After a prolonged decline, the long-suffering "vertically integrated media conglomerate," commonly called Big Media, seems to be passing away. It endured as the industry's prevailing business
model for nearly a generation, spawning Viacom, News Corp and NBC Universal. But it essentially failed in its goal of giving a handful of companies unprecedented power and outsized profits.
In the prime example of Big Media's demise, a scaled-down Time Warner will soon be left as a sharply focused, purebred content company comprised of filmed entertainment and news brands.
Basically, it will be a corporate reincarnation of its original form.
So what is Big Media's legacy? Among its contributions: wireless broadband and DVDs. On the negative side, it
gave us the modern mogul -- outsize personalities with jet-setting lifestyles, a sense of corporate omnipotence and entitlement, "corporate America's most damaging form of management." Big Media
also revealed that synergy is overrated -- "the most over-hyped concept in American business."
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