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Sunday 22 of December 2024

Viacom CEO's Tenure May Be Up Soon as He's Kicked Off Board


Viacom Inc. CEO Philippe Dauman,photo: AP/Evan Vucci
Viacom Inc. CEO Philippe Dauman,photo: AP/Evan Vucci
The latest shake-up comes as lawyers battle over whether Redstone, 93, is mentally competent to run Viacom Inc. and its sister company, CBS Corp.

LOS ANGELES — Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman may not have much time left at the entertainment conglomerate.

National Amusements, the theater company through which Sumner Redstone controls both Viacom and CBS, said Thursday that it has replaced Dauman and four other directors on Viacom’s 11-member board.

Viacom shares jumped nearly 7 percent Thursday. Dauman, the third highest-paid CEO in America last year, has been criticized by analysts and investors alike for failing to keep up with changes wrought by the internet on Viacom’s TV networks like Comedy Central, MTV and Nickelodeon.

The latest shake-up comes as lawyers battle over whether Redstone, 93, is mentally competent to run Viacom Inc. and its sister company, CBS Corp.

Frederic Salerno, the lead independent director who was among those ousted, said in a statement the move was “brazen and demonstrably invalid.” He pinned it on Redstone’s daughter, Shari. Salerno contends she is manipulating her father in a bid to control his empire upon his death.

National Amusements says it also filed papers with a Delaware court to reaffirm the move, which it expected to be challenged by the ousted directors. It asked the court to keep the current board — the ousted directors — temporarily in place and prohibit it from taking any unusual actions until a final judgment.

FILE - In this Oct. 1, 2012, file photo, Sumner Redstone attends the premiere of "Seven Psychopaths" in Los Angeles. Redstone’s family theater company said Thursday, June 16, 2016, it has replaced five directors from Viacom’s 11-member board, including CEO Philippe Dauman, and filed court papers in Delaware to defend its actions. It’s the latest move to reassert control even as lawyers battle over whether Redstone is mentally competent to run the multibillion-dollar media companies Viacom and CBS. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP, File)
Sumner Redstone’s family theater company said Thursday, June 16, 2016, it has replaced five directors from Viacom’s 11-member board, including CEO Philippe Dauman, and filed court papers in Delaware to defend its actions. Photo: Matt Sayles/Invision/AP

The company also hinted that Dauman’s CEO job was on the line, although he keeps it for now. National Amusements said it will be up to the new board to “take whatever steps it deems appropriate” to ensure “strong, independent and effective leadership.”

The Redstone saga has been dragging on for months and became highly public in November after he booted ex-girlfriend Manuela Herzer from his home and she sued to be reinstated as his health care proxy. Her case continues to roil through the courts.

Dauman and another ousted director, George Abrams, also brought a suit in a Massachusetts probate court last month asking to be reinstated to their roles on both National Amusements and the Redstone family trust after being stripped of their positions.

They argue Redstone is incapacitated and would have been unable to make those decisions. Redstone’s lawyers have disputed the charge, citing doctor’s reports that say he is mentally capable despite his speech impediment and feeding tube.

Among the new directors are Buzzfeed chairman Kenneth Lerer; former Discovery Communications CEO Judith McHale; former DreamWorks SKG co-COO Ronald Nelson and former Sony Entertainment president Nicole Seligman. Along with Dauman, Abrams and Salerno, board members Blythe McGarvie and William Schwartz were removed.

SpringOwl Asset Management LLC, a small minority shareholder that slammed Viacom management in a January presentation, said in a statement “the board has been significantly upgraded,” and continued to press for Dauman’s removal.

Even with Thursday’s share price bump, the stock is down by 33 percent over the past 12 months.