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TV executive Jamie Kellner, who helped create Fox and the WB, dies at 77

Meredith Blake, Los Angeles Times on

Published in Entertainment News

Kellner helped shape the network's brand identity and make it a destination for edgier content, like the bawdy family sitcom "Married…With Children" — a show that initially attracted controversy but became a long-running hit.

"One of the first tests we apply is: Would one of the three networks do this? And quite often, if the answer is 'yes,' then we disqualify it. There is no reason for us to exist if we are going to do what they have already done," Kellner told the New York Times in 1986.

Fox attracted younger viewers with shows that bucked long-held industry convention, like "In Living Color," the irreverent sketch comedy show featuring a predominantly Black cast; and "Beverly Hills, 90120," a high school soap opera that became one of the defining shows of the 1990s.

"The whole reason we did 'The Simpsons' was because no one had done animation in prime time since ABC in the '60s with 'The Flintstones' and 'The Jetsons.'"

"The most important lessons we learned were to be different, to speak in a different voice than what was available to viewers already, and to get as young as you can get," Kellner told The Times in 1997.

He left Fox in 1993, just as the network was expanding into a seventh night of programming and had numerous buzzy hits like the "90210" spinoff "Melrose Place." In just seven years, Kellner had turned a "rickety string of UHF affiliates into a significant competitor," as The Times then put it.

He soon began shopping around an idea for a fifth broadcast network. In 1995, he launched the WB, which initially made its mark with Black sitcoms including "The Wayans Bros.," "The Jamie Foxx Show" and "Sister, Sister," but faced stiff competition from another would-be contender, UPN. "We wouldn't be doing this if I didn't believe this would be as successful, or more successful, than the Fox network," he said early in the WB's reign.

One of the network's first hits was the squeaky clean family drama "7th Heaven." Throughout the late '90s, the network leaned into teen-centered dramas and ushered in a Golden Age for young adult programming that could be both sentimental and self-aware, with shows such as "Dawson's Creek," "Felicity" "Gilmore Girls" and "Buffy the Vampire Slayer." By 2002, the network, in which he had ownership stake, was valued at $1 billion.

"I think the magic of that place came so much from his form of leadership, which was about taking bets on people," said Greg Berlanti, who was tapped at age 28 to become showrunner on "Dawson's Creek" and created two other shows at the WB, "Everwood" and "Jack & Bobby." He recalled Kellner as an executive who supported creative talent and gave shows time to grow, but could also tell you "what five cities your show was most popular in."

 

"I'm so glad I met that kind of leader at that age, someone who led with curiosity and compassion and was clear-headed and honest. He imbued people around him with a sense of faith in themselves." Berlanti believes Kellner-era WB was "the most successful YA network in the history of television," in part because Kellner "didn't see it as a lesser audience."

While still at the WB, he was tapped to succeed Ted Turner as chairman and chief executive of Turner Broadcasting System, where he oversaw TBS, TNT and CNN. He angered wrestling fans in 2001 by canceling World Championship Wrestling programming on TNT and TBS. He presided over CNN during a period of seismic shifts in the news business, with increased competition from Fox News and MSNBC and the cataclysmic attacks of 9/11.

Kellner was known for fostering loyalty among his top executives, several of whom moved with him from network to network. "He gave you tremendous latitude as a boss and mentor, always empowering you to make bold, decisive decisions and never settling for what's always been done," said Brad Turell, who was head of corporate communications at Fox, the WB and Turner Broadcasting under Kellner.

Kellner retired from the business in 2004, when he was just 57.

"I found it hard to believe because he was so competitive, in the best sense of the word, and so vigorous. But when he was done, he was really done," said Ancier.

He remained busy pursuing passions like sailing and golf. He also opened a winery, Cent'Anni, in the Santa Ynez Valley, and was known for hosting Italian meals at his home.

He is survived by his wife, Julie Smith, daughter Melissa, son Christopher, and three grandchildren, Jake, Scarlett and Oliver.

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©2024 Los Angeles Times. Visit latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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