Gulf+Western
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Gulf and Western Industries, Inc., for a number of years known as Gulf+Western, was an American conglomerate.
Gulf and Western's prosaic origins date to a manufacturer named Michigan Bumper Co. founded in 1934, though Charles Bluhdorn treated his 1958 takeover of what was then Michigan Plating & Stamping as its "founding" for the purpose of later anniversaries.
Under Bluhdorn the company diversified widely, leaving behind things like stamping metal bumpers not only for communications properties like Paramount Pictures and Simon and Schuster but clothing (Kayser-Roth, which happened to own the Miss Universe pageant because it had bought Pacific Mills, which had invented the pageant to sell its Catalina brand of swimsuits), cigars, zinc mines, auto parts, Madison Square Garden, and Caribbean sugar plantations. The company also purchased Desilu Productions from Lucille Ball in 1967, which included most of Ball's television product, as well as such properties as Star Trek and Mission: Impossible. (It would make millions on both series over the following decades with Star Trek's various hit follow-up TV projects and films, beginning in the late 1970s, as well as the hit Mission: Impossible theatrical remake in the 1990s and its sequels.)
In 1983 Bluhdorn died on a plane en route home from the sugar plantation to New York headquarters, and the board bypassed president David Judelson and named senior vice president Martin S. Davis, who had come up through Paramount Pictures, as the new Chief Executive Officer. Davis slimmed down the company's wilder diversifications and focussed it on communications. In 1989 he renamed Gulf+Western as Paramount Communications, and sold all of its non-entertainment and non-publishing assets.
It was under this name that the company was taken over by Viacom. Davis was named a member of the board of National Amusements, which controlled Viacom, but ceased to manage the company.
Viacom split into two companies in 2006, one retaining the Viacom name (which continues to own Paramount Pictures and music publishing company Famous Music), while another was named CBS Corporation (which now controls Paramount Television, which was renamed CBS Paramount Television, and Simon & Schuster). Together, these two companies own many of the former media assets of Gulf+Western today.
Another communications company, Western Gulf Media, was incorporated in Texas in 1994. This media company owns internet publications and on-line radio streams. It has no relationship with the former communications group mentioned above.
[edit] In Popular Culture
The Talking Heads song "Puzzling Evidence" which is about the commercialization of America mentions the conglomerate in the line "With your Gulf and Western and your Mastercard, got what you wanted and lost what you had".
In Mel Brooks 1976 film, Silent Movie, the main characters make a colorized silent film to prevent Engulf & Devour (a parody of Gulf+Western) from taking over their company. This was in reference to the real Gulf+Western takeover of Paramount Pictures in 1966.