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Must the Shows Go On?
Hollywood’s disrupted awards season is as much about box office as it is about self-congratulation.
Omicron hits Hollywood
On television, the pandemic is already over. In reality, it continues to wreak havoc on the entertainment industry.
Last night’s Golden Globes, which traditionally kick off the award show season, were not televised because of ethical issues surrounding the group that gives out the awards. The spike in coronavirus cases is also threatening the rest of awards season, which is about more than just self-congratulation: It has the entire industry reconsidering its fate in a year that was supposed to mark a return of Hollywood’s glitz and glamour.
“Suddenly, 2022 is looking eerily similar to 2021,” The Times’s Nicole Sperling writes. “It is also seeing the movie business’s best form of advertisement undercut in a year when films desperately need it.” The Critics’ Choice Awards — scheduled to be aired last night in hopes of filling the void left by the Globes — were pushed back, as were the AFI awards. Film festivals have been canceled or will be held virtually with less fanfare. The Academy Awards remain scheduled for March 27, with nominations on Feb. 8, but there has been no indication what the event will be like.
A lack of award shows affects which movies are made. If the Hollywood hype machine loses steam, it could prove devastating to the box office, which has struggled with each spike in coronavirus cases. The latest Spider-Man movie was a big success, but other big-budget films, like “West Side Story,” flopped. Pixar said last week that its latest film, “Turning Red,” would skip theaters and will debut exclusively on Disney+ in March, free for subscribers.
Movies with medium-sized budgets are particularly vulnerable, given their reliance on word of mouth and awards to spread awareness. In response, studios are experimenting with slowing theatrical rollouts, accelerating home streaming and holding more virtual screenings to court award voters.
“The movie business is this gigantic rock, and we’re close to seeing that rock crumble,” said Stephen Galloway, the dean of Chapman University’s Dodge College of Film and Media Arts. According to a recent study, 49 percent of prepandemic moviegoers are no longer buying tickets. Eight percent say they will never return. And the industry’s troubles extend well beyond movies: The Grammy Awards have been postponed for the second year in a row, Broadway shows are being delayed or canceled and sports events are suffering disruptions and dropouts.
In other pandemic news:
Chicago’s mayor rejected a proposal by the city’s teachers union for a return to in-person learning. School has been canceled for a fourth straight day.
Misinformation about Covid tests is spreading rapidly online.
The C.D.C. is facing new criticism over muddled messaging about testing and isolation guidelines.
A medical expert makes the case for a safe return to offices by mid-February.
Bob Wachter, the chairman of the University of California San Francisco’s department of medicine, shares his son’s personal struggle with Covid.
HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING
New York City suffers its deadliest apartment building fire in decades. At least 19 people, including nine children, were killed in a Bronx high-rise on Sunday, reportedly after a space heater sparked the blaze. The building is owned by three investment firms, including one co-founded by a housing adviser to Mayor Eric Adams.
Novak Djokovic can stay in Australia, for now. A judge ordered the release of the Serbian tennis star, who had been detained after the Australian government canceled his visa over questions about his coronavirus vaccination exemption. But he isn’t necessarily guaranteed to appear at the Australian Open next week: The government said it could still cancel his visa.
Airlines continue to cancel thousands of flights. About 5,000 trips were called off over the weekend, prolonging a string of disrupted journeys that began before Christmas. At fault, again, was a combination of bad weather and Covid-related staff shortages.
New York allows online sports betting. Four websites began taking wagers from New Yorkers over the weekend, making the state the 18th in the U.S. to legalize internet gambling. Anticipation of the move lifted shares in DraftKings, which had fallen last year as skeptics like the short-seller Jim Chanos questioned whether it could ever be profitable.
Jamie Dimon’s son-in-law is entangled in a $21 million business dispute. Joey Romeo is one of several Apollo Global Management executives accused of stripping an oil executive of his stake in an energy company, The New York Post reports. Apollo disputes the claims.
Why Tesla is winning
Automakers recently announced their 2021 sales tallies, and the big winner was Tesla. The electric vehicle maker sold nearly 950,000 cars last year, up 87 percent from the year before. Detroit’s Big Three — Ford, G.M. and Stellantis, the parent of Chrysler — all saw sales fall last year, though they still sell far more cars than Tesla.
