Scamfluencers - Jack Abramoff: Bringing Down the House Part 2
Episode Date: September 16, 2024Jack Abramoff has schemed his way to the top of right-wing politics, skimming off the top of every lobbying deal he makes. But when burned clients expose his scam to Congress, Jack is forced ...to answer to elected officials who have actually stuck to their convictions. He still considers himself a hero, even as his circle of DC power players gets taken down. And even a stint behind bars can’t stop Jack’s impulsive need to lie, cheat, and steal, even as he tries to stage a comeback tour.Listen to Scamfluencers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen early and ad-free on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/scamfluencers/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to scamfluencers early and ad-free right now.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or Apple podcasts. [♪THEME MUSIC PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WONDERY PLUS THEME SONG PLAYING—WON a homegrown freak that we just love. I mean, I think it's just because Canada's so small,
so anytime we get anything, we're like,
hey, that's one of us.
It is really hard to make it as a Canadian,
especially in the arts,
and there's always a sense of national pride
when someone becomes famous.
Yeah, I love all Canadian scammers, murderers,
philanderers, whatever you got.
Well, today, I'm gonna to tell you about a scammer
you may not have heard of, but unfortunately,
he has made a big impact on both sides of the border.
It's June 1998, and Garth Drabinski is sitting in the audience
at New York's Radio City Music Hall.
Garth is a 49-year-old theater producer from Toronto. He has a broad
frame, floppy brown hair, and wire-rimmed glasses. And he's here for the Tony Awards.
Garth is surrounded by some of Broadway's biggest stars who are all dressed to impress.
He watches as award after award is presented and actors stage performances from the season's
biggest musicals. The cast of The Lion King sings
The Circle of Life, and Alan Cumming wows the audience as the MC from Cabaret.
Garth tries to enjoy the show, but as the night goes on, he starts to feel more and more nervous.
Because his theater company is in major financial trouble and he's bet everything on his latest
production, Ragtime. Ragtime is a sweeping epic about three diverse families
trying to make it in New York at the turn of the century.
It's been nominated for 13 Tony Awards,
which is more than any other production.
But so far, it's only won a couple.
Despite its critical acclaim,
Ragtime's ticket sales have been suffering.
A best musical win would really help
get more butts in seats. Historically, the show that wins the Tony can expect at least a 34% increase
in ticket sales, and Garth really needs this. If he can't make his company's investment
back, he's going to lose his job, his reputation, and maybe even more.
But Garth hasn't lost hope yet, and now it's time for the big moment.
He holds his breath as actor Nathan Lane takes the stage to announce the winner for the biggest
award of the night, Best New Musical.
The nominees are Ragtime, Sideshow, The Lion King, and The Scarlet Pimpernel. And the best new musical of 1998 is The Lion King.
Garth is devastated.
In an instant, his hopes are dashed.
And even worse, his secret is going to get out.
He's not just in a financial hole,
he's been falsifying his company's financial records
for years to keep his shows afloat.
He needs ragtime to succeed to keep the cash flowing, and without the Tony win,
Garth is almost certainly screwed.
With Audible, there's more to imagine when you listen. Whether you listen to stories,
motivation, expert advice, any genre you love, you can
be inspired to imagine new worlds, new possibilities, new ways of thinking.
And Audible makes it easy to be inspired and entertained as a part of your everyday routine,
without needing to set aside extra time.
As an Audible member, you choose one title a month to keep from their ever-growing catalog.
Explore themes of friendship, loss, and hope with Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby
Van Pelt.
Find what peaks your imagination.
Sign up for a free 30-day Audible trial and your first audiobook is free.
Visit audible.ca to sign up.
At a time when we're debating where policing is going, we're going to tell you where the
police came from.
From Wondry and Crooked Media, I'm Chinjirah Kumanika,
and this is Empire City,
the untold origin story of the NYPD.
Follow Empire City on the Wondry app
or wherever you get your podcasts. From Wondery, I'm Sarah Haggi, and I'm Sachi Cole, and this is Scamfluencers.
Garth Drabinski is a world-famous producer who really believed the show must go on by
any means necessary, even if that required a little fraud.
Garth is a man with a vision, but eventually,
all his theatrical deceptions bring his big show
to its crashing finale.
This is, There's No Business Like Scam Business.
It's the summer of 1953 in Toronto,
and three-year-old Garth Strabinski
is running around in his backyard
when all of a sudden he collapses.
Barely conscious, he's driven to the hospital
where he's diagnosed with polio.
This is before a vaccine was created,
so it's really scary.
Polio is super contagious
and can lead to paralysis and even death.
Garth can't move his left leg and is
confined to a bed in a hospital ward full of other sick kids. Imagine the orphanage in Annie,
but with a deadly illness and no singing. Garth's parents can only visit every once in a while,
and he feels abandoned. He later refers to the months he spent in this ward as an
air-conditioned nightmare. His only comfort is the transistor radio, which plays a mix of classical music and rock
and roll.
Garth falls in love with music.
This is cartoonishly sad and also like an incredible origin story that would play really
well in a documentary about someone's life.
