Los Angeles Times 11/26/2020

(Joyce) #1

E6 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2020 LATIMES.COM/CALENDAR


During the coronavirus
crisis, the Los Angeles
Times is making some tem-
porary changes to our print
sections. The prime-time
TV grid is on hiatus in print
but an expanded version is
available in your daily Times
eNewspaper. You can find a
printable PDF online at:
latimes.com/whats-on-tv.

SERIES
Gilmore Girls: A Year in
the LifeThe final episode
of the rebooted miniseries.
8 p.m. CW
The Masked SingerJay
Pharoah. 8 p.m. Fox
Alaska: The Last Frontier:
The Frozen EdgeThe
Kilcher family gathers for
Thanksgiving at the old
barn. 8 p.m. Animal Planet
I Can See Your VoiceFox
Star Trek: DiscoveryOn
board Discovery, Burnham
(Sonequa Martin-Green)
realizes things are not as
they seem. 10 p.m. CBS

SPECIALS

The 94th Annual Macy’s
Thanksgiving Day Parade
9 a.m. and 2 p.m. NBC
The National Dog Show
John O’Hurley and David
Frei cohost this year’s event
in Oaks, Pa., produced
following state and local
pandemic guidelines. Noon
NBC

SPORTS


NFL FootballThe Texans
visit the Lions, 9:30 a.m.
CBS; Washington visits the
Cowboys, 1:30 p.m. Fox; the
Ravens visit the Steelers,
5:20 p.m. NBC

TALK SHOWS

CBS This Morning(N) 7
a.m. CBS
TodayThe COVID-19 pan-
demic; Goldie Hawn and
Kurt Russell; Marlo Thom-
as. (N) 7 a.m. NBC
Good Morning America
Nicholas Pinnock; chefs
Jamika Pessoa, Eden Grin-
shpan and Jeff Mauro. (N)
7 a.m. ABC
Live With Kelly and Ryan
Shania Twain; Kim Cattrall.
(N) 9 a.m. ABC
Amanpour and Company
(N) 11 p.m. KCET; midnight
KPBS; 1 a.m. KLCS
The Tonight Show Jerry
Seinfeld; Bad Bunny per-
forms. (N) 11:35 p.m. NBC
Late Night The Meyers
family; Kurt Vile performs.
(N) 12:37 a.m. NBC

MOVIES
The Wizard of OzAfter a
tornado whisks Dorothy
(Judy Garland), a Kansas
farm girl, to a magic land,
she must travel to the Emer-
ald City for help in getting
home in the 1939 classic. Ray
Bolger, Bert Lahr, Jack
Haley, Billie Burke, Mar-
garet Hamilton and Frank
Morgan also star. 6 and 8
p.m. TBS
Miss JuneteenthNicole
Beharie stars as a single
mother, and former winner
of the local Miss Juneteenth
pageant, who enters her
15-year-old daughter (Alexis
Chikaeze) in this year’s
competition. 8 p.m. BET
Christmas by StarlightA
lawyer (Kimberley Sustad)
makes a deal with the heir
(Paul Campbell) to a devel-
opment firm to spare her
family’s restaurant from
demolition, if she pretends
to be his attorney in this new
holiday romance. 8 p.m.
Hallmark
1917 George MacKay and
Dean-Charles Chapman
star as young British sol-
diers entrusted with deliv-
ering a vital message calling
off a doomed attack by
Allied forces, in this 2019
World War I drama. 9 p.m.
Showtime
Frozen(2013) 9:07 a.m.
Starz
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
(1968) Noon TCM
The Black Stallion(1979)
2:45 p.m. TCM
Shrek(2001) 3, 5, 7 and 9
p.m. Bravo
Kung Fu Panda 2(2011) 3
p.m. Nickelodeon

TV Highlights


BURNHAM(Sonequa
Martin-Green) senses a
problem in a new “Star
Trek: Discovery” on CBS.

