January 17, 2001 9:30 PM PST

AOL Time Warner plans to close Entertaindom

AOL Time Warner is planning to close down Web entertainment hub Entertaindom on Feb. 1, making it the latest in a long line of failed Time Warner online ventures.

The shuttering of Entertaindom is the second time the media giant will cut costs at its Web properties since the completion of its historic merger last week. Its operations will be rolled into the larger Warner Bros. Online Web site, which has about 200 employees, said well-placed sources familiar with the company's integration plans.

"Entertaindom is going away," a source said. "Time Warner is no longer making a play to become an entertainment portal because it flat out didn't work."

The move may provide an important indication of how the company will operate as it bridges the gap between old and new media. Though Internet companies such as America Online have had to move quickly and innovatively to survive their hypercompetitive markets, traditional empires like Time Warner and Walt Disney have often lagged behind in the digital world.

Entertaindom was Time Warner's first foray into creating a series of Web destinations, or hubs, focusing on specific topics. The hub strategy and the creation of Time Warner Digital Media were the company's attempts to develop Internet businesses in the wake of its defunct Pathfinder site, often criticized as one of the largest Internet debacles of any media company.

Although AOL Time Warner Chairman Steve Case said the combined company "will lead the convergence of the media, entertainment, communications and Internet industries," analysts have said cost cutting rather than revenue growth will provide much of the predicted synergies from the deal.

The combined company faces a much harsher climate today than when it was announced a year ago. Online advertising has been particularly hard hit as cash-strapped dot-coms have cut back on marketing budgets, putting a brake on potential revenue growth.

A Warner Bros. representative said some potential cuts are under review but that no final decisions have been made.

"We're not looking at major cutbacks," said Warner Bros. spokeswoman Barbara Brogliatti. "We're looking at what makes sense for the long term. We don't want to make a short-term mistake."

She declined to comment on the future of Entertaindom.

Analysts and insiders have speculated about Entertaindom's demise since the AOL merger was first announced and Time Warner's online strategy abruptly changed. Signs of trouble have included the departure of top executives last year from Time Warner's Digital Media division, as well as derailed plans to spin off the division as a separate company with a tracking stock.

The belt-tightening at Warner Bros. comes amid larger cutbacks across the company.

Cuts Wednesday hit cable news channel CNN, which announced it would lay off 400 employees, or 10 percent of its staff. CNN's interactive division will account for a third of the cuts, the company said in a statement.

Driving AOL Time Warner's AOL Time
Warner packagecost-cutting measures, analysts said, are its earnings growth estimates made last year when the deal was cut. Despite darkening skies over the Internet economy, the company has stood by its original predictions of 30 percent earnings growth (excluding certain costs) in the first year of the merger.

Phil Leigh, a digital media analyst at Raymond James, said the company is unlikely to revise those expectations soon.

"They've consistently stood by those numbers," he said. "But it will be harder to hit those numbers through revenue growth...Whether they hit will depend on how harsh the advertising downturn gets."

The deal closed in a climate where many media companies are choosing to cut back on Web operations rather than continue to fund money-losing businesses.

News Corp. shuttered its Digital Media Division earlier this month, and The New York Times Co. quickly followed with layoffs in its Internet business. Knight-Ridder has also put its online operations under the knife.

Meanwhile, employees at AOL Time Warner are wondering how deeply management is prepared to cut.

According to one source within the company, AOL Time Warner plans "massive layoffs, cutting really deep through Warner and Time Warner." The source added that some executives fear the cuts may go too deep, potentially limiting the entertainment unit's offline production operations.

"What's ironic is it's affecting areas that AOL can't take over. AOL employees aren't going to walk in and start shooting television shows," the source said.

Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • News - Business Tech

    Dell planning to ditch factories

    Dell's new CFO Brian Gladden has said that the company "more work to be done," to improve profitability and decrease costs. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the company is planning to lower costs by selling off its factories.

  • Gallery

    Photos: Ron Paul's RNC alternative

    As the Republican convention took place just miles away, a crowd rallied for the former presidential candidate and his message of limited government, ensured civil liberties, lower taxes, and peace.

  • Negative Approach

    Online content and services via game consoles will generate $8 billion in revenue in 2013

    The revenue possibilities in gaming continue to grow, at least for the big console manufacturers.

  • Beyond Binary

    Microsoft begins big ad push

    Microsoft's multi-year push, estimated at $300 million, begins with a spot featuring Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld aired during Thursday's NFL game.

  • Video

    YouTube plays party politics

    During the presidential campaigning four years ago, YouTube didn't even exist. Now it's a tool candidates must master to get their message across. CNET's Kara Tsuboi stops by the YouTube upload booths at the Democratic and Republican conventions to find out why Google's video site has such a big presence in Denver and St. Paul, Minn.

  • News - Wireless

    Was EarthLink's failed citywide Wi-Fi a blessing in disguise?

    Wireless Philadelphia, the nonprofit charged with providing broadband bundles to low-income families in Philadelphia, may be better off in the long run without EarthLink.

  • Video

    Political party playlists

    We know the Democrats and Republicans are split over policy issues, but does their musical taste fall down party lines too? And what kind of gadgets did they bring to the conventions to listen to their music? CNET reporter Kara Tsuboi finds out.

  • News - Gaming and Culture

    Behind the prototyping of 'Spore'

    Many of the components of Will Wright's highly anticipated evolution game started out as small concept projects that are now available to the public.

  • News - Cutting Edge

    Execs predict next Google-like tech

    On eve of company's 10-year anniversary, researchers and business pundits speculate about what technologies might someday have as much impact as Google.

  • Gallery

    Photos: The brains behind Google Chrome

    Here's a look at some of the engineers and executives who took the stage at the company's headquarters as they unveiled the new browser.

  • The Cheapskate

    Record TV in style with a refurbished TiVo HD, $179.99 shipped

    TiVo is offering refurb HD units for cheap, though you'll still have to pay for the TiVo service.

  • Green Tech

    Clean-tech group forms to support Obama

    "Clean Tech and Green Business for Obama" aims to raise $1 million for the Democratic presidential nominee while elevating issues of climate change and alternative energy.