Hollywood Can’t Handle Gay Sex Tinseltown supports LGBT rights everywhere but the big screen.

James Franco, that jack of all media, is on yet another artistic mission: The star of the soon-to-be-released Disney film Oz: The Great and Powerful is hell-bent on bringing gay sex into mainstream Hollywood cinema. Adding to an already considerable oeuvre of gay-themed projects such as SalHowl, Milk, and The Feast of Stephen, Franco and co-director Travis Matthews’s Interior. Leather Bar., which premiered at last month’s Sundance Film Festival, attempts to recreate the “missing” 40 minutes of footage that William Friedkin had to cut from his controversial 1980 film Cruising in order to obtain an ‘R’ rating from the MPAA. In the quasi-documentary, Franco discusses how it was “a little shocking” to watch two men have sex, but only because his “mind has been twisted by the way that the world has been set up around me.” “Every fucking love story is a dude that wants to be with a girl,” he says. “I’m fucking sick of that shit.” Franco then sums up Hollywood’s mentality: “Oh, don’t show gay sex, don’t do that, that’s the fucking devil. In previews, show people getting blown away and killed, but don’t show gay sex.”

 

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/112329/james-franco-gay-movies-show-how-little-hollywood-has-come#

B&N Aims To Whittle Its Stores For Years

“In 10 years we’ll have 450 to 500 stores,” said Mitchell Klipper, chief executive of Barnes & Noble’s retail group, in an interview last week. The company operated 689 retail stores as of Jan. 23, along with a separate chain of 674 college stores.

From humble beginnings to a bookselling behemoth, Barnes & Noble has seen ups and downs over the decades as it tried to straddle the world of paper books and e-books.

Mr. Klipper said his forecast assumes that the company will close about 20 stores a year over the period.

The chain shut an average of about 15 stores a year in the past decade, but until 2009 it also was opening 30 or more a year. Its store openings have largely dried up as consumers’ shift toward digital books has upended the market and developers have stopped opening new malls; this fiscal year it has opened only two stores.

The company’s consumer bookstores peaked at 726 in 2008, excluding the B. Dalton chain, which is now defunct.

Even with 450 to 500 stores, “it’s a good business model,” says Mr. Klipper. “You have to adjust your overhead, and get smart with smart systems. Is it what it used to be when you were opening 80 stores a year and dropping stores everywhere? Probably not. It’s different. But every business evolves.”

Mr. Klipper’s comments come amid growing questions about Barnes & Noble’s future. This month the company reported an unexpectedly weak holiday selling season, with store revenue declining nearly 11% from a year earlier. Book sales at stores open at least a year, a key barometer in the industry, fell 3.1%.

After years of losing market share for print books to discounting by Amazon.com Inc., Barnes & Noble is grappling with the print market’s shrinkage, thanks to the growing popularity of cheap e-books, also championed by Amazon. Unit sales of print books dropped 9% in the U.S. last year, according to market researcher Nielsen BookScan, and they are off 22% from 2007, when digital books started gaining traction.

At the same time, Barnes & Noble’s efforts to build support for its two new Nook tablets have stalled. Amid competition from Amazon, Apple Inc., Google Inc. and electronics companies like Samsung Electronics Co., sales of Nook products in stores and online during the holiday season fell from a year earlier.

Plenty of retailers have been felled by digital competition in the past decade, including Tower Records, Circuit City Stores and Barnes & Noble’s former rival, Borders Group Inc. Retail consultant Doug Stephens, whose book, “The Retail Revival,” is being published in the U.S. in March, predicts that mainstream booksellers eventually will “become a thing of the past.”

Mr. Klipper said he thinks that’s nonsense. Opening a thick printout of the financial performance of each Barnes & Noble store, he ran his finger over a few lines and said, “This is what’s losing money, a handful. Then you go from making money to making a lot of money.” He estimated that fewer than 20 of the retailer’s stores lose money, or less than 3% of the group’s total.

