Stallone, Katzenberg, Burnett
Go for NBC Knockout
Fri
February 20, 2004 09:04 PM ET
By Steve Gorman / Reuters
LOS ANGELES
(Reuters) - Looking for its next ratings knockout, NBC
has clinched a deal for a boxing reality series developed by
"Survivor" creator Mark Burnett, DreamWorks
co-founder Jeffrey Katzenburg and big-screen "Rocky"
champ Sylvester Stallone.
A spokesman for Mark Burnett
Prods. told Reuters on Friday that after shopping
the project, titled "The Contender," to all
the major networks this week, "we ultimately made a deal
with NBC."
Sources close to the bidding
said NBC agreed to pay $2 million an episode for
the 16-part series, a higher license fee than many first-year
scripted dramas and sitcoms fetch, but that the deal was structured
to allow the network to recover much of the fees.
The Burnett Prods. spokesman
said the series, planned for a debut sometime next season, would
begin casting on Monday for several aspiring pugilists
to compete on the show as they slug their way through training
and qualifying bouts to a big-time title shot.
Stallone, who gained fame
in the 1976 film "Rocky" as the small-time
boxer who beats the odds to go the distance with the world's
heavyweight champion, will play a central role in "The
Contender" as a kind of mentor to the young boxers.
He also will serve as executive
producer with Katzenberg and Burnett, the producer
behind such reality shows as the hit franchise "Survivor"
on CBS and "The Apprentice" with real
estate tycoon Donald Trump on NBC.
But the series is not being linked
with "Rocky," in part because Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Inc. controls rights to that franchise.
Details of the program remained
sketchy, but the Burnett Prods. spokesman said the series
is envisioned as an unscripted drama that chronicles the struggle
of real-life boxers to make a name for themselves rather
than as an athletic competition.
There was no official comment
from the General Electric Co.-owned network.
But sources close to the negotiations
said all four major networks bid on the project, with NBC
winning out. NBC, however, negotiated barter terms that
would let it potentially recoup nearly half the license fee,
the sources said.
Under those terms, producers
could buy a certain amount of advertising units for "The
Contender" from NBC and sell them to product
sponsors, with NBC pocketing a rebate, they said.
The Hollywood trade
paper Daily Variety reported earlier this week that
Burnett, Katzenberg and Stallone also planned
to launch their own independent boxing federation in
conjunction with the show. But sources said that aspect of the
venture remains in its formative stages and was not part of
the NBC deal.
Now this is good news!
- Craig Zablo