Arick Wierson
Arick Wierson | |
---|---|
Arick Wierson (Right) alongside Albert II, Prince of Monaco (Left) at the 2009 Monte-Carlo Television Festival. | |
Born |
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States | November 23, 1971
Residence | Brooklyn, New York |
Nationality | U.S. |
Ethnicity | American |
Citizenship | U.S. |
Alma mater | UNICAMP |
Occupation | Adviser to New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Founder, NYC-TV, Executive Producer, Channel Production Films, President, Luanda Fashion Center |
Arick Wierson (born November 23, 1971)[1] is an American-born media executive and entrepreneur with business interests spanning television and film production, fashion & retail, and a variety of business endeavors in the Middle East, Latin America, and, most recently, Africa. Best known as a top communications and technology aide to former New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, Wierson is also credited as a co-founder of NYC TV, which, according to some sources, revolutionized local television in the United States. Wierson has been labeled as "one of the most important people in New York media"[2] by the television industry 'Bible' weekly magazine Broadcasting & Cable. In 2002, New York City Mayor and media mogul Michael Bloomberg named Wierson as the General Manager and President of WNYE-TV and WNYE -FM, in addition to his responsibilities for running the City´s cable network, a combined entity that became collectively known as NYC Media Group.[3] On April 28, 2009, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that Wierson was returning to the private sector.[4] Since leaving the public sector in 2009, Wierson has been credited as a major force behind the creation of the first private television station in Angola, TV Zimbo, and the establishment of Luanda Fashion Center, the largest department store in Angola.[5]
Wierson was the Executive Producer of the feature documentary film "Back Door Channels: The Price of Peace", which held its world premiere in Abu Dhabi at the 2010 Abu Dhabi Film Festival,[6] formerly known as the Middle East International Film Festival. After an early cut screening of the film in 2009,[7] it was selected by H.S.H. Albert II, Prince of Monaco to open the 49th Annual Monte-Carlo Film & Television Festival at an invitation-only private royal screening. It has since been shown in over 75 Film Festivals and in 2012 the film aired nationally in the United States on PBS[8][9] In 2015, the film won the best documentary for the 57th annual New York Emmy® Awards after airing on New York PBS affiliate WLIW (Long Island).[10]
Wierson led NYC TV to 160 Emmy nominations in his seven years at the helm of the network. He was nominated on 29 different occasions for the role of Executive Producer in the creation of various programs. In 2007, he won five Emmy awards for his role as the Executive Producer of the nationally syndicated Secrets of New York.[11][12][13] Along with co-founder Seth Unger, Wierson launched NYC TV in 2005.[14][15] The network has been recognized as an innovator and pioneer in both local and national public broadcasting across the United States and internationally.[16]
Early years
Wierson grew up in Excelsior, Minnesota and attended part of his high school years in the Middle East. He graduated from Minnetonka High School (1990), later graduating cum laude from Georgetown University (1994) with a Bachelor of Science degree in Foreign Service.[17] In 1997, Wierson, was named an International Rotary Scholar, which he used to receive his master's degree in Economics from the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP).[18]
Banking career
Wierson's career began as an investment banker, working for the World Bank, ABN AMRO Bank, and JP Morgan.[19] There has been ample speculation that Wierson was hired to lend his political and personal connections to the Dutch Banking giant ABN Amro to ensure a successful acquisition of the Brazilian retail giant Banco Real.
Public Sector
In the 1990s, Wierson worked under former Brazilian Finance Minister Rubens Ricúpero and, later, former Nicaraguan President Violeta Chamorro. In 2001, billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg[20] made a personal appeal through Wierson´s spouse, Fabiana Mesquita-Wierson, then the one ot he top executives in Bloomberg LP's operations in Latin America, to recruit her spouse to New York from Brazil to aid him in his 2001 mayoral campaign. During Bloomberg's initial 2001 election campaign, Wierson headed "Democrats for Bloomberg" initiatives and oversaw the campaign's field operations which combined traditional electioneering and voter profiling databases, which political analysts today say was the campaign that ushered in a new era technically sophisticated, statistical, voter profiling for political operation in the country.[21] Wierson has maintained close political ties in his home state of Minnesota, reestablishing residency in the state in 2009. He is known to be close to maverick political strategist Bill Hillsman, who has asked Wierson to lecture in his courses at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University on several occasions.[22] In June 2010, Brazilian Vice Presidential candidate and Federal Deputy Antônio Pedro de Siqueira Indio da Costa (Democratas (Brasil)) invited Wierson to advise him and Presidential candidate José Serra on media and political matters during the final months of the campaign before the October election.[23] Wierson is said to have declined the invitation due to "ongoing engagements in Angola."