To be sure, the stores remain comfortably profitable, generating $317 million in earnings before interest taxes depreciation and amortization in fiscal 2012. That’s more than enough to offset continuing losses at the Nook unit.

David Strasser, an analyst with Janney Montgomery Scott LLC, projects that ebitda at Barnes & Noble’s retail group, which includes BN.com, will rise 7% in fiscal 2013, which ends in April, but will decline modestly the next fiscal year.

The next two years will go a long way in defining the bookseller’s future, by clarifying how fast the print market is shrinking. Bertelsmann SE & Co.’s Random House, the world’s largest publisher of consumer books, says e-books now make up about 22% of its global sales, up from almost nothing five years ago. The head of a major publishing rival says he expects e-books will be as much as 50% of his total book sales in the U.S. by the end of 2014. Digital books already account for 60% of this publisher’s sales of new commercial fiction, a key category for the nation’s largest bookstore chain.

Mr. Klipper, though, argues that consumers read both digital books and print books. “That’s why we’re going to be around a long time,” he said. “Digital is a convenient format. It could be expanding the market in fiction. I think the combined book market is growing.” Publishers say the growth rate of e-books has slowed in recent months.

Declines in print sales could affect the pace of store closures. Barnes & Noble has 442 leases up for renewal by April 30, 2016, representing substantially more than half of its stores. Mr. Klipper said he expects many will be renewed: “Why close them if they are making money?”

Bookstores remain valuable to mall owners. “They are a destination,” said Stephen Lebovitz, CEO of CBL & Associates Properties Inc., one of the country’s largest mall landlords. “They still do a strong volume, they bring in traffic, people socialize. We still like them as a tenant.”

Mr. Klipper said that bookstores serve a different purpose than many other retail outlets. “You go to Barnes & Noble to forget about your everyday issues, to stay a while and relax,” he said. “When you go to Bed Bath & Beyond, you don’t sit down on the floor and curl up with your blender and your kid.”

At least some consumers appear to agree: On Jan. 20, 600 people turned up at a Barnes & Noble store in New York for a reading by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, promoting her new memoir, “My Beloved World.” Altogether they bought 1,200 copies that day.

Write to Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg at jeffrey.trachtenberg@wsj.com

A version of this article appeared January 28, 2013, on page B1 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: B&N to Cut Up to 33% Of Its Retail In a Decade.

Capitals, Wizards Launch Digital Network; Ted Leonsis Eyes Cable

http://aol.sportingnews.com/nhl/story/2013-01-21/washington-capitals-ted-leonsis-monumental-network-wizards-verizon-center-comcas

Monumental Sports and Entertainment chairman Ted Leonsis will launch a full-fledged digital network this week in what is the first step toward setting up his own local TV channel.

The broadband sports and entertainment channel will be called Monumental Network and will feature programming related to the teams and Washington, D.C.-area arenas operated by Leonsis’ company, including the NHL Capitals, NBA Wizards, WNBA Mystics and those teams’ Verizon Center home.

The broadband channel will be housed at MonumentalNetwork.com and eventually will grow to include more than 20 affiliated websites that will be available via the primary site.

“We want to become a cable network,” Leonsis said. “This is a next-generation property that could very easily exist on cable or satellite as well as the Web.”

Currently, Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic controls the Capitals’ and Wizards’ local TV rights and will do so for the next several years: The Caps’ rights are tied up for the next five years; the Wizards’ for the next 10. In an interview last week, Leonsis was complimentary of Comcast SportsNet, calling it a “great relationship.” He did not discuss the possibility of bringing his teams’ rights to his network, but that clearly appears to be a long-term option for the former AOL executive.

“We don’t know what the long-term future holds,” he said. “But we’re not going to not develop lots of interesting and new Web-based applications.”

Monumental Network will feature a blend of video and blogs. While it will not have access to live games, it will offer highlights and shows with names like “Caps Red Line” or “Wizards/Mystics Magazine.”