Yeah, it is really cinematic and quite fitting for the story, as you will see.
Garth survives the illness, but over the next eight years,
he has multiple major surgeries to save his leg.
While his classmates go to sleepaway camp, Garth spends his summers on the operating table.
He's left with a permanent limp, but he also develops a never say die attitude.
Garth believes that he can get through anything if he puts his mind to it.
By high school, he's overcome the worst of polio,
so he turns all his determination into pursuing his passion for music and the arts.
By now, this passion has expanded to include theater, musicals, and movies.
At 18, he puts on a musical variety show at his high school.
The show's a huge success.
It takes in $25,000.
Garth realizes he's not meant to be a performer,
but he's got a gift for producing,
and he can't wait to feel the rush of opening night
again and again and again.
It's January 1988,
about 20 years after Garth graduated high school,
and he's in London to see a new musical,
The Phantom of the Opera.
Garth has a shitty seat
and can't even see the iconic chandelier fall,
but he's still awestruck by the production.
He leaves the theater glowing.
As a man with a physical disability, he feels a special connection to the musical's central character,
the Phantom.
Here's how Garth explains it years later to a TVO journalist.
In Phantom of the Opera, you know it was that distorted individual
who was born with a disfigurement,
and yet he had a soul that was stirring and memorable.
And I was able to relate to that.
But there's something else that appeals to Garth
about Phantom, it's success.
The show has been a huge hit in England.
It's about to open on Broadway
and already sold $18 million in advance tickets.
Garth is sure that if he can secure the Canadian rights
to the show, he can make a fortune.
And he needs this money.
About a decade ago, Garth co-founded a chain
of Canadian movie theaters that has grown
into Cineplex Odeon.
Sarah, that's nuts.
This is a huge movie theater chain in Canada
amongst the biggest for sure.
And like those theaters have Italian marble floors
and really big seats and like customable carpets.
Like that was a monied movie theater.
He started Cineplex.
Yeah, he's one of the people who started Cineplex.
And yeah, it's like,
it made going to the movies feel like special, right?
Yeah, it was a special event
if you were going to a Cineplex movie in the 90s.
Totally.
From the outside, Garth's company looks like a success,
but they're growing too fast
and spending way too much money on renovations.
Profits aren't keeping up.
Despite that, Garth is expanding Cineplex
beyond movie screens and getting into live theater.
The company's board isn't psyched about it.
They have serious reservations about Garth's leadership
and vision for the company.
But on this trip to London, Garth becomes convinced
that if Cineplex can get the Canadian rights
to the Phantom of the Opera,
it will be a huge moneymaker for the company
and will hopefully be enough for him to keep his job.
He arranges to meet with the artist behind the show, Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Andrew is on the cusp of turning 40 years old and is currently the world's biggest
musical theater composer.
Before Phantom, he wrote hits like Evita, Jesus Christ Superstar, and Cats.
Garth had already asked mutual friends to talk him up to Andrew.
But Andrew still has a lot of questions for Garth had already asked mutual friends to talk him up to Andrew, but Andrew still has a lot of questions for Garth.
Like, why is a movie theater company getting into the musical business, and does Toronto
even have a stage big enough for something as epic as the Phantom of the Opera?
Garth tells him he plans to renovate one of Cineplex's theaters, the Pantages.
But Andrew's still not sure, so Garth pulls out the big guns. He offers to
pay Andrew $1 million upfront for the rights and promises to have the theater and show
up and running by the fall of 1989, about 18 months from now. Andrew finally agrees
and Garth becomes the proud owner of Phantom's Canadian rights.
But Garth can't revel in this for long
because his company is still in deep trouble.
Cineplex's debt is up to 650 million dollars around this time. The board wants
to sell the company to get what they can and call it a day. But Cineplex is
Garth's whole life. He asks for time to put together an offer to buy the company
back himself. They give him until just after Phantom's premiere to come up with the financing.
He hopes this successful opening for Phantom will convince investors to chip in some major
cash.
But Phantom is a very complicated production.
The Pantages needs a $20 million Canadian dollar renovation before the show can open.
The theater needs a new basement for extra dressing rooms and storage.
Nearly 200 trap doors need to be built into the stage itself, and
the orchestra pit needs to be expanded to fit 40 musicians and
fitted with a hydraulic lift.
It seems pretty bold that he's going to bank not only on Toronto audiences
wanting to see this particular musical
in this particular space,
but also the amount of money
that he's pouring into this renovation.
Even if the show's a success,
it could still mean that they don't get out
of this financial hole.
Yeah, it is truly a big gamble.
But in September 1989,
the Phantom of the Opera opens in Toronto.
The show goes off without a hitch. The cast gets a standing ovation But in September 1989, the Phantom of the Opera opens in Toronto.
The show goes off without a hitch.
The cast gets a standing ovation from the star-studded audience, including Prince Edward.
But despite the show's success, Garth isn't able to raise enough money to buy Cineplex and keep the company.
A little over two months after the premiere, Garth resigns from his own company. As part of his exit package,
Garth buys a newly renovated Pantages Theater
and the Phantom rights for $65 million.
