Robert W. Pittman
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Robert W. "Bob" Pittman | |
|---|---|
| Born | December 28, 1953 Jackson, Mississippi, USA |
Robert Warren "Bob" Pittman (born 28 December 1953), the programmer who led the team that created MTV[1], has been CEO of MTV Networks, AOL Networks, Six Flags Theme Parks, Quantum Media, Century 21 Real Estate and Time Warner Enterprises. He was also COO of America Online, Inc. and AOL Time Warner.
He has also been a radio and TV programmer, marketer, media entrepreneur and investor who has had multiple careers in a number of consumer-focused industries.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
Son of a Methodist minister, Pittman was born in Mississippi and became a radio announcer at the age of 15 to earn money for flying lessons. He was an announcer in a number of cities and then successfully programmed radio stations in Pittsburgh, Chicago and finally at the NBC flagship station, WNBC, in New York when he was 23 years old. He also produced and co-hosted a music video and news show in 1978 that ran on the NBC O& O television stations. He did learn to fly, and has been a pilot for almost 40 years: He has almost 5,000 flight hours; currently holds an Airline Transport Pilot's license for airplanes; and is rated for helicopters and 3 types of jets.
[edit] MTV Years
At MTV, he oversaw the creation and growth of MTV and the transition of Nickelodeon from a network geared to preschoolers to one aimed at older kids as well as overseeing the launches of VH-1 and Nick at Nite, and led the initial public offering for MTV Networks and its expansion into international markets.[2] Under Pittman's leadership, MTV became the first profitable cable network; then-Time Warner Co-Chairman and Co-Chief Executive Officer Steve Ross also noted that MTV became the most profitable basic cable network during Pittman's tenure there.[3]
[edit] Quantum Media and Warner Communications
After MTV, Pittman founded Quantum Media with MCA (one of the company's ventures was the Morton Downey Jr. show, an early television shock talk show), and in 1989, he bought out MCA, sold the assets to Warner Communications and became senior advisor to Warner Communications CEO Steve Ross just as Warner was merging with Time Inc. to create Time Warner.[4] In 1990, Pittman was appointed President and CEO of Time Warner Enterprises, the new business group of Time Warner, and in 1991 became Chairman and CEO of Six Flags Theme Parks where his team oversaw the revitalization of the Six Flags brand.
[edit] Century 21 Real Estate
After Pittman led a process that led to Time Warner selling a controlling interest in Six Flags to Boston Ventures in 1995, he left to join Century 21 Real Estate as CEO. Pittman and his team grew Century 21 Real Estate through a strategy which included brand-building and national marketing, a new franchise sales organization, and the early adoption of the Internet as a lead-generating tool.
[edit] America Online and AOL Time Warner
While at Century 21, Pittman met Steve Case and joined the board of directors of America Online, Inc.; he joined the company in 1996. While at AOL, Pittman led the operating team that moved AOL from 6 million members to over 30 million; took the company profitable; introduced mass market advertising as a revenue source; and continued the mission of making the Internet as easy for consumers to use as the telephone or television. The company’s most memorable ad of that time had the tagline “America Online: So Easy To Use, No Wonder It’s Number One”. After AOL merged with Time Warner in 2001, Pittman became the Co-COO (and eventually COO) of the combined AOL Time Warner before leaving the company in 2002.[5]
[edit] Pilot Group
Pittman joined a number of his longtime operating team colleagues when he co-founded Pilot Group LLC, a private investment firm based New York in 2003. Pilot and its members have controlling investments in Thrillist, Barrington Broadcasting, Double O Radio, OTX Research, North American Membership Group, Tasting Table and Vital Juice, Tequila Casa Dragonesand also have stakes in companies including David's Bridal, Spotrunner, iLike.com, Next New Networks, Zynga and Rapleaf, and Playlist.com, where he sits on the board.
Pilot Group previously sold investments that include Stereogum and IdealBite, and in August 2008, Pilot Group sold DailyCandy, its initial investment, to Comcast for a reported $125 million.[6][7]
[edit] Recent years
Pittman is a philanthropist, building community and philanthropic projects into every business he managed from Live Aid at MTV to educational efforts using the Internet at AOL. He is former chairman of the non-profit Robin Hood Foundation, which fights poverty in New York City, and former chairman of the New York Public Theater, and still serves on both boards; he is also on the boards of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, NYU Medical Center and the Alliance for Lupus Research. He is a former board member of Electronic Arts, Atari Games, Excite, 3DO, MTV Networks, America Online, HFS/Cendant/Realogy and AOL Time Warner.
[edit] Awards and Honors
Pittman's many honors include: Robert F. Kennedy Memorial’s 2000 “Ripple of Hope Award”[8] for his commitment to civic and community affairs and his contributions to the advancement of education; induction into the Broadcasting and Cable Hall of Fame in 1999; Cablevision Magazine's "20/20 Vision" award for the 20 people who have had the greatest impact on the cable industry; selection as one of Advertising Age's "50 Pioneers and Visionaries of TV" and recognition as one of Business Week magazine's Top 25 Executives of 1998. He was also named one of Life Magazine's "Five Original Thinkers of the '80s"; recognized as the eighth of Life Magazine's "50 Most Influential Boomers"; included in Time Magazine's 1984 Man-of-the-Year issue "Seven Others who Succeeded"; named Success Magazine’s “Pioneer of the New American Start-Up” in 1989; received the 1986 White House Conference on Small Business Award for Entrepreneurial Excellence and the 1984 Council of Fashion Designers of America award; Performance Magazine’s 1982 “Innovator of the Year” award for his work developing MTV and Billboard Magazine’s “Radio Program Manager of the Year” in 1977. He also received the American Academy of Achievement’s Golden Plate award; International Teleproduction Society’s Lifetime Achievement International Monitor Award and The President's Award and an Honorary Doctorate from Bank Street College of Education the school's highest honor for his many contributions to the advancement of education.
[edit] Personal life
Pittman married Sandy Hill, a merchandise editor at Mademoiselle magazine, in July 1979; they divorced in 1997. They have one son.[9] He married Veronique Choa, a graphic designer, in 1997; they have two children.
[edit] References
- ^ New York Times coverage of Robert W. Pittman
- ^ CNN coverage of Pittman
- ^ New York Times, op cit
- ^ Businessweek coverage of Pittman's ventures
- ^ New York Times, op cit
- ^ Comcast Sets Deal to Buy Daily Candy
- ^ Comcast to Buy Daily Candy for $125 Million
- ^ "AOL's Bob Pittman to Receive Ripple of Hope Award; Mrs. Robert Kennedy to Present Award at New York Gala." U.S. Newswire. US Newswire. 2000. Retrieved September 22, 2009 from HighBeam Research: http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-18885525.html
- ^ Pittman family biodata
[edit] External links
- Buzzco & MTV. From Frederator Blogs September 2, 2007
- Bob Pittman. From Frederator Blogs September 5, 2006
- The museum of broadcast communications
- Media Megadeal: The Cultures; A Bridge Builder For Corporate Culture
- "Robert Pittman Begins a New Music Channel"
- "Comcast to Buy Daily Candy for $125 Million"
- "Comcast Sets Deal to Buy Daily Candy"
- A Guide To New Food Sites
- "What Will Stimulate Spending? Advertising!"