Monumental executives have looked into the possibility of carrying tape-delayed games, but Leonsis said he has not made a final decision on that yet.

Leonsis was clear that the network will offer more than just sports content. Similar to MSG Network in New York, Monumental Network will feature content from events at arenas that Monumental Sports operates — Verizon Center, Patriot Center and Kettler Capitals Iceplex. That is expected to include concerts and behind-the-scenes coverage.

Other programs will include coaches shows, “Scouting Report” produced by SB Nation reporters, and “Press Row,” a “Sports Reporters”-type show featuring beat reporters and broadcasters.

Leonsis also plans to draw on programming from SnagFilms, the online documentary production company he launched in 2008. He said SnagFilms will build a sports-themed library that he expects to be akin to ESPN’s “30 for 30” documentary series.

Monumental Network’s launch comes a couple of months after Leonsis created an in-house production company called Monumental Productions with about 20 employees.

“I’ve made it well-known that I believe our destiny is to be in the media business,” Leonsis said. “It might be that in the future there is a broadband cable sports and entertainment network. Or it might be that the network exists on all platforms. We just want to be prepared for it, so we made this investment in productions.”

MonumentalNetwork.com was built and developed by the Virginia-based Perfect Sense Digital.

 

Magazines on Left and Right Unite to Share Office Space

The financial crisis did not bring bipartisanship to Congress, but a difficult media environment may have brought that spirit to two political standard-bearers.

In need of cash and with extra space on its hands, the liberal magazine The American Prospect decided to sublet part of its Washington offices. The American Conservative, tired of working from Arlington, Va., was looking for a new location. When the publishers Jay Harris of The Prospect and Wick Allison of The Conservative were getting lunch in August, they put two and two together.

A six-month lease was soon signed. The self-described bastion of “traditional conservatism” moved in with the self-described “liberal, progressive, lefty” on Dec. 27.

 

No Big Hits, but Bookshops Say They’re Thriving

Last year, there was a clear winner among books for the holiday gift of choice: “Steve Jobs,” by Walter Isaacson. This year, despite a lineup of offerings from literary heavyweights, many of whom have commanded strong sales in the past, there has not been a breakout hit for the holiday season, booksellers say.

Books like Bob Woodward’s “Price of Politics,” Tom Wolfe’s “Back to Blood” and Salman Rushdie’s “Joseph Anton” have each sold well under 100,000 copies by the end of last week according to Nielsen Bookscan. (In contrast, the Jobs biography sold 379,000 copies in the first week after its release in October 2011.)

While Bookscan does not include e-books and covers only roughly 75 percent of retail outlets, this year’s figures provide a snapshot of the fragmented holiday sales picture as a whole: independent bookstores report that a range of books are moving nicely, but there are mixed numbers from Barnes & Noble, the nation’s largest book chain, and solid but not stellar growth in digital sales. Independent bookstore owners say they are thriving even without that surefire best seller because of a wide array of options this year: everything from Barbara Kingsolver’s “Flight Behavior” (list price $28.99) to Chris Ware’s expensive graphic novel “Building Stories” — which comes with 14 components, including bound volumes, a board and a tabloid newspaper ($50) — to attractive impulse buys like “I Could Pee on This: And Other Poems by Cats” ($12.95).

Does Fox Dream of an ESPN?

Anyone wondering why News Corp NWSA +2.52% .’s Fox has been negotiating so many sports deals in recent weeks, including a stake in the YES Network and a likely deal to renew TV rights to the Los Angeles Dodgers, has only to look at one number for a possible explanation: $42 billion.

News Corp. has been in talks to renew its Los Angeles Dodgers TV rights. Here, new pitcher Zack Greinke with Magic Johnson, a Dodgers owner.