Jan ThijsCBS

tent consumers,” said S&P
analyst David Snowden.
”But this is a small, inde-
pendent movie studio with
volatile revenues.”
Many challenges MGM
faces are shared by other
midsize studios. Analysts ex-
pect it to become more diffi-
cult for MGM to compete as
an independent entity as
larger companies, such as
Walt Disney Co. and Com-
cast’s NBCUniversal, grow
through streaming.
“It’s hard to imagine any
of the smaller studios being
stand-alone over the next
several years,” said Light-
Shed Partners media analyst
Rich Greenfield.
Much of the investor ten-
sion has centered on the
chairman of MGM’s board,
Kevin Ulrich, who is chief exe-
cutive of investment firm An-
chorage Capital Group, the
studio’s leading shareholder.
Some investors who want
to sell think Ulrich, who co-
founded Anchorage in 2003,
has become too enamored
with the entertainment in-
dustry, said people close to
the company who were not
authorized to comment.
Others believe Ulrich is sim-
ply holding out for a higher
valuation. The Wall Street
Journal earlier reported in-
vestor pressure on MGM.
Anchorage and Ulrich de-
clined to comment.
MGM and Anchorage
have yet to publicly comment
on a sexual assault allegation
made, and subsequently
withdrawn, against Ulrich.
On June 2, Jennifer B.
Perry sued Ulrich for sexual
battery and sexual assault,
alleging he assaulted her in a
room in New York City’s up-
scale Mercer hotel on July 25,
2019, according to recently
surfaced documents filed
with the New York Supreme
Court. On July 2, Perry with-
drew her case.
Neither Perry, nor her at-
torneys, responded to re-
quests for comment. Anchor-
age told investors it settled
the suit, according to the fi-
nancial publication Institu-
tional Investor, which first re-
ported the lawsuit. The
Times could not independ-
ently verify the settlement.
New York-based Anchor-
age was among a group of
MGM’s top creditors who be-
came shareholders when the
studio emerged from Chap-
ter 11 protection in December
2010 under a prepackaged
plan to wipe out $4 billion in
debt.
Hedge funds and private
equity investors such as An-
chorage usually invest in
companies for three to five
years before selling, though
some distressed assets take
longer to change hands, in-
dustry analysts said.
“The longer you hold an
asset, the lower your return
on investment is going to be,”
said Lloyd Greif, founder of


Los Angeles investment
bank Greif & Co. “The fact of
the pandemic coming along
has increased the gamble.”
The company’s decentral-
ized management structure
has also presented a chal-
lenge, sources familiar with
the company said. Since 2018,
MGM has been run by an “of-
fice of the CEO” that includes
Chief Operating Officer
Chris Brearton, TV head
Mark Burnett and other exe-
cutives.
MGM adopted the struc-
ture when CEO Gary Barber
was abruptly fired after eight
years. Barber had been push-
ing for a sale, which Ulrich op-
posed, according to people
familiar with the matter who
were not authorized to com-
ment. MGM’s stock was val-
ued higher than $110 a share
in 2018. Now its shares are
priced at $84.50, according to
FactSet.
MGM spokeswoman
Katie Martin Kelley declined
to comment on sale discus-
sions but said the leadership
structure has worked well.
“The studio has, and will
continue to, make decisions
that are right for the overall
business and our sharehold-
ers,” Kelley said.

Another source of friction
within the company is the
clout of reality television im-
presario Burnett, the “Sur-
vivor” and “Shark Tank” pro-
ducer who became head of
MGM’s TV division in 2016,
several people close to the
company said. Burnett influ-
enced Ulrich’s decision to
oust Barber, these people
said.
MGM disputes the claim.
“Mr. Burnett is not a board
member of MGM and does
not control board member
decisions,” Kelley said.
Burnett, the sources said,
has gained sway with Ulrich
by showing him the glitzy el-
ements of the industry, in-
cluding bringing him to ex-
clusive parties and taking
him backstage at “The
Voice.”
Known for creating some
of the biggest phenomena of
the reality TV boom, Burnett
has produced few major hits
since joining MGM, as de-
tailed in recent critical New
York Times and Hollywood
Reporter stories. A long-dis-
cussed faith-based stream-
ing platform from Burnett
and his wife Roma Downey’s
production company Light-
Workers Media, owned by

