Los Angeles Times - 07.09.2019

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The NFL and its TV part-
ners received an early indi-
cator Thursday that last
year’s ratings comeback was
real.
The kickoff to the 2019-20
season on NBC scored 22
million viewers, despite the
game being a lackluster 10-3
win for the Green Bay Pack-
ers over the Chicago Bears
at Soldier Field in Chicago.
An additional 627,000 view-
ers streamed the game. The
TV audience was up 16% over
last season’s opener.
The encouraging data
from Nielsen comes after the
league saw a 5% uptick in
ratings last season — with
regular season games aver-
aging 15.8 million viewers —
after two straight seasons of
audience erosion. The de-
cline raised questions as to
whether the country’s top
viewing attraction was get-
ting caught up in the same
downward trend affecting
traditional TV viewing and
other factors, such as the
controversy over players
participating in social jus-
tice protests during the

playing of the national
anthem.
The ratings performance
of the NFL is more vital than
ever to CBS, NBC, Fox and
Walt Disney Co.’s ESPN,
which collectively pay $5.62
billion annually for the
rights to carry the games.
The NFL is the most de-
pendable programming for
attracting mass audiences
who watch live as younger
viewers flock to streaming
platforms to watch their fa-
vorite sitcoms and dramas.
According to the media
analysis firm Moffet-
tNathanson, NFL games
and the programming sur-
rounding them account for
63% of the live viewing on
Fox during the football sea-
son. The figure is 25% for
CBS and ESPN, and 24% for
NBC.
Ad revenue for NFL tele-
casts in the 2018-19 season
came in at $3.28 billion, a
slight decline from 2017-18,
according to Standard Me-
dia Index. While ratings for
the season were up, pricing
for advance ad sales were
probably adjusted down-
ward due to declines in the
previous two years.
But advertisers’ confi-
dence in the NFL’s ability to
deliver big audiences was re-
newed after last season’s
bounce back. Ad Age re-
ported advance sales for
commercial time were up 5%
to 10%. Fox is getting more
than $800,000 for a 30-sec-

ond spot for its Nov. 24 game
between the Dallas Cowboys
and the New England Patri-
ots.
“The marketplace is very
vibrant right now,” said CBS
Sports Chairman Sean Mc-
Manus.
So how does the NFL
keep the momentum going?
Based on last season, the
best defense against declin-
ing ratings is more offense,
according to Mike Mulvihill,
executive vice president for
research and league opera-
tions at Fox Sports.
“The biggest factors in
the viewership increase is
that you had an eruption in
offensive efficiency,” said
Mulvihill, who noted that
most offensive categories
were at or near record levels
last season. “There is a more
aggressive philosophy being
taken by head coaches that
is also contributing to a
more entertaining product.
The number of two-point
conversion tries last year
was the highest in 25 years.
Fifty-six percent of fourth-
down tries resulted in a first
down. That makes for a few
more exciting moments ev-
ery game.”
Interest in the NFL is also
being lifted by a new genera-
tion of star players, such as
Cleveland Browns quarter-
back Baker Mayfield, New
York Giants running back
Saquon Barkley and Kansas
City Chiefs quarterback
Patrick Mahomes.

“A couple of years ago
when the ratings were down,
we were in a post-Peyton
Manning period when there
was a dearth of exciting
young players,” Mulvihill
said. “Now it feels like there
is a lot of young talent in the
glamour positions that we
haven’t seen in a while.”
Mulvilhill believes Fox is
positioned to have a strong-
er year thanks to a schedule
that pits the NFC East
teams — which include the
Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas
Cowboys and New York Gi-
ants — against the NFC
North with the Green Bay
Packers, Chicago Bears and
Minnesota Vikings. The
match-ups among the
league’s most iconic fran-
chises happen only every
three years.
The networks have also
gotten the NFL to allow
them to offer their own Sun-
day afternoon game at the
same time a local market
team is playing a home
game. The NFL’s blackout
rules had long prevented a
competing game from airing
against a local market home
game telecast, which left 10%
of the country without two
games to watch on Sundays.
“The number of blacked-
out windows this year will be
about half of what it was in
previous years,” Mulvihill
said. “Windows that previ-
ously did not have a game
will have a game, and it will
only help. It’s more football.”

ADRIAN AMOS of the Green Bay Packers intercepts a pass in the end zone over Allen Robinson of the Chi-
cago Bears at Soldier Field in Chicago on Thursday. The Packers beat the Bears 10-3 in the NFL season opener.

