Who is ceo at music & arts

Who is ceo at music & arts
Show captionSony Music has announced Vanessa Picken as the new Australian chair and chief executive, replacing Denis Handlin after he left the role 12 months ago. Photograph: Supplied

Australian arts in focus

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Who is ceo at music & arts
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Who is ceo at music & arts
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Who is ceo at music & arts
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Who is ceo at music & arts
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Wed 15 Jun 2022 03.07 BST

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Global multinational Sony Music Entertainment has announced the new head of its Australian operations, almost one year to the day after its Australian chief executive of 25 years, Denis Handlin, suddenly left under a cloud of allegations about a toxic workplace culture under his leadership.

On Wednesday, Sony’s head office in New York announced that Los Angeles-based Australian Vanessa Picken would take over the chair and chief executive roles of Sony Music Entertainment Australia and New Zealand.

In a statement, Sony chairman, Rob Stringer, said Picken would return to Australia and begin her new role in September, overseeing all operations, artist signings, marketing and business partnerships for the company.

Former Sony Music Australia boss Denis Handlin stripped of third award over toxic workplace culture allegations

Picken is the managing director of the independent global music company PIAS in California, playing a key role in the discovery and development of a number of artists including the triple BRIT award-winning artist Arlo Parks.

In a statement, Picken said she looked forward to taking the company “into a transformative next chapter”.

Sony Music Australia has been leaderless from almost 12 months after Handlin’s sudden departure on 21 June 2021, the same day Guardian Australia published an extensive investigation into allegations by former employees of workplace sexual harassment, intimidating behaviour, alcohol abuse and gender discrimination spanning more than two decades under Handlin’s leadership.

None of the former Sony employees Guardian Australia spoke to made any allegations of sexual harassment against Handlin himself, although they were critical of the workplace culture at the company while Handlin was chief executive.

The New York office, which had been aware of problems with Handlin’s management style since the late 1990s, promised it would conduct a full investigation and issued a statement at the time saying harassment, bullying and other inappropriate behaviour would not be tolerated by the company.

The results of the investigation have not been released.

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Topics

  • Music
  • Australian arts in focus
  • Sony
  • Music industry
  • #MeToo movement

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Robert Kyncl, chief business officer for YouTube, speaks during a keynote address at the 2016 CES trade show in Las Vegas, Nevada January 7, 2016. REUTERS/Steve Marcus

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Sept 21 (Reuters) - Warner Music Group Corp (WMG.O) on Wednesday named Robert Kyncl as its chief executive officer, handing the reins to the outgoing YouTube business head as the record label looks to diversify its revenue streams.

Kyncl will take over from Warner Music's longest-tenured Chief Executive Steve Cooper, who is set to leave the media company by the end of next year.

Kyncl, who will start in his new role from Jan. 1, announced his resignation from the Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O) unit last month after having spent 12 years at YouTube. Before that, he was vice president of content at Netflix Inc (NFLX.O).

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The move comes at a time when the music industry is looking for growth beyond streaming by signing deals with ad-supported social media platforms such as TikTok and YouTube.

Having enjoyed a boom in revenue during the pandemic-induced lockdowns, the sector faces risks from surging inflation that has started pinching consumers' wallets.

Shares of Warner Music, the label behind artists such Ed Sheeran, Lizzo and Dua Lipa, have declined 40% this year and are trading around their 2020 initial public offering price.

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Reporting by Yuvraj Malik in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.