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Of Course Megyn Kelly Gets The Full $30 Million From NBC – Explained

Megyn Kelly has now parted ways with NBC as that contract to do shows with them didn’t quite work – and she’s getting the full value of the 3 year contract to leave too, another $30 million for not working there. The original contract was an eye popping $69 million which is one thing but given that the contract’s about half way through and she’s leaving she still gets that other half of the loot – that $30 million.

There will be those upset with this, why such payments for failure? One reason is that Megyn’s working in an industry where failure can happen:

[perfectpullquote align=”full” bordertop=”false” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]Kelly is halfway through a three-year contract worth a total of $69 million — an eye-popping sum even by the inflated standards of television news.
Bowing to the terms of the contract, NBC will pay Kelly the remaining sum of money, believed to total about $30 million, two of the sources said.[/perfectpullquote]

Well, why is this? When the thought that the contract was going to end first came up a few months back we pointed out why there are these “failure payments“:

Two or three money failures is enough to kill any career as a movie star, three failed albums will kill a recording contract. That’s how we know that Hollywood and the music biz are thoroughly capitalist businesses. TV perhaps not quite so much in image but as we can see not meeting ratings expectations does lead to a defenestration.

So, what happens in contract negotiations? You want to tempt me away from my studio, label or channel/network? Sure, you’re going to have to pay me more than I’m getting. But you’ve also got to give me that cushion. What I would have made if I’d not taken that risk of leaving where I’m good to move up to where I might be incompetent. And that’s why pay offs in contracts that don’t work out.

Because the payoffs were written into the original contract so as to assuage if the step up didn’t work out. As Karl Marx pointed out, action creates its own reaction. That kill the failures attitude of a truly vicious industry has created that cushion of the leaving payment in the event of failure. And without such assuagement people wouldn’t take the risk of the move upwards in the first place.

The Peter Principle, the world just makes more sense when we assume it’s true. As here – Megyn Kelly’s getting $30 million because she’s not very good at this higher level job. And $30 million was the contract price of getting her to take the risk to find that out. Capitalism red in tooth and claw that is.

The reason Megyn Kelly’s getting $30 million for failure from NBC is because it was always likely that Megyn Kelly would fail at NBC.

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Matt Ryan
Matt Ryan
5 years ago

So why don’t we all get a big chunk of cash for changing jobs and then failing? It’s possible for 2/3 failures to bugger the career of everyone after all.

Presumably she can’t be Premier League as she failed at NBC – so she must be First or Second Division (or Formula 2 or Formula 3 if you prefer). That excludes her from the argument that the top people get all the money I’d propose.

BarksintheCountry
BarksintheCountry
5 years ago
Reply to  Matt Ryan

She may star, however, at rugby.

literate3
literate3
5 years ago
Reply to  Matt Ryan

Because NBC were willing to pay $69m for the *chance* that she would succeed. Prresumably if there had been a cast-iron guarantee that she would succeed they would have paid $200m.
And who complains about the pay packets for FTSE100 CEOs? Might it be the media stars?

Matt Ryan
Matt Ryan
5 years ago
Reply to  literate3

Still doesn’t answer my question. Why wouldn’t a potential employer pay me £50k or £100k on the off-chance I’d succeed in their vacancy?

timworstall
timworstall
5 years ago
Reply to  Matt Ryan

If they’ve got to tempt you away from another well paid job to have a go then they probably would.

Matt Ryan
Matt Ryan
5 years ago
Reply to  timworstall

Be an interesting exercise to survey your readership to see just how often this happens. Statistically, there must be a number high achievers on here who might have been the beneficiary of such an inducement. For me, despite working in a set of relatively senior technical positions in various companies (including some large one’s) over the last 25 years, I’ve never had any sort of inducement offered to move jobs. This is despite vacancies (for roles I’ve moved on from) being advertised for over a year without anyone to fill them. Of course, I might be just a Vauxhall Conference… Read more »

timworstall
timworstall
5 years ago
Reply to  Matt Ryan

Investment banking used to be known for guaranteed bonuses etc, much the same thing. Golden Handshakes are not unknown….

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