Current:Home > ContactOliver James Montgomery-If you love film, you should be worried about what's going on at Turner Classic Movies -Elevate Capital Network
Oliver James Montgomery-If you love film, you should be worried about what's going on at Turner Classic Movies
Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-11 01:26:28
When the dismissal was announced recently of most of the people who have Oliver James Montgomeryguided Turner Classic Movies brilliantly for years — the programmers, the producers of special material, even the executives who plan the TCM film festivals and party cruises — many people in Hollywood reacted like there'd been a death in the family. Because, to people who really love movies, that's what the news felt like.
The more you love film, the more you're likely to love TCM. It presents a wider variety of movies, across film's century-plus history, than any other network or streaming service. Thanks to its knowledgeable and enthusiastic co-hosts, it puts those films into context. It creates a sense of community and enthusiasm among its viewers, which is invaluable. TCM doesn't just present movies, it curates them. It explains why some films and performances are so good, and why you should watch and value them. And it presents those films, every one of them, unedited, uninterrupted and without commercials.
TV executive and maverick pioneer Ted Turner had many great ideas during his reign back in cable's early days, including launching TBS, the first satellite-transmitted superstation, and creating a cable channel for 24-hour news with CNN. But arguably, Turner Classic Movies is as pure, and as perfect, an idea as Turner ever had.
TCM has been a joy since its launch in 1994, and has never faltered. In my home, it's earned its place as my default channel of choice: When I'm not watching something else, I'm watching TCM. And I've watched it enough to say, with as much authority as I can muster, that of all the channels and streaming services on TV, it's the one that, more than any other, wasn't broke, and didn't need fixing.
Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav, in explaining his TCM changes, has said that, among other things, he wants to have filmmakers appear on TCM to curate and present movies of their choosing. Nothing wrong with that. Except you don't have to replace your current management team to make that happen — and besides, it's already happening. Earlier this year, when Steven Spielberg was promoting his new autobiographical movie The Fabelmans, TCM host Ben Mankiewicz had Spielberg on to select, present and talk about three movies of his choice.
The team that's been running TCM for years has been serving up treats like this with regularity, and with exceptional taste. There are pockets on the schedule for silent movies, for underground films, for film noir, for musicals, and so much more.
And if you stay tuned between movies — which you should — you get even more treats. Salutes of actors by fellow actors. Short features on costume design and the uncomfortable but illuminating history of blackface in the movies. Some films are presented in newly restored form. Others are newly discovered and presented as the gems they are – and TCM occasionally revives and showcases rare live television dramas, too. You can imagine how much I love that.
Zaslav says the TCM channel is on all the time in his office, too, and he's saying all the right things about valuing the curation of film as well as film itself. But Zaslav already has just shut down his overseas equivalent of Turner Classic Movies in the U.K. And he's the guy who, since taking over the reins at Warner Bros. Discovery, already has turned HBO Max into just Max, which makes no sense — devaluing his own HBO brand.
Zaslav's altered that Max streaming service so that, while a link to a TCM sub-menu does appear, it's buried way down in the menu. What's worse, its highlighted TCM movie offerings are almost all of the more recent, filmed in color, variety. It's presenting only a tepid taste of what TCM offers on its own 24-hour cable service. Zaslav also, since becoming CEO, has overseen the rapid, clumsy devaluation of CNN, by making poorly received moves like that Donald Trump town hall. In Zaslav's short time on the job, he's already considerably damaged CNN, one of Turner's more brilliant network ideas. I fear, with Turner Classic Movies, Zaslav is about to weaken another — but I'd love to be proven wrong.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Pregnant 18-year-old who never showed for doctor's appointment now considered missing
- The death toll in a Romania guesthouse blaze rises to 7. The search for missing persons is ongoing
- Photographer Cecil Williams’ vision gives South Carolina its only civil rights museum
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Alabama agency completes review of fatal police shooting in man’s front yard
- Vikings TE T.J. Hockenson out for season after injury to ACL, MCL
- North Dakota Republican leaders call on state rep to resign after slurs to police during DUI stop
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- She died weeks after fleeing the Maui wildfire. Her family fought to have her listed as a victim.
Ranking
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Almcoin Trading Center: Trends in Bitcoin Spot ETFs
- Beyoncé’s Childhood Home Catches Fire on Christmas
- Is this the perfect diet to add to your New Year's resolution? It saves cash, not calories
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Subscription-based health care can deliver medications to your door — but its rise concerns some experts
- Lamar Jackson fires back at broadcaster's hot take about the Ravens
- Widower of metro Phoenix’s ex-top prosecutor suspected of killing 2 women before taking his own life
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
As social media guardrails fade and AI deepfakes go mainstream, experts warn of impact on elections
Bowl game schedule today: Everything to know about college football bowl games on Dec. 26
Manchester United says British billionaire buys minority stake
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Migrant caravan slogs on through southern Mexico with no expectations from a US-Mexico meeting
Wolfgang Schaeuble, German elder statesman and finance minister during euro debt crisis, dies at 81
How Suni Lee Refused to Let Really Scary Kidney Illness Stop Her From Returning For the 2024 Olympics