
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This week’s podcast is a conversation with my former Atlanta neighbor, Steve Chamberlain, a former media executive whose career has intersected with some of the biggest brands and celebrities in entertainment history.
I originally wanted to talk to Steve because of his experience leading the go-to-market plan of The Beatles Anthology, one of the most commercially successful recording projects of all-time. It was to be the follow-up episode to last week’s interview with Peter Doggett, author of 'You Never Give Me Your Money: The Beatles After the Break Up'.
And while Steve and I discussed this at length, I found his experience as an executive vice president at Turner Broadcasting in the 1980s even more interesting. Working directly for Ted Turner, Steve’s responsibilities included everything from home video to cable syndication and World Championship Wrestling. He shares a great story about utilizing 1-900 telephone numbers to monetize wrestlers' smack talk. It’s a fun insight into the early days of a pre-Internet media “start-up.”
Steve oversaw the 50th Anniversary celebrations for both Gone With the Wind and Casablanca, then—after Turner— went on to captain the release of Frank Sinatra’s Duets, which eventually led to his work with the Fab Four.
Check it out here or wherever you get your podcast love.
✍️ Please rate and review Reasonably Happy HERE (DO IT!) ✍️
📚 Read Paul’s Substack newsletter HERE 📚
#music #movies #film #marketing #beatles #entertainment #TedTurner #wrestling #ricflair
By Paul Ollinger4.9
437437 ratings
This week’s podcast is a conversation with my former Atlanta neighbor, Steve Chamberlain, a former media executive whose career has intersected with some of the biggest brands and celebrities in entertainment history.
I originally wanted to talk to Steve because of his experience leading the go-to-market plan of The Beatles Anthology, one of the most commercially successful recording projects of all-time. It was to be the follow-up episode to last week’s interview with Peter Doggett, author of 'You Never Give Me Your Money: The Beatles After the Break Up'.
And while Steve and I discussed this at length, I found his experience as an executive vice president at Turner Broadcasting in the 1980s even more interesting. Working directly for Ted Turner, Steve’s responsibilities included everything from home video to cable syndication and World Championship Wrestling. He shares a great story about utilizing 1-900 telephone numbers to monetize wrestlers' smack talk. It’s a fun insight into the early days of a pre-Internet media “start-up.”
Steve oversaw the 50th Anniversary celebrations for both Gone With the Wind and Casablanca, then—after Turner— went on to captain the release of Frank Sinatra’s Duets, which eventually led to his work with the Fab Four.
Check it out here or wherever you get your podcast love.
✍️ Please rate and review Reasonably Happy HERE (DO IT!) ✍️
📚 Read Paul’s Substack newsletter HERE 📚
#music #movies #film #marketing #beatles #entertainment #TedTurner #wrestling #ricflair

32,246 Listeners

43,687 Listeners

3,565 Listeners

2,000 Listeners

1,955 Listeners

1,312 Listeners

1,479 Listeners

5,467 Listeners

5,156 Listeners

694 Listeners

3,081 Listeners

14,324 Listeners

357 Listeners

989 Listeners

8,482 Listeners