MGM, has yet to emerge.
Still, Burnett has shows
on all four major broadcast
networks, including Fox’s
“Beat Shazam.”
His unit has “consistently
been the most profitable
original content division in
the company,” MGM’s Kelley
said. “To reach this level of
success fiscally and crea-
tively over so many years re-
quires sophisticated dele-
gation and management, in-
cluding an understanding of
both holistic and strategic
growth.”
Kelley said “market con-
ditions” slowed LightWork-
ers’ progress in subscription
streaming but that MGM is
“still actively engaged with
investors.”
Some of MGM’s moves
during the pandemic have
fueled sale rumors. Michael
De Luca, named film chair-
man in January, has been
making splashy deals with
filmmakers to beef up its
slate.
MGM in November trum-
peted plans for Oprah Win-
frey and Brad Pitt to produce
an adaptation of Ta-Nehisi
Coates’ “The Water Dancer.”
In August, the company an-
nounced a plan to remake its
Orion Pictures label to focus
on movies with diverse film-
makers and casts under
Alana Mayo, the former pro-
duction head of Michael B.
Jordan’s company Outlier
Society.
It’s unclear who would be
a buyer. Apple and Amazon
were thought to be potential
acquirers due largely to the
appeal of the company’s film
and TV library, which in-
cludes 4,000 movies such as
“Robocop” “The Pink Pan-
ther” and “The Silence of the
Lambs.” Its scripted TV divi-
sion is responsible for
“Fargo,” “The Handmaid’s
Tale” and “Vikings.”
Speculation has swirled
that Barber, who runs Spy-
glass Media Group, could
make a run at the company,

which values itself north of
$7.5 billion, industry insiders
said. MGM’s 2018 agreement
to buy out Barber’s stake for
$260 million prohibits him
from getting involved in
MGM matters for three
years. A spokesperson for
Barber declined to comment.
With the pandemic delay-
ing film releases, MGM had
preliminary talks with Apple
and Netflix to sell the U.S dis-
tribution rights to “No Time
to Die” for a one-year license,
said people familiar with the
negotiations. MGM wanted
as much as $800 million for
the Bond rights, and no
streamer was willing to offer
close to that. Apple and Net-
flix declined to comment.
The studio would have
had to convince 007 produc-
ers Barbara Broccoli and
Michael G. Wilson of the mer-
its of such a deal. “No Time
To Die” would normally gross
more than $800 million at the
global box office, with hun-
dreds of millions more from
home video and other reve-
nue streams.
“It’s MGM’s golden goose,
but it’s the Broccolis’ plati-
num goose,” said one pro-
ducer familiar with the fran-
chise who requested ano-
nymity to avoid repercus-
sions.
MGM said it is “commit-
ted” to a theatrical release.
Although MGM has $2.3
billion in long-term debt, it is
not facing a crunch and
there’s no immediate need
for a sale. MGM had $280 mil-
lion available under the $1.8
billion loan maturing in July
2023, giving it enough liquidi-
ty to meet its obligations over
the next year, S&P said.
The pandemic took a toll,
prompting the studio to cut
7% of its 750-person work-
force in April. In the third
quarter, revenue fell 12 % to
$308.5 million and the com-
pany posted an $18.1 million
loss, reflecting falling box of-
fice and television licensing
revenues. Last year, MGM
had a $436.2 million loss in
the third quarter after a
write-off from its investment
in pay TV network Epix.
But COO Brearton
sounded upbeat in the earn-
ings call, citing upcoming TV
productions such as Season 4
of Hulu’s “Handmaid’s Tale”
and the series “Clarice” for
CBS. Movies for 2021 include
the Aretha Franklin biopic
“Respect” and a Jordan
Peele-produced “Candy-
man” reboot.
“We’ve also seen a tremen-
dous amount of operational
momentum in each of our
core businesses,” he told in-
vestors. “The content shifts
and restart of production
have set a stage for 2021 that
will potentially be one of the
biggest years for new content
in recent MGM history.”

Times staff writer Meg
James contributed to this
report.

MGM struggles to roar again


[MGM, from E1]


DANIEL CRAIG as James Bond and Ana de Armas star in “No Time To Die,”
whose release was postponed by MGM until Easter due to theater closures.

Nicola DoveMGM

ROMA DOWNEYand husband Mark Burnett have
discussed a faith-based streaming platform at MGM.