That’s the value put on Walt DisneyCo.’s DIS +1.25% sports juggernaut ESPN by Wall Street research firm Sanford C. Bernstein. It is more than the market capitalization of several big entertainment companies, includingViacom Inc. VIAB +0.72% and CBSCorp., CBS +2.58% and nearly as much as that of Time Warner Inc.TWX +2.50%

It reflects in part ESPN’s outsized share of subscription fees split with cable- and satellite-TV operators. ESPN’s flagship channel alone generates four times as much revenue from such fees as the next biggest cable channel, according to market researcher SNL Kagan.

Enter Fox, which early next year is expected to announce plans for a national sports cable channel through the rebranding of its motor-sports network Speed, according to people familiar with the plans. The new venture, to be called Fox Sports 1, is expected to launch later in 2013, say these people.

With the network, Fox will be in a position to capture a bigger share of TV viewers and advertisers’ seemingly insatiable appetite for sports, not to mention the subscription fees shared by pay-TV operators. Even next to ESPN, insiders say, there’s still room for Fox to carve out its own chunk of the market.

Fox’s Recent TV-Sports Deals:

In talks to renew rights to Los Angeles Dodgers; potential $6 billion, 25-year deal

Nov. 2012 Buys 49% stake in YES network, home to the Yankees, for about $1.5 billion

Oct. 2012 Signs new eight-year deal with MLB, valued at $4 billion

Oct. 2012 Renews Nascar rights for eight years, in deal valued at $2.4 billion

Dec. 2011 Signs nine-year deal renewal with NFL valued at $9.9 billion

“There’s no natural reason why there should be just one” major sports network, said Bernstein analyst Todd Juenger.

Fox believes it can carve out a profitable business if the rebranded Speed can boost the fees Fox now receives for that channel, which average 22 cents per subscriber per month, SNL Kagan estimates. ESPN receives more than $5 per subscriber, Kagan says, although Fox would need less than $1 to make the network viable, say two people familiar with its thinking.

News Corp. has never formally acknowledged plans publicly for the national sports network. But News Corp. Chief Operating Officer Chase Carey has hinted at it, while playing down speculation that Fox would try to create an ESPN rival.

“People have said we’re going after ESPN. ESPN is a different game,” Mr. Carey told investors in September. During News Corp.’s November earnings call with analysts, however, Mr. Carey said Fox has “got enough breadth and the right franchises” to build its sports properties “into something that can be special for us.”

News Corp. also owns The Wall Street Journal.

If it goes ahead with the channel, Fox would be jumping into an already-crowded arena where TV-sports-rights costs are skyrocketing. Aside from ESPN, Comcast Corp. CMCSA +2.72% has recently rebranded its Versus network as NBC Sports Network in an effort to grab a larger share of the TV-sports market. CBS has also made a bigger foray into the market.

At the same time, efforts by sports-network owners to raise their prices for satellite and cable operators is prompting a backlash, with many in television concerned about the long term implications of higher cable prices that will result.

Dish Network Corp. DISH -0.15% Chairman Charlie Ergen, for instance, has publicly warned that the rising cost of sports content, like ESPN, will ultimately lead some distributors to drop sports. DirecTVDTV +1.48% meanwhile, recently imposed a surcharge for some new customers to reflect the cost of regional sports networks.

“I’m not sure that initially [the channel is] going to be embraced openly across the board by distributors,” said Chris Bevilacqua, a media-industry adviser who has structured sports-rights deals.

Meanwhile, Mr. Juenger, the analyst, questions whether Fox has the rights to enough top-tier sports programming to support a national sports channel. ESPN, for instance, televises the National Basketball Association, National Football League, Major League Baseball, Major League Soccer and the best of college football and basketball, as well as the grand slams of tennis and golf’s major championships.

Through its broader sports division, Fox has deals with nearly every major sports entity in the country, including Major League Baseball, the NFL and numerous local basketball, hockey and baseball teams. And over the past two years, Fox has committed more than $20 billion through 2024 to retain some of these rights, and to acquire more, including those for the NFL’s championship games. It recently agreed to buy a stake in YES Network, home to the New York Yankees. In recent weeks Fox has been in talks to renew TV rights to the Los Angeles Dodgers for 25 years, at a price expected to be around $6 billion—a sharp increase over what it pays now.