Tesla better anticipated last year’s rebound in demand and showed a superior command of its supply chain, The Times’s Jack Ewing reports. This shows that the industry’s biggest players may be even more vulnerable to Tesla, Rivian and other upstarts than industry experts seem to realize. Here are three reasons Tesla won 2021:
Elon Musk, Tesla’s enigmatic C.E.O., insists on complete control of the company’s manufacturing process, down to making its own batteries and programming its own chips. The latter allowed Tesla to navigate the global semiconductor shortage better than rivals, by rewriting its code to work with whatever chips were available. (It is telling that many established auto giants, G.M. in particular, are becoming more conglomerate-like, while manufacturers in other industries, like G.E., are slimming down.)
Tesla offers fewer options than traditional carmakers, which streamlines manufacturing. Two of Tesla’s models — the Model 3 sedan and Model Y S.U.V. — account for nearly all of the automaker’s sales.
It also helps that Tesla is smaller than its rivals, for now, making supply chains simpler to manage. Toyota and Volkswagen produced more than 10 million vehicles each in a good year.
Will the good times last? Tesla aims to increase sales about 50 percent a year for the next several years, which could get trickier as it ramps up production and needs more chips and parts. Traditional carmakers are also upping their game in electric vehicles. “Tesla will continue to grow,” said Stephen Beck of cg42, a management consulting firm. “But they are facing more competition than they ever have, and the competition is getting stronger.”
“The tolerance for dealing with jerky bosses has decreased.”
— Angelina Darrisaw, C.E.O. of an executive coaching firm, on one of the many ways that the pandemic has changed work culture. Darrisaw said demand for her services rose last year: “You can’t just wake up and lead people.”
The week ahead
► Fed confirmation hearings: The Senate holds hearings for key posts at the central bank, with Jay Powell, who was nominated for a second term as chairman, answering questions on Tuesday and Lael Brainard, who was nominated as vice chairwoman, appearing on Thursday. Some progressive Democrats, like Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, said they will oppose Powell’s renomination, but he and Brainard are expected to pass muster.
► Prices and shopping: On Wednesday, the latest inflation data will reveal how much prices rose in December, after the previous month’s reading set a 40-year high. On Friday, retail sales numbers for December are set for release, and they will be scanned for any signs that inflation, supply issues and other pandemic disruptions have made shoppers more wary of opening their wallets.
► Earnings season: Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo are set to publish quarterly earnings on Friday, with analysts expecting the banks to post strong profits, driven by deal making and strong capital markets.
Ron Perelman pays up
Ron Perelman is a rare American billionaire who didn’t get richer during the pandemic. The chairman and C.E.O. of the holding company MacAndrews & Forbes, who became an emblem of the “greed is good” era with his 1985 hostile takeover of Revlon, is divesting a wide range of personal assets to pay down huge business debts.
Perelman’s recent actions have raised speculation that he is sick or broke, both of which he denies, writes Jacob Bernstein in a must-read profile in The Times. Perelman, 79, has said he is simply shifting priorities and leading a less leveraged lifestyle.
Buying Revlon “was never a vanity play,” he says. But it was personal to the extent that many of the loans financing it and Perelman’s other businesses were backed by his assets. When the pandemic hit and Revlon’s share price collapsed, he began divesting to repay creditors: He has recently sold properties, tens of millions of dollars worth of art, and he placed his superyacht on the market for $106 million.
“We’re all complicated, we’re all crazy,” he notes. Perelman, an Orthodox Jew with a penchant for celebrity and high culture, who has been married five times and whose divorces have been known to go poorly, cultivated a myth of being self-made despite being born into privilege and marrying into fortunes that helped him grow his own. He controls Revlon and has held onto its cosmetics arm while selling off more profitable ventures. Hints at a sale have never gone anywhere, which some believe is a way for Perelman to buy time with bondholders.
“I want to be active until I’m 120,” he says. Revlon is a big part of his identity, associates point out. Retirement, Perelman told The Times, is “the beginning of the end.”
