Merging Media

Ad-sales executives are known for their capacity to wine and dine. But
Amy Carney may be the only one who actually owns a vineyard. Carney, executive
VP of advertiser sales and operations for Sony Pictures Television (SPT), has a
family farm outside of Charlottesville, Va., where she bottles 1,000 cases a
year under her Green Springs Winery label.

Her weekends at the vineyard are a leisurely departure from the hectic
weeks in New York, where she works to move the Culver City, Calif.-based Sony
studio beyond the world of 30-second national barter spots.

In addition to selling SPT's first-run and off-network commercial
inventory, Carney is looking to monetize Sony Pictures Entertainment's
new-media platforms, including video channels on AOL and In Demand Network's
high-definition channel, INHD. Moreover, she is carving out paid-ad campaigns
across many of Sony's entertainment properties and 10-second paid
announcements in such programs as Seinfeld,
Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune.

Growing up with Bozo

Growing up in Pelham, N.Y., Carney was exposed to the TV business early
on. Her father, the late Don Carney, was a director on Bozo the
Clown
and a longtime executive producer and director of Yankees
games on WPIX New York.

“Although I grew up in a control booth, I never really considered
production as a career,” she says. “I did get to mix the Bosco [chocolate
syrup] on the Bozo the Clown show when I was a little
girl. Maybe that is what steered me toward advertising as a career.”

After graduating in 1980 with a degree in business administration and
political science, Carney listened to her father, who saw the makings of a TV
sales executive in her.

She soon landed a job as an assistant at station-rep firm TeleRep. Back
then, TV-ad sales offered Carney few prominent female role models, but she was
confident she had made the right choice. “Watching the account executives
there,” she says, “it didn't take too long for me to figure out that I
could do that, too.”

After 13 years at TeleRep, where she rose to VP/general sales manager,
Carney left in 1994 to be a full-time mother to her two children. Despite four
years out of the business, she landed a spot as VP/general sales manager of CBS
affiliate WTVR Richmond, Va.

“Getting back into the work force after four years off was like riding
a bike,” she says. “The hardest part was, and continues to be, leaving my
kids every day.”

In 1999, media mogul Barry Diller tapped her to be general manager of
online entertainment guide CitySearch. Her tenure was brief, but Carney recalls
the welcome gift that Diller sent her: a crystal disco ball that she hung in
her office.

Converging old and new media

After nearly three years at Univision Online, where she launched a sales
division, Carney left in September 2003 to join SPT, where the convergence of
old and new media is a big priority.

“The merging of the two for me is like the perfect storm,” she says.
“The traditional and new media all coming together in one place makes my job
exciting.”

With studios and networks still feeling their way with new media, SPT
has been particularly cautious about moving forward with a formal digital
strategy, perhaps due to its independent status in Hollywood. But SPT President
Steve Mosko trusts Carney's sense of adaptability. A friend for more than two
decades, he praises her “ability to grasp new situations quickly and make
them work.”

And the uncertainty doesn't faze Carney. “I don't ever remember a
time when this business seemed like it was easy,” she says. “There's
always a new challenge and growth to achieve. It doesn't feel that different
to me.”