NBC Uni to buy Oxygen Media for $925 mil

$925 mil Oxygen buy adds to female demo focus

By Paul J. Gough and Georg Szalai
NEW YORK -- NBC Universal is getting in touch with its feminine side, snapping up cable network Oxygen on Tuesday for $925 million.

The seven-year-old, female-focused independent cable channel will complement what NBC Uni is calling a "virtual women's network" of assets that will be shopped to Madison Avenue, including online acquisition iVillage, NBC morning franchise "Today" and cable channel Bravo.

"Oxygen fits in perfectly and will really give us a great leadership position in the female demographic category," NBC Uni president and CEO Jeff Zucker said in a conference call with reporters.

Oxygen owners including Oprah Winfrey, Paul Allen, Marcy Carsey, Tom Werner and Caryn Mandabach were reported to have been interested in unloading the property given the challenges indie cable operations face. News of negotiations between the two companies was first reported in The Hollywood Reporter (HR 8/10).

NBC Uni said it will finance the Oxygen deal mostly by selling two independent Telemundo stations, KWHY Los Angeles and WKAQ San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Oxygen CEO Geraldine Laybourne, who founded the network and also had an ownership stake, will leave the company by year's end. She declined to discuss her plans.

Oxygen will come under the portfolio of Jeff Gaspin, president of NBC Universal Television Group. He is expected to tap an exec to run the network in the coming weeks.

NBC Uni execs cited NBC's 2002 acquisition of Bravo as a useful guidepost for what to expect with Oxygen. But Gaspin noted that Oxygen, which is in about 74 million homes, is in better position than Bravo was when NBC took it over and brought it from 54 million to its current distribution base of 80 million.

"We think we can do what we did with Bravo, but the task is not as great," Gaspin said.

Executives also referenced the success they have had investing in programming and marketing for USA Network and Sci Fi Channel since those cable outlets came into the Peacock's fold in the 2004 merger with Vivendi Universal Entertainment.

Laybourne indicated that NBC Uni's brands will give Oxygen crucial exposure. "What is apparent now is that we need cross promotion, and that is really the biggest issue for Oxygen," Laybourne said. "That was the attraction of NBC, plus the fact it has such quality brands."

Programming-wise, Gaspin said Oxygen will continue to target women ages 18-34, compared with Bravo's focus on women 18-54.

Execs also signaled that NBC properties like "Today" could promote some of the network's shows in similar fashion to how NBC's repurposing of Bravo's "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy" was key to elevating that cable channel. Oxygen potentially could replay "Today" segments.

Gaspin also cited on-demand offerings and digital subscriber growth as growth opportunities.

Zucker emphasized that the sale of the Telemundo stations should in no way be interpreted as a sign that NBC Uni is reducing its focus on Spanish-language offerings. KWHY is one of three stations it owns in Los Angeles, meaning that the company eventually would have had to sell one anyway to comply with media-ownership rules. There are no buyers to announce yet, Zucker said.

NBC Uni said the Oxygen acquisition would be accretive to earnings after the first full year, with revenue and cost synergies of about $35 million in 2008. NBC Uni management declined Tuesday to specify where those savings would come from but said it would focus on the proper integration in the coming weeks.

However, execs signaled that the price tag made the acquisition very affordable. NBC Uni paid less than $12 per subscriber for Oxygen, compared with the $22 it paid for Bravo.

Laybourne and Oxygen president and COO Lisa Gersh said in a memo to staff that they managed to build "a profitable and high-growth business," adding, "NBC will grow Oxygen into a behemoth."

The deal is expected to close in November.

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