Ted Turner Part 1: Maverick in the Making
Robert Edward “Ted” Turner III is an entrepreneur known for the Turner Broadcasting System, which birthed the CNN, TBS, and TNT cable channels. Everyone in Atlanta knows of Turner, but I decided to buy his autobiography, Call Me Ted, after reading about his financing deal for MGM/UA in the biography of Kirk Kerkorian.
Turner was born in 1938 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He was sent to boarding school when he was four years old, when his father joined the Navy and his younger sister Mary Jean and mother joined his father on base. Ted’s father was a complicated man. He moved the family to Savannah, Georgia, when he acquired a small billboard company in 1947. He enrolled Ted in The McCallie School, then a Christian military academy in Tennessee. At age twelve, Ted began working 42-and-a-half hours a week at his father’s company in the summers, usually doing manual labor with outside crews.
Growing up in Savannah, Turner learned to sail by joining his dad on sailing trips. His love for sailing was the deciding factor in attending Brown University, which is located on Narragansett Bay in Providence, Rhode Island. After his freshman year, his parents divorced, and his mother and sister moved back to Cincinnati. After Turner lost a bet and failed to honor a commitment to his father, his father stopped giving him a weekly $5 allowance. Frustrated about the situation with his father, he fell in with the wrong crowd and got suspended for the rest of the school year. To fill his time, he joined the Coast Guard as a reservist until he could return to Brown the following semester. Then, after declaring classics as his major, Ted had a nasty falling out with his father, who refused to pay his tuition any longer. He was forced to leave Brown.
Turner briefly moved to the Miami area but was broke, so he started working for his dad’s company, Turner Advertising Company, in 1959. At 21, Turner married Judy Nye, a fellow sailing enthusiast he’d dated long distance. A few months later, his sister Mary Jean died; she was just 17.
Turner moved to Macon, Georgia, with his new bride to take over a small billboard company his dad had acquired. At just 21, Turner ran the company, and within two years he’d doubled its revenue. His marriage with Judy was rocky, but they welcomed a daughter, Laura, in 1961.
In 1962, Ted’s father made a deal with an entrepreneur from Minnesota to purchase General Outdoor Inc., a larger billboard company based in Atlanta. The $4 million deal was financed with debt, and Ted’s father split the acquired assets with the other entrepreneur. Ted moved to Atlanta to help run the leasing department of the acquired company; his family stayed in Macon.
After closing the deal, the fear of losing everything because of the debt load consumed the elder Turner. His behavior became erratic, and he checked into rehab. One day he announced he was selling a big part of the company to the Minnesota billboard entrepreneur, which shocked Ted because it had only been a few months since the closing. A few days later, in March 1963, the elder Turner committed suicide.
Ted was in shock, but he had to pick up the pieces. He was the executor of his father’s estate. The deal to sell General Outdoors assets was signed the day before his father died. It was an informal handwritten note, but it was binding. Turner started renewing billboard leases with General Outdoors customers in the name of his Macon company, which reduced the value of General Outdoor assets being acquired. The buyer was angry and offered to pay $200,000 to have all leases returned, or Turner could pay him $200,000 to retain all the General Outdoor assets. Turner picked the latter but didn’t cash; he paid using his company stock. Cash was still an issue because the $600,000 first payment on the General Outdoors debt was coming due. Turner went into fire-sale mode and sold his father’s 1,000-acre plantation and commercial real estate to raise the funds. He kept his father’s company intact.
Turner was now ready to start rebuilding his family’s empire, but first he’d have to resolve his personal troubles.
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