Richmond Times - Dispatch
Ted Turner was uncharacteristically understated yesterday as he departed Time Warner Inc.
The media conglomerate swallowed his cable network company and slowly sidelined him as a mover and shaker in the businesses he helped to create.
The CNN founder told Time Warner shareholders at their annual meeting he regrets not being able to do more for them.
"I just wish the last five years I could have made a bigger contribution," Turner said. "I hung in there as long as I could. I've done my best."
With that, he borrowed newscaster Edward R. Murrow's famous sign- off, said "Good night and good luck" and left the Georgia World Congress Center after not standing for re-election to Time Warner's board of directors.
A video tribute to Turner was played at the meeting in Atlanta, and later former CNN chief Tom Johnson offered a moving personal tribute, though Turner had left the meeting.
"How lucky we are to have known and still know one of the most remarkable men in world history," Johnson said of Turner. Richard Parsons, Time Warner's chairman and CEO, promised to get Turner a copy of Johnson's remarks.
Turner became a director of Time Warner in 1996 when the media conglomerate bought his cable networks company, Turner Broadcasting Systems.
In 2003, Turner resigned as vice chairman of what was then known as AOL Time Warner Inc. Then, this year, he said he wouldn't seek re- election to the board of what is now known as Time Warner. In addition to Virginia-based AOL, Time Warner owns Warner Bros., HBO, a large cable TV operator and Time Inc., a major magazine publisher.
Turner, 67, now focuses mostly on philanthropic efforts. He is chairman of the United Nations Foundation, which he started with a $1 billion pledge to the agency in 1997, and co-chairs the Nuclear Threat Initiative with former U.S. Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia. He also owns a restaurant chain that serves bison meat.
At the meeting, shareholders elected 11 other directors to another term, approved the appointment of the company's independent auditors and approved a stock incentive plan.
Shareholder proposals to separate the roles of the chairman and CEO and to institute a code of vendor conduct were rejected, though a shareholder proposal seeking a simple majority voting structure was approved.
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO
(c) 2006 Richmond Times - Dispatch. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.
Print this Article