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‘The Movie Business Is Not Over,’ Super Agent Ari Emanuel Says

Things certainly look rough for movie theaters these days, with ticket sales still well off their pre-pandemic highs.

CENTURY CITY, CALIFORNIA - MARCH
CENTURY CITY, CALIFORNIA - MARCH

Things certainly look rough for movie theaters these days, with ticket sales still well off their pre-pandemic highs and one of the largest chains contemplating a bankruptcy filing.

But Ari Emanuel, co-founder of one of the world’s largest talent agencies, strongly disagrees with folks who think cinemas will disappear.

“Anybody that says to you, and I won’t name names, that the movie business is over are fools,” Emanuel said in a recent appearance on “The David Rubenstein Show: Peer-to-Peer Conversations” on Bloomberg TV. “The movie business is not over,” he said. “It is just an expanding world.”

Ari EmanuelPhotographer: Amy Sussman/Getty Images
Ari EmanuelPhotographer: Amy Sussman/Getty Images

Emanuel, the 61-year-old chief executive officer of Endeavor Group Holdings, has diversified his company over the years, taking it from its roots representing Hollywood actors, writers and directors, and adding sports stars, ownership of live events and more recently, a sports-betting technology company. Endeavor is projecting operating profits of at least $1.13 billion on sales of $5.24 billion this year.

Emanuel said he’s been guided for years by George Gilder’s 1990 book “Life After Television,” which argued that the computer age would expand the ways in which people consume and interact with content. Cinemas have survived challenges from broadcast TV, cable and DVDs, Emanuel said. Now streaming video is the perceived threat.

“The theatrical business is as important as it’s ever been,” he said. “Is it gonna be a $9.3 billion business? No, maybe it’ll be an $8 billion business. I’m not sure. But it’s not going away.”

Comscore Inc., which collects data on cinema ticket sales, projects the domestic movie theater industry will end this year with revenue of $7.5 billion, still down 37% from 2018’s record of $11.9 billion.

Ariel Emanuel, Endeavor CEO and founder, says the movie and entertainment industry isn’t going away, it just keeps expanding. He appears on “The David RubensteinShow: Peer-to-Peer Conversations.” This was recorded Aug. 12 in New York City.
Ariel Emanuel, Endeavor CEO and founder, says the movie and entertainment industry isn’t going away, it just keeps expanding. He appears on “The David RubensteinShow: Peer-to-Peer Conversations.” This was recorded Aug. 12 in New York City.

A fitness buff who gets up before dawn for workouts, an ice bath and meditation, Emanuel said he’s also come to terms with the super-aggressive character, Ari Gold, which was modeled after him in the HBO series “Entourage.”

“I didn’t like it at the beginning,” he said. “There were some things that were for sure not true and then there were some things that I hated seeing that were true.” 

Now, however, he’s realized the benefits of the exposure. “It’s for sure opened a lot of doors.”

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