DreamWorks - S - K - G

Written by Eric Olsen
Published February 26, 2003

Forbes interviews Spielberg, Katzenberg, and Geffenberg, I mean Geffen.

Spielberg:

    Forbes interviewed Steven Spielberg, DreamWorks' de facto chief creative officer, at Amblin, the mini-studio that Universal Studios built for him on the corner of its Burbank lot, and discussed his work and the future of the company. The following is an excerpt from the interview.

    Forbes: We're not that far off from DreamWorks tenth anniversary. Have you given any thought to the company's corporate evolution since 1994?

    Spielberg: I give very little thought to the corporate evolution, because that's not my job here. That's not what I'm supposed to do. ...I get a headache when these guys start talking about refinancing and things like that. It just goes right over my head. And that's why I insisted, when Jeffrey [Katzenberg] approached me to form DreamWorks...that David [Geffen] had to come along as a full partner. And I said "Jeffrey, you know, you and I need an adult in this mix."

    But it's not as if you're clueless when it comes to business. You have a reputation for being one of the sharper business minds in Hollywood.

    My head's not in the clouds, but I think I've gotten too much credit for being an astute businessman. I really think I should be left off the cover of Forbes and put on the inside, and you guys should just feature Jeffrey and David. Because I really feel that over the past eight years, I've principally worked as a creative partner....

Katzenberg:

    The following are excerpts from Forbes' interview with Jeffrey Katzenberg. The 52-year-old, who helped revive the Walt Disney Co.'s fortunes with such hits as The Lion King and Beauty and the Beast, is now DreamWorks' de facto chief executive. He spoke to us at his Glendale, Calif., office, where the studio has built a 14-acre animation campus.

    Forbes: You run a private company that has been reluctant to release any financial information for the past eight years. Why are you talking now?

    Katzenberg: We are about to start working on all 12 cylinders, instead of six or eight. And with that's going to come opportunity. I can't tell you what the opportunity is. I just know it will be there. And part of what I think will allow us to participate or capitalize on those opportunities is to have people actually start to know a little bit about us. I emphasize the word "little."

    What's the benefit in having the outside world know more about your financials?

    About a year and a half ago, there was an opportunity we were interested in [Editor's note: In 2001 DreamWorks discussed a combination with music giant EMI]. Because we had shrouded ourselves in such secrecy and no one had any access to what we were doing or how we were doing, when the opportunity came, we started to try to tell our story--it didn't work. No one would believe it. That's the price we pay for our secrecy.

    If you wait until you're at a place where there could be a transaction to tell the story, you're telling it at a time when people, by natural instinct, must be cynical, must look at it through doubting eyes. I'm not saying that's not the only reason it didn't work out. But it's a very big reason. Every time they turned to the experts and asked, "So what do you know about DreamWorks?" there was no good news to be told there. Not because we didn't have any, but because they didn't know anything. It was a mistake....

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Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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DreamWorks - S - K - G
Published: February 26, 2003
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Filed Under: Music: News, Video: News
Writer: Eric Olsen
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