Media Interests
Broadcasting & Cable Magazine described Wierson as "one of the most important people in New York media".[2] Under Wierson, NYC TV expanded from a local cable operation to a broad array of broadcast, cable, production, online video and syndication entities, organized under the name of NYC Media Group.[24] At his time at NYC TV, Wierson led the network to 42 NY Emmy Awards and over 100 National Telly Cable Awards. In addition to Secrets of New York, Wierson played a role in the creation of many of the network's original series' productions including $9.99, Eat Out NY, New York 360*, and The Bridge. In 2008, Wierson led NYC TV's digital media group to its first-ever Webby nominations.
At NYC Media Group (since rebranded as NYC Media), Wierson was vocal critic of the traditional public broadcasting model for second and third stations in heavily saturated markets like New York City.[25] In 2005, Wierson disbanded the station’s long-held PBS status, enabling NYC TV's original shows to take over prime-time[26] "It was smart not to be the 'fifth channel,' said Dalton Delan, executive vice president of WETA in Washington. You don't want to be the triple-A team. You want to find a new ballpark where you can be No. 1."[27]
In August 2006, Wierson, Unger and Bloomberg appeared in the NBC studios, joined WNBC General Manager Francis X. Comerford and former NBC Station Group President Jay Ireland in announcing a partnership between NYC TV and NBC flagship station WNBC[28] The executives were flanked by two of NYC TV's on-air stars, Kelly Choi and Amy Palmer, who would be hosting some of the programming that would be part of the content deal, namely Eat Out NY and New York 360*. Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who began Bloomberg Television as part of his media empire, knew better than most the value of a city television station, his aides said."[29]
On April 28, 2009, Mayor Bloomberg announced Wierson was stepping down as CEO of NYC Media Group, saying "Over the past seven years, Arick Wierson and his team transformed NYC TV into one of the nation’s best television stations. After helping build the station virtually from scratch, Arick oversaw the merger of NYC TV with WNYE-TV and WNYE-FM, creating the largest local media group in New York that now reaches hundreds of thousands of people every day. NYC TV’s 160 New York Emmy nominations and 42 awards serve as a testament to Arick’s vision, tenacity, and leadership and to the excellence of the media group he was instrumental in creating. I have no doubt that Arick’s entrepreneurial and creative talents, which helped him achieve great things at NYC TV will serve him well as he rejoins the private sector..."[30] In a private email circulated among city officials, Wierson revealed that has had been planning to leave NYC TV since late 2008 to work on a new television project overseas. Additionally, the New York Times revealed that Wierson had been quietly producing a documentary film starring former U.S. President Jimmy Carter "Back Door Channels: The Price of Peace" which later opened in Monte-Carlo and Abu Dhabi.[31]
In addition to the TV business, Wierson also led a complete overhaul of WNYE-FM 91.5FM, including new formats for morning and afternoon drive-time programming. On February 19, 2008, WNYE announced that it was re-branding itself as "Radio New York" and that the station was partnering for live coast-to-coast music feeds with Seattle-based alternative rock station KEXP.[32] The announcement was seen as an overtly aggressive move by the New York City Indie music community, causing broadcaster WFUV to take public on-air swipes at Wierson for having encroached on their market.[33] On March 5, 2009, Wierson, along with NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg, announced that WNYE, after being in Brooklyn since 1938, was moving its radio broadcast operations to Manhattan, and was unveiling a new digital transmitter, capable of transmitting multiple in-band HD radio streams.[34]
Controversies and Criticisms
Over the years Wierson was at the helm of New York City's media assets, he frequently, and sometimes very publicly, sparred with public officials who had a bone to pick with Mayor Bloomberg. One elected official who was a consistent thorn in Wierson's side was New York City Councilwoman Gale Brewer. Brewer, who represents Manhattan's Upper West Side regularly criticized NYC TV for being “too flashy” with its focus on fashion, celebrity, and other topics she viewed as inconsistent with the mission of the network.[35] Wierson has countered in Council testimony that “television is meant to be watched.”[36] Brewer often complained in public hearings that Wierson was a "pain in the neck"[37] - as recently as the April 14, 2010 NYC Council Committee on Technology in Government hearing - nearly a full year after Wierson had left office.
