of Murdoch's British operations

Murdoch and son to appear before Parliament committee

News Corp.'s U.K. problems hit U.S. shores

-- Joe Flint

Photo: Les Hinton, former chief executive officer of News Corp.'s Dow Jones & Co. Credit: Joshua Roberts / Bloomberg

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