Jonathan DanielGetty Images

NFL opens with a big hit


Thursday’s season


kickoff on NBC


scored 22 million


viewers, a 16% jump


over last year.


By Stephen Battaglio

Participant Media, the
company behind “Green
Book” and “Roma,” is get-
ting a makeover as it looks to
become a better-known
brand in the entertainment
industry and among socially
conscious audiences.
The Beverly Hills firm,
founded in 2004 by former
EBay President Jeff Skoll,
has made a name for itself in
Hollywood by financing and
producing films and TV
shows and waging cam-
paigns for what it views as
the public good. However,
for the general public, the
company has mostly re-
mained under the radar.
Executives are hoping to
change that, starting with a
new logo that debuted at the
Toronto International Film
Festival on Friday, ahead of
the screening of the Michael
B. Jordan civil rights drama
“Just Mercy,” the Warner
Bros. release that the com-
pany co-financed.
Participant’s previous
logo was essentially just its
name in a simple lower-case
font. The new image features
the word “Participant” in all
caps, surrounded by shapes
meant to evoke the planting
of a flag and cut-up pieces of
film.
The company is also
dropping “Media” from its
name to emphasize that its
goal is not solely to produce
compelling content but also
to spur audiences to act, exe-
cutives said. “We believe that
our efforts, including our
logo and visual identity, now
better convey what we do
and the values behind it,”
Skoll said in a statement.
The idea is to make the
brand feel more accessible
and approachable for the
public, said Participant’s
president of worldwide mar-
keting, Christina Kounelias.
The rebranding also


comes at a potentially op-
portune time for Participant
amid a rise in “conscious
consumerism,” in which
people make decisions
about what they buy and
watch based on their per-
ceived social, political or en-
vironmental effect.
“It allows us to tap into
some global trends and cul-
tural shifts that are happen-
ing right now,” Kounelias
said via phone. “It’s this era
of individual empowerment.
You can become a participa-
nt, which is the brand’s
premise and promise.”
Participant is led by
David Linde, who took the
reins in 2015 after a period of
struggles that led to a strate-
gic review of the business.
Recently, the firm has
found success backing this
year’s popular, albeit contro-
versial, best picture Oscar
winner “Green Book,” re-
leased by Universal Pic-
tures. Participant also made
Netflix’s Alfonso Cuaron
drama “Roma,” which com-
peted head to head with
“Green Book” in the Oscar
race. Its documentary
“American Factory,” re-
leased by Netflix in August,
earned the distinction of be-
coming the first title from
Barack and Michelle Oba-
ma’s production entity
Higher Ground. The com-
pany also owns SoulPan-
cake, the digital video pro-
vider co-founded by “The
Office” actor Rainn Wilson.
Participant executives
said they’re looking to in-
crease their efforts to use
their content to promote so-
cial good. Alongside the re-
lease of “Roma,” for exam-
ple, Participant launched a
campaign pushing legisla-
tion in Mexico to give labor
protections to domestic
workers. The rebranding re-
flects that effort, the com-
pany said.
“We embarked on a
thoughtful process of build-
ing a refreshed identity,
which will resonate with that
rapidly growing demo-
graphic who embrace inspi-
ration and seek to change
the world,” Linde said.

‘Roma’ producer


seeks to rebrand


“ROMA,” from Participant Media, was among this
year’s best picture Academy Award nominees.


Carlos SomonteNetflix

Participant puts


greater emphasis on


social consciousness.


By Ryan Faughnder


A bill to let a troubled Cal-
ifornia utility borrow money
tax-free so it can pay victims
of wildfires started by its
equipment will not pass this
year.
PG&E is facing poten-
tially $30 billion worth of
damages from a series of
devastating wildfires in re-
cent years, including one
that killed 86 people and
mostly destroyed the town
of Paradise last year.
The fires were found to be
started by PG&E’s equip-
ment, including power lines
that toppled from strong

winds. Under California law,
that makes PG&E liable for
damages.
The company filed for
bankruptcy this year, which
has pitted shareholders
against bondholders for
control of the company.
Shareholders control it now.
Bondholders hold most of
the company’s debt.
A group of the company’s
largest shareholders have
pushed for legislation that
would let the California In-
frastructure and Economic
Development Bank issue
tax exempt bonds on behalf
of the company, borrowing
against PG&E’s future prof-
its.
Supporters of the plan
say shareholders — not the
utility company’s customers
— would be responsible for
paying off the loan. Taxpay-
ers would not have to pay off

the loan if the shareholders
default.
Shareholders hope the
proposal would strengthen
their efforts to resist a
proposal by the bondhold-
ers to buy the company.
Their lobbying efforts have
focused on the bonds being a
quick way to pay victims
while also protecting the
stakes of current investors.
Bondholders oppose the
plan because it would saddle
the company with more
debt. They also argue that
the state government would
lose billions of dollars in rev-
enue because the bonds are
tax-exempt.
Assemblyman Chad
Mayes (R-Yucca Valley) on
Friday announced that the
bill would not get a vote this
year because “there is not
sufficient time left for proper
debate.”

