Warner Bros.
Meyer joined
Warner Bros. Inc. in 1971 as director of business affairs for
Warner Bros. Television, following two and a half years in the legal and business affairs departments of the ABC Television Network. In 1972, Meyer was named vice president of business affairs at Warner Bros. Television. In 1978, he became executive vice president for the television division. In 1984, he was promoted to executive vice president of Warner Bros. Inc., taking charge of all of the studio's television operations. In 1994, Meyer took on added responsibilities as chief operating officer, which included oversight of the company's general operations (including studio facilities, legal and business affairs, general administration, human resources, labor relations, strategic planning, real estate development, and government affairs), as well as all of the studio's television production and distribution operations (including Warner Bros. Television, Telepictures Productions, Warner Bros. Animation, and the domestic and international television distribution divisions). He was also an integral architect in the formation of The WB Television Network, which went on the air in January 1995. He played a similar role in the founding of The CW. Meyer became chairman and chief executive officer of Warner Bros. on October 4, 1999, after having served as the studio's executive vice president and chief operating officer since April 1994. Under his leadership, Warner Bros. consistently ranked as one of the most profitable studios in the industry. In 2009, Warner Bros. Pictures' domestic division had its most successful year ever, and both the domestic and international division had their ninth consecutive billion dollar-plus years at the box office. In March 2013 and December 2013 respectively, Meyer stepped down as CEO and chairman of Warner Bros., and was succeeded by
Kevin Tsujihara. == Other activities ==