THE SPEED READ
Deals
Reddit has reportedly hired Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs to lead its I.P.O., which could value the site at $15 billion. (Bloomberg)
“Inside private equity’s race to go public” (FT)
A profile of Changpeng Zhao, the founder of the cryptocurrency exchange Binance, whose fortune is now estimated at nearly $100 billion. (Bloomberg)
Policy
Senator Jon Ossoff, Democrat of Georgia, is said to be planning a bill that would ban members of Congress from trading individual stocks. (NY Post)
Senator Joe Manchin, Democrat of West Virginia, has reportedly withdrawn his $1.8 trillion counteroffer to President Biden’s social-spending plan. (WaPo)
Why European financial centers have yet to capitalize on Brexit. (FT)
The Labor Department accused a Georgia auto-repair shop that dumped 91,500 oil-covered pennies on an ex-worker’s driveway of retaliation. (NYT)
Best of the rest
Americans’ personal finances improved on average during the pandemic, defying experts’ worries. (WSJ)
The freelance writer Ruth Shalit Barrett sued The Atlantic for defamation over a 2020 article of hers that the magazine retracted. (NYT)
In defense of careerist strivers “with no chill.” (NYT Opinion)
Barcelona has become a hub for billionaires and their superyachts. (NYT)
“Podcasting Hasn’t Produced a New Hit in Years” (Bloomberg)
We’d like your feedback! Please email thoughts and suggestions to dealbook@nytimes.com.
Andrew Ross Sorkin is a columnist and the founder and editor-at-large of DealBook. He is a co-anchor of CNBC’s Squawk Box and the author of “Too Big to Fail.” He is also the co-creator of the Showtime drama series Billions. More about Andrew Ross Sorkin
Jason Karaian is the editor of DealBook, based in London. He joined The Times in 2020 from Quartz, where he was senior Europe correspondent and later global finance and economics editor. More about Jason Karaian
Sarah Kessler is a senior staff editor for DealBook and the author of “Gigged,” a book about workers in the gig economy. More about Sarah Kessler
Stephen Gandel is a news editor for DealBook. He was previously a senior reporter for CBS News, and a columnist at Bloomberg. He has covered Wall Street and financial firms for most of his career. More about Stephen Gandel
Michael de la Merced joined The Times as a reporter in 2006, covering Wall Street and finance. Among his main coverage areas are mergers and acquisitions, bankruptcies and the private equity industry. More about Michael J. de la Merced
Lauren Hirsch joined the New York Times from CNBC in 2020, covering business, policy and mergers and acquisitions. Ms. Hirsch studied comparative literature at Cornell University and has an M.B.A. from the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth. More about Lauren Hirsch
Ephrat Livni reports from Washington on the intersection of business and policy for DealBook. Previously, she was a senior reporter at Quartz, covering law and politics, and has practiced law in the public and private sectors. More about Ephrat Livni
Driverless Cars and the Future of Transportation
News
Autonomous taxis have arrived in car-obsessed Los Angeles, the nation’s second most populous city. But some Angelenos aren’t ready to go driverless.
Cruise, the embattled self-driving car subsidiary of General Motors, said that it would eliminate roughly a quarter of its work force, as the company looked to rein in costs after an incident led California regulators to shut down its robot taxi operations.
Tesla, the world’s dominant maker of electric vehicles, recalled more than two million vehicles to address concerns from U.S. officials about Autopilot, the company’s self-driving software.
Read More
An Appetite for Destruction: A wave of lawsuits argue that Tesla’s Autopilot software is dangerously overhyped. What can its blind spots teach us about Elon Musk, the company’s erratic chief executive?
Along for the Ride: Here’s what New York Times reporters experienced during test rides in driverless cars operated by Tesla, Waymo and Cruise.
The Future of Transportation?: Driverless cars, once a Silicon Valley fantasy, have become a 24-hour-a-day reality in San Francisco. “The Daily” looked at the unique challenges of coexisting with cars that drive themselves.
Stressing Cities: In San Francisco and Austin, Texas, where passengers can hail autonomous taxis, the vehicles are starting to take a toll on city services, even slowing down emergency response times.
A Fast Rise and Fall: Cruise, a subsidiary of General Motors, wanted to grow fast. Now, the company faces safety concerns as it contends with angry regulators, anxious employees and skepticism about the viability of the business.
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