In August 2009, the Village Voice, dedicated a cover story to the rise of NYC TV, focusing on the organization's president and co-founder, Arick Wierson. The author, Tom Robbins, a vocal critic of Mayor Bloomberg (who has taken to calling Bloomberg "Mayor Mugabe"[38] in drawing comparisons between him and the Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe) wrote about Wierson's business interests outside of government.[39] Robbins has since been let go of the Village Voice.[40]
The Village Voice, under financial pressure,[41] has taken an unabated anti-Bloomberg stance, hoping to appeal to New Yorkers upset with the Mayor's overturning of term-limits, and so it appears that the real target of the Robbin's 8 articles on NYC TV was Bloomberg. Robbins portrayed Wierson and the media assets he had been quietly amassing since Bloomberg took office, as part of a concerted effort to use a hazy mixture of campaign, personal, not-for-profit and public sector resources at the Mayor's disposal to manipulate his public image,[42] positioning him for first a presidential run,[43] then later a third-term as Mayor. Robbin's initial article described Wierson as a Bloomberg insider who was given carte-blanche to run the city agency as he saw fit, often eschewing traditional public-service protocols.
In a Fall 2009 Village Voice cover story, Robbins profiled Wierson and his close relationship with not only Bloomberg but other wealthy businessmen, royalty, and politicians, describing Wierson as "a tall man with a broad jaw, who wears his hair fashionably slicked back" and his wife, Fabiana Wierson, as "an attractive blond from Brazil." The author was critical of Wierson's close business ties to New York billionaire and real estate tycoon Leon Charney, as well as Wierson's relationship with Monaco's Prince Albert II. Robbins found the small fine that Wierson paid to the City's Conflicts Board to settle the issue as the "...latest episode of justice in the Bloomberg era."[44]
Academia
Wierson is an adjunct professor of business at the MBA program at Metropolitan College of New York (formerly known as Audrey Cohen College) lecturing on the business of media and television.
Channel Productions
Wierson is one of the Executive Producers in a film and television production company Channel Productions. The film arm of the company, Channel Production Films, produced the feature documentary film "Back Door Channels: The Price of Peace"[45] which will be one of the opening night films of the 2010 Middle East International Film Festival, since re-branded as the Abu Dhabi Film Festival. Due to a special request from the Monte-Carlo Television Festival in Monaco, an early cut of the movie was shown in Monaco in 2009 to a private audience including Prince Albert. In June 2011, Fisher Klingenstein Films announced that it had acquired worldwide rights to "Back Door Channels: The Price of Peace" and laid out plans for a platform release in New York City on Sept. 16, 2011, followed by openings in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Cleveland, Boston and Philadelphia.[46] The film deals with the 1979 Peace Treaty between Israel and Egypt and the unlikely circumstances and behind-the scenes jockeying that led to its coming to fruition.[47] The film features former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, former Secretary-General of the U.N. Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Dr. Henry Kissinger, the former U.S. Secretary of State and CNN's Wolf Blitzer, among many other name-brand international statesmen and politicians.
Luanda Fashion Center
As of 2011, it was reported that Wierson was arranging financing in an effort to make a sizable investment in the African apparel and retail sectors, most notably in Angola.[48][49][50] Luanda Fashion Center was acquired by the Brazilian retailer, Morena Rosa Group in 2014.[51]
Personal life
Wierson is married to Fabiana Mesquita-Wierson, a former executive at Bloomberg, LP. They have one daughter.[52]
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Arick Wierson |
References
- ↑ http://www.mediabistro.com/articles/details.asp?aID=9587&
- 1 2 “Big Apple media chief promoted” Broadcasting & Cable, Feb 7, 2005
- ↑ "Thanks to the media-mogul-turned-mayor, New York City is a bigger star than ever". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved 2006-10-23.
- ↑ http://www.channelproductionfilms.com
- ↑ http://www.platinaline.sapo.ao/index.php/novidades/item/4283-modelos-que-vestem-tamanho-grande-desfilam-na-luanda-fashion-center
- ↑ http://ticketing.abudhabifilmfestival.ae/eng/film.aspx?ID=2148
- ↑ http://www.festivaltvmontecarlo.spoilersfrance.com/home.php?page=news1
- ↑ http://variety.com/2010/film/reviews/back-door-channels-the-price-of-peace-1117944010/
- ↑ http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/back-door-channels-the-price-of-peace-to-air-on-public-television-nationwide-beginning-january-2012-131158368.html
- ↑ http://www.steamfeed.com/bdc-the-price-of-peace-by-channel-production-films-won-a-new-york-emmy-awards-for-best-documentary/
- ↑ LA Times, “City TV dons stilettos and vinyl” A-16, 05-28-07
- ↑ 2008 NY NATAS Emmy Press Release
- ↑ 2009 NY Natas Official Emmy Winners Press Release
- ↑ New York Times, “New From City Hall, TV Worth Watching” Jul 14, 2003
- ↑ "Young Guns Running the City's TV Network". Downtown Express. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
- ↑ NY Times, “One Television Station, and Countless Hours, Devoted to Pulse of New York Life” by Winnie Hu, May 22, 2006
- ↑ List of Notable Georgetown University Alumni.