Wildfire-claims bill stalls


Measure would allow


PG&E to borrow tax-


free to pay victims.


associated press

NEW YORK — Facebook
Inc. is joining Google in the
crosshairs of state attorneys
general investigating pos-
sible antitrust violations,
adding to the scrutiny of Sili-
con Valley giants that have
been widely criticized by
politicians from both parties
over their market domi-
nance.
New York Atty. Gen. Leti-
tia James is leading a bipar-
tisan coalition of states look-
ing into whether Facebook
“stifled competition and put
users at risk” by increasing
the price of advertising, re-
ducing consumer-choice
quality and mishandling
personal information, ac-
cording to a statement Fri-
day.
“We will use every inves-
tigative tool at our disposal,”
James said. “Even the larg-
est social media platform in
the world must follow the
law and respect consumers.”
Scrutiny of so-called Big
Tech will surge next week: In
addition to an announce-
ment of a separate multi-
state investigation into Al-
phabet Inc.’s Google, which
Bloomberg reported Tues-
day, the House subcommit-
tee focused on antitrust law
will hold a hearing Thursday
on the effect of data and pri-
vacy on competition.
Federal antitrust enforc-


ers have also opened investi-
gations. The Justice Depart-
ment is looking at Google’s
role in the online advertising
market and its search opera-
tions, and the U.S. Federal
Trade Commission is scruti-
nizing acquisitions by Face-
book as part of an early stage
antitrust investigation of
the social media platform.
“If we stop innovating,
people can easily leave our
platform. This underscores
the competition we face,”
Will Castleberry, Facebook’s
vice president for state and
local policy, said in a state-
ment. “We will work con-
structively with state attor-
neys general and we wel-
come a conversation with
policymakers about the
competitive environment in
which we operate.”
The other states investi-
gating Facebook are Col-
orado, Florida, Iowa, Ne-
braska, North Carolina,
Ohio and Tennessee, plus
the District of Columbia, ac-
cording to the statement.
The Wall Street Journal re-
ported earlier that several
states plan to announce in-
vestigations into Facebook
next week.
States have the power to
issue fines as well as order
changes to corporate policy
and even a corporate break-
up if serious violations are
uncovered. Such remedies
aren’t being considered for
Facebook at this point but
are on the table in any such
investigation, according to a
person familiar with the in-
vestigation. Other states
have expressed an interest
in joining the inquiry and the

coalition could expand, the
person said.
Facebook is already
under investigation by New
York over its unauthorized
collection of 1.5 million users’
email contacts without their
permission during an email-
password verification proc-
ess for new users. When an-
nouncing that inquiry in
April, James said the har-
vest may have exposed hun-
dreds of millions of people to
targeted advertising by the
social media giant.
The FTC’s Facebook in-
vestigation covers concerns
across a wide swath of its
business — including social
media, digital advertising
and mobile applications. In
July, the company was fined
a record $5 billion for violat-
ing an order to protect users’
data privacy.
Some people have called
for antitrust enforcers to
break up Facebook. The
FTC chairman has said that
if necessary, he is prepared
to break up the company —
or other major technology
platforms — by undoing
past mergers if they violated
antitrust law by harming
competition.
Specifically, people want-
ing a breakup have called for
the unwinding of Facebook’s
acquisitions of apps, par-
ticularly the Instagram
photo-sharing service and
the WhatsApp chat plat-
form. It probably would
prove difficult to persuade a
court to approve such a
breakup.

Larson writes for
Bloomberg.

NEW YORK Atty. Gen. Letitia James is leading a bipartisan coalition of states
looking into whether Facebook stifled competition and put consumers at risk.

Drew AngererGetty Images

Facebook targeted in


states’ antitrust probe


Inquiry is reviewing


tech giant’s business


and user data tactics.


By Erik Larson

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