Fox
TV producers offered assurances ahead of Disney merger
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[January 05, 2018]
By Lisa Richwine
PASADENA, Calif. (Reuters)
- Walt Disney Co. executives have voiced support for the
Fox television studio's adult-oriented programming and
development is continuing as usual while a proposed
merger undergoes regulatory review, Fox executives and
producers said Thursday.
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In December, Disney announced plans to acquire the Fox TV
studio, the FX and National Geographic cable channels and other
assets from Rupert Murdoch's Twenty-First Century Fox
conglomerate.
Fox produces edgy adult comedies such as "Family Guy" and gory
dramas such as "American Horror Story" that contrast with
Disney's family-friendly movies and TV shows.
Ryan Murphy, producer of several Fox and FX hits including
"American Horror Story," said he received a phone call from
Disney CEO Bob Iger and was blunt about his concerns.
"The stuff that I do is not specifically Disney," Murphy said he
told Iger. "I'm concerned about that. Am I going to have to put
Mickey Mouse in 'American Horror Story?'"
Iger told him Disney was interested in buying Fox because it
believes in its assets, executives and creators, said Murphy,
who spoke at a Television Critics Association meeting where
networks promote upcoming shows.
Murphy said he will wait to decide whether to keep working with
Fox after the merger, but added that he was hopeful about its
future. He noted that Iger had successfully integrated Pixar
Animation Studios and Marvel Entertainment "while keeping their
communities intact."
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"I’m interested in seeing what that company is going to look like
before I decide where to go," Murphy said.
The deal sparked anxiety among some other producers of Fox shows,
said Gary Newman, co-chairman and co-CEO of Fox Television Group.
Newman said he met with many producers to assure them it was
"business as usual" during the regulatory review, which is projected
to take 12 to 18 months.
"When we did hear from Disney management, they were incredibly vocal
to us about how much they like our brand, how much they admire the
programming we did," Newman said.
"Every expectation we have is that they are not acquiring Fox to
turn it into some form of a PG company," he added. "My expectation
is they are going to be encouraging of our content."
"Family Guy" creator Seth MacFarlane, who also said he received a
call from Iger, shrugged off the pending acquisition. "This kind of
stuff happens often now," he said. "I don't think anything will
change that much."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Editing by David Gregorio)
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