Al Seib Los Angeles Times

than Goldie Hawn, marking
this longtime Hollywood
couple’s first onscreen re-
union since their 1987 come-
dy, “Overboard.”
“The Christmas Chroni-
cles” — or, as I like to think of
it, “Overbeard” — wasn’t a
particularly good movie, but
it passed the time amiably
enough, and that last mo-
ment showed modest charm
and real promise.
Given the natural pleas-
ure of seeing Russell and
Hawn share the screen, the
next entry in the inevitable
“Christmas Chronicles”
franchise might have done
well to ditch its prede-
cessor’s kid protagonists
and tried something a little
different. The Clauses could
have been cast as merry-
making sleuths in a St. Nick-
and-Nora-style detective se-
ries. Or they could have built
on that Netflix synergy by
overseeing a North Pole pas-
try-making competition.
“The Great Elvish Baking
Show”? Would watch.
None of this has come to
pass in “The Christmas
Chronicles: Part Two,” an
unremarkable if far from un-
pleasant sequel arriving just
in time to brighten your
locked-down holiday festiv-
ities. For better or worse, the
kids stay in the picture, and
the directing reins have
passed from Clay Kaytis to
the veteran Chris Columbus,
who has an obvious track
record with children, fantasy
and holiday-centric may-
hem.
Like the first two “Harry
Potter” films he directed,
“The Christmas Chronicles:


Part Two” is a busy, imper-
sonal amalgam of whimsical
inventions, teachable mo-
ments and fluid visual ef-
fects, marshaled in service of
an aesthetic that brings to
mind a Thomas Kinkade
deluxe snow globe. And as in
Columbus’ 1990 holiday pe-
rennial, “Home Alone,” there
are parent-child tensions
and villainous home invad-
ers galore, even if no one
takes an iron to the face or a
pellet to the groin this time
around.
Darby Camp is back as
Kate Pierce, the high-spir-
ited young girl who went for a
fateful ride in Santa’s sleigh
in the first “Chronicles” — a
journey that dispensed some
much-needed uplift for her
and her older brother, Teddy

(Judah Lewis), still grieving
their dad’s untimely death.
As the sequel opens, Kate
is miserably enduring the
First World horrors of a
Christmas holiday in sunny
Cancún with Teddy and
their mom, Claire (Kimberly
Williams-Paisley). Not a
huge fan of the tropics, or of
Claire’s new boyfriend, Bob
(Tyrese Gibson), Kate would
rather be sipping hot choco-
late around the fire with
Santa and his Minion-like
computer-generated elves.
She’ll get her wish,
thanks to a disgruntled elf
named Belsnickel (played in
cursed human form by New
Zealand actor Julian Denni-
son), who zaps Kate back to
the North Pole as part of a
convoluted hostile takeover

plot. Tagging along this time
is Bob’s young son, Jack
(Jahzir Bruno, “The
Witches”), a sweet, overly
anxious kid who’s soon hap-
pily stuffing his face at Mrs.
Claus’ dinner table. But their
idyll doesn’t last long. Bel-
snickel — goodness, that’s a
fun name to write — soon at-
tacks the North Pole with
the help of a ferocious Yule
Cat and a lot of high-tech
gadgets, unleashing chaos,
endangering reindeer and
turning all those cute elves
into property-smashing,
chainsaw-wielding maniacs.
That transformation
might put you in mind of the
creepy 1984 Christmas favor-
ite “Gremlins,” which, not
coincidentally, was written
by Columbus, in a warm-up

for his future exercises in
havoc-wreaking. He scripted
this new movie too, with
Matt Lieberman (the first
film’s writer), and it’s expect-
edly formulaic stuff, dispens-
ing personal-growth narra-
tives and believe-in-yourself
platitudes like stocking
stuffers. Still, amid all the
quest-driven subplots and
flat line readings, it does find
time for a few intriguing
nuggets of authentic Santa
Claus lore, including an
evocative flashback to St.
Nicholas’ Turkish mytholog-
ical origins.
The movie’s more sus-
tained bout of time travel
finds Santa and Kate
whooshing randomly back
to 1990 Boston, where
stranded airline passengers
need an uptick in Christmas
spirit. Naturally, one of San-
ta’s impromptu musical
numbers does the trick, al-
lowing Russell to flash that
twinkle and show off a damn
good set of pipes. It’s not long
before the passengers are
happily homeward-bound,
likely in the company of an
in-flight movie neither better
nor worse than this one.

This ‘Christmas’ needs more Clauses


TYRESE GIBSON and Kimberly Williams-Paisley get into the holiday spirit in
the tropics in “The Christmas Chronicles: Part Two,” directed by Chris Columbus.

Joseph LedererNetflix

‘The Christmas
Chronicles:

Part Two’


Rated: PG, for mild
action/violence and brief
language
Running time:1 hour,
55 minutes
Playing:Anytime on
Netflix

[‘Christmas,’ from E1]

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