Warner Bros TV’s Bruce Rosenblum Boasts

Time Warner doesn’t detail its Warner Bros Television financials — never has, probably never will. So it’s always interesting when any exec there gives some facts and figures while boasting. With a series of slides illustrating his 30-minute speech, Warner Bros TV chief Bruce Rosenblum today told Barclay’s Global Technology, Media and Communication Conference in NYC that the TV group is responsible for over half of the overall operating income at Warner Bros. One slide noted that television, including Turner and HBO, brought in $4.4 billion of Time Warner’s 2011 adjusted operating income of $5.9 billion. Rosenblum also noted that “from a profitability standpoint the most lucrative part of our business is success with broadcast network series.” Rosenblum added, “For the past season that just ended, we covered 73% of our production costs from the license fees paid to us by the domestic networks. Our international revenue was another 50% of the total production cost.” He noted that this came before any “lucrative syndication, home entertainment or SVOD revenues on successful series”.

Rosenblum said about the recent upfronts, “Our television group is once again the leading supplier to the broadcast networks. We sold at least one new show to each of the 5 broadcast networks, we have at 2 shows on each network, and we are the only studio that can say either of those things.” WBTV has 9 new series ordered for the upcoming broadcast year including J.J. Abrams’ Revolution on NBC, the comedy Partners on CBS, and the Kevin Bacon vehicle The Following on Fox. In addition, WBTVG has 16 series returning like Two and a Half Men, Two Broke Girls, The Big Bang Theory and The Mentalist.

Rosenblum claims, “There has never been a better time to be in the high quality scripted TV series production business” and “More people are spending more time watching television content than ever before.” He joked, “We want to be everyone’s second favorite supplier,” referring to the networks’ preference to buy from their in-house production companies. He also claimed that right now international buyers are in WB’s Burbank offices watching new series to purchase for their regions.

Finally, about WBTV’s expanding digital markets, Rosenblum said Internet and mobile viewing is “evolutionary for our business not revolutionary.”

Related: Bruce Rosenblum Taps Top TV Executives For Television Academy’s Exec Committee

 

Comments (6)

  • Goes hand in hand with the buzz that Robinov is out of the running for the big WB job

    Comment by Dewey — Wednesday May 23, 2012 @ 6:03pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Glad to hear one part of the Entertainment universe is booming. Working on the new pilot season even as we speak…

    Comment by Snoop — Wednesday May 23, 2012 @ 6:10pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • As the EP/Creator of a WBTV show is this the reason I just got a 14 dollar check for foreign sales?

    Comment by Dan — Wednesday May 23, 2012 @ 6:20pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Um…….is Bruce trying to take credit for HBO and Turner…..NEITHER of which report to or through him in any way/shape/form??????

    Comment by Ordinaryjoe — Thursday May 24, 2012 @ 5:52am PDT  Reply to this post
    • ah…yes, but give him time….

      Comment by aitchee — Thursday May 24, 2012 @ 12:49pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • I’m surprised he was bragging too. I thought all the Studios were broke! That’s what they claimed in negotiations with the IA. Why they want us to start helping them with healthcare and pension. $5.9 Billion doesn’t sound broke to me!

    Comment by IA Member — Thursday May 24, 2012 @ 4:29pm PDT  Reply to this post
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