- ↑ http://www.eco.unicamp.br/teses/mest_economia.html
- ↑ Media Bistro Interviews NYC TV General Manager Arick Wierson
- ↑ http://digitalcontentproducer.com/mag/video_civil_service_television/
- ↑ Steinhauer, Jennifer (2003-07-14). "New From City Hall, TV Worth Watching". New York Times. Retrieved 2003-09-18.
- ↑ “Run the Other Way” By Bill Hillsman (Simon and Schuster, 2002)
- ↑ http://www.portaldatelevisao.net/2010/08/e-os-candidatos-vice-voces-consideram.html
- ↑ "Mayor michael r. bloomberg announces merger of wnye-tv and wnye-fm with nyc tv". Mayor's Office, City of New York. Retrieved 2005-01-30.
- ↑ Gothamist: “NYC TV - Love It or Hate It” 22 May 2006
- ↑ Hu, Winnie (2006-05-22). "One Television Station, and Countless Hours, Devoted to Pulse of New York Life". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-04-25.
- ↑ NEW YORK TIMES, "One Television Station, and Countless Hours, Devoted to Pulse of New York Life" filed by Winnie Hu, 5.22.06
- ↑ Variety, "NYC TV shows to WNBC" Tue., Aug. 15, 2006, Addie Morfoot.
- ↑ NY Times, W. Hu, May 22, 2006
- ↑ BY MAYOR MICHAEL R. BLOOMBERG ON THE RESIGNATION OF NYC MEDIA GROUP PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MANAGER ARICK WIERSON, PR- 187-09, April 28, 2009
- ↑ The New York Times: http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2009/04/28/nyregion/wierson-190.jpg&imgrefurl=http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/tag/news-media/&usg=__3QqAJQtSRVXz9UrLysZd9d5NyjA=&h=241&w=190&sz=13&hl=pt-BR&start=5&um=1&tbnid=7jR0GxiyYaziMM:&tbnh=110&tbnw=87&prev=/images%3Fq%3Darick%2Bwierson%26hl%3Dpt-BR%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26hs%3D2gd%26sa%3DN%26um%3D1
- ↑ KEXP COMING TO 91.5 FM IN NY
- ↑ Air Raid: a new kid comes to town as Seattle’s indie-loving KEXP moves onto city-controlled airwaves
- ↑ New York City Upgrades Radio Transmitter, Government Technology News
- ↑ "Municipal Television – A Clash Of Vision". Gotham Gazette. Archived from the original on 29 October 2006. Retrieved 2006-10-18.
- ↑ "Brewer Critical Of NYC-TV's Coverage". NY Sun. Retrieved 2006-09-16.
- ↑ Minutes from NYC Council Committee on Technology in Government, 4.14.2010
- ↑ http://www.villagevoice.com/2008-10-22/columns/michael-bloomberg-s-velvet-coup/
- ↑ http://www.villagevoice.com/2009-08-04/news/inside-the-mayor-s-studio-nyc-tv-and-the-secrets-of-new-york
- ↑ Village Voice Fires Wayne Barrett, Tom Robbins http://www.mediabistro.com/fishbowlny/tom-robbins-comments-on-leaving-the-village-voice_b24868?c=rss
- ↑ Clifford, Stephanie (2008-12-31). "Village Voice Lays Off Nat Hentoff and 2 Others". The New York Times.
- ↑ Katz, Celeste (2009-11-28). "Mayor Bloomberg spent $102M on campaign to win third term - or $175 per vote". Daily News (New York).
- ↑ http://www.villagevoice.com/2010-05-04/columns/nyc-life-bloomberg-business-trips/
- ↑ http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/archives/2010/01/bloombergs_nyc-.php
- ↑ http://tvfestival.net/Pressreleaseuk.pdf
- ↑ McNary, Dave (2011-06-21). "'Peace' doc roll out set". Variety.
- ↑ http://www.4rfv.co.uk/industrynews.asp?id=90091
- ↑ http://mulher.sapo.ao/moda-beleza/tendencias-novidades/atelier-xl-uma-nova-solucao-163644-0.html
- ↑ http://www.opais.net/pt/revista/?det=24241&id=1722&mid=
- ↑ https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10150320577537549&set=vb.214593635256323&type=3&permPage=1
- ↑ pt:Morena Rosa Group
- ↑ Arick Wierson Official Bio at IMDB