Meanwhile, Mr. Carey told select investors at a recent meeting that Fox could bid for rights to the NBA when they come up for renewal again in 2016, according to people who were present.

But these deals won’t necessarily help the rebranded network directly. More than half of those investments, such as the $9.9 billion, nine-year rights to NFL championship games, are for Fox’s broadcast network. Fox couldn’t take its rights to broadcast NFL games and start showing them on a cable network, or begin showing Dallas Mavericks NBA games slated for Fox Sports Southwest, a regional sports network, on the national network.

Fox would have opportunities to elevate some content from its regional sports networks to run on the national network, Mr. Carey told investors at the recent meeting. The rights granted in Fox’s recent MLB agreement, which begins in 2014, allow it to recycle baseball-game content for national audiences, for instance.

Speed is already available in more than 80 million homes, about 80% of the pay-TV universe, so rebranding the network would eliminate many of the challenges involved in creating a new channel from scratch and securing distribution deals with pay-TV operators.

Fox has already sought to minimize potential conflicts with affiliates and negotiate higher rates for a rebranded network, according to people familiar with its plans. Over the past several years, Fox revised the language in Speed’s affiliate contracts as they came up for renewal to reflect the possible inclusion of additional content and to trigger higher rates if or when the rebranding occurs.

—Matthew Futterman contributed to this article.

Chernin Group Invests in Latino YouTube Channel

Here’s another bet on YouTube, placed by people who don’t work at Google: The Chernin Group is leading an early investment round in MiTú, a Latino-focused YouTube network.

Peter Chernin’s holding company isn’t announcing the amount of the round, but I’m told it’s around $3 million.

Other investors include Machinima CEO Allen DeBevoise; Advancit Capital, Shari Redstone’s VC firm; and Code Advisors.

There’s a lot of interest in Hispanic and Spanish-language stuff on YouTube, and the video site has funded several channels targeted at that audience, including one produced by IAC’s Electus and fronted by “Modern Family”’s Sofia Vergara. But MiTú doesn’t have any financial backing from YouTube.

 

http://allthingsd.com/20121212/chernin-group-invests-in-latino-youtube-channel/

New Startup Soma Water Defines One Of The Biggest Trends In Silicon Valley

There’s a slow phase shift in Silicon Valley. Entrepreneurs are focusing on physical products more than ever before.

 

“There’s a deep hunger to create products you can actually hold in your hands,” says Michael Del Ponte, a serial entrepreneur who just launched a new company today, Soma Water.

“When I talk to entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley about this, they talk about seeing their product in someone’s home. It’s going into someone’s house and being able to say, ‘Yeah, I helped build that.’ There’s something about that experience.”

The shift originated with Steve Jobs turning Apple into a consumer-products company, says Del Ponte, but really gained momentum when iPod creator Tony Fadell redesigned the thermostat. Robotics companies like Romotive are also a huge part of this trend.

http://www.businessinsider.com/silicon-valley-software-vs-hardware-2012-12#ixzz2EtOFhJzO

Sexual Assaults Roil Amherst, and College President Welcomes the Controversy

It began with a first-person account of an elite college’s callous treatment of a rape victim, written by a woman from the rural South who said she never felt fully accepted on campus. The resulting storm has engulfed Amherst College, leading to debates about not only rape, but also group identity, tradition and how directly or publicly a school should confront its problems.

It may be that no college leader in the country was as well prepared to face this controversy than Biddy Martin,president of Amherst since September 2011. As an academic, she has written extensively on gender and sexuality, and as an administrator, she has a history of tackling — though not always successfully — thorny disputes. Months before sexual misconduct became the dominant issue on campus, she started overhauling the way that Amherst handled sexual assaults.