During his tenure at NYC Media working under New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, Wierson led the flagship NYC TV station to 160 Emmy nominations, while personally being nominated on 29 different occasions for the role of Executive Producer in the creation of various programs. To date he has won five Emmy awards for his role as the Executive Producer of the nationally syndicated
Secrets of New York as well one Emmy for his role as Executive Producer of the feature documentary film "
Back Door Channels: The Price of Peace" which featured former U.S. President
Jimmy Carter, former Secretary-General of the U.N.
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Dr.
Henry Kissinger, the former U.S. Secretary of State and CNN's
Wolf Blitzer, among other notables. The film deals with the 1979 Peace Treaty between Israel and Egypt and the unlikely circumstances and behind-the scenes jockeying that led to its coming to fruition. In 2009, New York City Mayor
Michael Bloomberg announced that Wierson was returning to the private sector.
Broadcasting & Cable Magazine described Wierson as "one of the most important people in New York media". At his time at NYC TV, Wierson led the network to 42 NY Emmy Awards and over 100 National Telly Cable Awards. In addition to
Secrets of New York, Wierson played a role in the creation of many of the network's original series' productions including
$9.99,
Eat Out NY,
New York 360*, and
The Bridge. In 2008, Wierson led NYC TV's digital media group to its first-ever
Webby nominations. At NYC Media Group (since rebranded as
NYC Media), Wierson was vocal critic of traditional public broadcasting for second-tier stations in heavily saturated markets like New York City. In 2005, Wierson disbanded the station's long-held PBS status, enabling NYC TV's original shows to take over prime-time "It was smart not to be the 'fifth channel,' said Dalton Delan, executive vice president of WETA in Washington and producer of the
PBS News Hour. You don't want to be the triple-A team. You want to find a new ballpark where you can be No. 1." In August 2006, Wierson, Unger and Bloomberg appeared in the NBC studios, joined WNBC General Manager Francis X. Comerford and former NBC Station Group President Jay Ireland in announcing a partnership between NYC TV and NBC flagship station WNBC Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who began Bloomberg Television as part of his media empire, knew better than most the value of a city television station, his aides said." The announcement was seen as an aggressive move by the New York City Indie music community, causing broadcaster
WFUV to take public on-air swipes at Wierson for having encroached on their market. On March 5, 2009, Wierson, along with NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg, announced that WNYE, after being in Brooklyn since 1938, was moving its radio broadcast operations to Manhattan, and was unveiling a new digital transmitter, capable of transmitting multiple in-band
HD radio streams. Over the years that Wierson was at the helm of New York City's media assets, he was known to spar with several public officials who were critical of the Bloomberg Administration. New York City Councilwoman
Gale Brewer, who at the time represented Manhattan's
Upper West Side on the City Council and had oversight over telecommunications and technology (she is now the Manhattan Borough President), regularly criticized the Bloomberg media and communications operation as being "too flashy" with its focus on fashion, celebrity, and other topics she viewed as inconsistent with the mission of the network. Wierson countered Brewer in sworn Council testimony that "television is meant to be watched." While at NYC Media, Wierson also taught as an adjunct professor of business at the
MBA program at Metropolitan College of New York (formerly known as
Audrey Cohen College) lecturing on the business of media and television. In 2009, Mayor Bloomberg announced Wierson was stepping down as President of NYC Media Group, saying "Over the past seven years, Arick Wierson and his team transformed NYC TV into one of the nation's best television stations. After helping build the station virtually from scratch, Arick oversaw the merger of NYC TV with
WNYE-TV and
WNYE (FM), creating the largest local media group in New York that now reaches hundreds of thousands of people every day. NYC TV's 160 New York Emmy nominations and 42 awards serve as a testament to Arick's vision, tenacity, and leadership and to the excellence of the media group he was instrumental in creating. I have no doubt that Arick's entrepreneurial and creative talents, which helped him achieve great things at NYC TV will serve him well as he rejoins the private sector..."
The New York Times later revealed that Wierson had been quietly producing a documentary film starring former U.S. President Jimmy Carter "
Back Door Channels: The Price of Peace" which later opened in
Monte-Carlo and
Abu Dhabi. ==Business activities in Angola==