He borrows most of the money
and plans to leave cinema behind
and build a musical theater empire.
As Garth leaves the building for the last time,
he loudly announces that with his exit,
culture at Cineplex is over.
Then later that same day, Garth sits in the orchestra
of the Pantages Theater and addresses
the cast and crew of Phantom.
Sachi, can you read what he says?
He says, you are now officially my new family.
I love this theater.
I love all of you.
He's kind of a drama queen.
This is really dramatic.
He is incredibly dramatic.
Garth is pinning all his hopes on Phantom's success.
His life in the movies may be behind him,
but his theater career is just getting started.
Garth's big bet pays off.
Phantom quickly starts grossing $1 million a week.
Garth's new company, Live Ent,
earns back his investment and then some,
and The Pantages becomes the highest-grossing theater
in the world.
The show will play for the next decade
with more than 4,000 performances.
But all the turmoil of the last few years
has depleted Garth's personal accounts.
He's borrowed and spent a lot of money, he wears the finest clothes, dines at the best restaurants,
has a staff of underlings, and travels by limousine and private jet.
Around the time he forms LiveEnt, he's eight million dollars in debt.
So while he waits for Phantom to get him back into the black,
Garth starts messing with LiveEnt's books.
He and another LiveEnt executive create a kickback scheme. They get one of the construction companies they work with
to send LiveEnt an invoice for fake work.
They have LiveEnt approve the expenses,
then a shell company controlled by Garth
and the other executive invoices the construction companies
for the same amount.
Garth steals over $6 million in the first four years
of owning Live Ent.
But with Live Ent's early success,
Garth sets out to stage another show.
In the summer of 1992,
less than three years after Phantom's premiere,
he produces another Andrew Lloyd Webber musical,
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.
The production stars Donnie Osmond,
whose career has been in a slump ever since the cancellation
of The Donnie and Marie Show.
Garth gives Donnie a chance to turn things around,
and he's an instant hit.
And please keep in mind that Donnie's in a loincloth
for half this show.
I'm sure that's what made it so popular.
Sex sells, Sachi. in a loincloth for half this show. I'm sure that's what made it so popular.
Sex sells, Sachi.
Well, once again, Garth has a money machine on his hands.
Over the next five years, this production of Joseph
and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
will gross more than $200 million.
Broadway shows are typically funded one at a time
with money from individual investors.
But Garth runs LiveEnt more like a movie studio.
The company puts on multiple shows at the same time and uses what it makes from hit shows to fund future productions.
It also does everything for the shows in-house, from making the costumes to marketing and even owning the theater itself.
This new format opens a door for Garth to do some funny math.
He shifts expenses far into the future,
falsely claims that expenses on some shows
are actually the cost of developing new shows,
and uses other accounting tricks
to majorly overstate Live Ent's value.
With this easy cash flow,
Garth keeps adding more projects to Live Ent's slate,
including a new musical called Kiss of the Spider Woman. With this easy cash flow, Garth keeps adding more projects to Live Ent's slate,
including a new musical called Kiss of the Spider Woman.
He hires Broadway legend Cheetah Rivera to lead the Canadian premiere,
and after a successful run in Toronto and London,
Garth transfers the show to theater's biggest stage, Broadway.
And then, in May 1993, Live Ent goes public in Canada
and raises $40 million in a public offering.
With all this new money, Garth's company is about to take American theater by storm.
In June 1993, Kiss of the Spider-Woman dominates the Tony Awards.
It wins seven awards including Best Musical and Best Actress for Cheetah Rivera.
But even though it's a critical smash, the show is still struggling to make money.
The Tony wins momentarily boost ticket sales, but it doesn't last. Six months after the show's opening,
Garth's company has made back less than a quarter of its original investment.
But does this stop Garth? Hell no.
Just four months after Kiss of the Spider-Woman's Tony wins,
Garth turns his attention to another show he's been developing,
a revival of Showboat.
It opens in Toronto to rave reviews,
and Garth immediately starts planning the show's future on Broadway.
And, because it's Garth,
he decides it needs to be
extravagant and talked about for years to come. So he hires a 71-person cast and a 30-piece orchestra,
which he claims is twice the size of the average Broadway show. When the musical opens in 1994,
it's the most expensive show to ever hit Broadway. It costs $600,000 a week to put up.
This means Garth needs to sell that amount
in tickets every week just to break even.
But he's not deterred.
Instead, LiveVent spends over $1.5 million on advertising
and hosts a six-figure opening night party
at the Plaza Hotel.
I think a worthy investment when you are already in huge debt.
It really stresses me out.
The show is another critical smash and earns record ticket sales.
But it's still just too expensive.
The ticket revenue is no match for Garth's spending.
Even the infusion of cash from going public and selling shares isn't helping.
At this point, Live Ent is millions of dollars in the red, and with each new show compounding
their debt, Garth has no way of digging himself out.
So Garth has Live Ent's accountants start keeping two sets of books, the real books
and the ones they'll make available to stockholders and auditors. Garth is willing to create as toxic an environment as necessary to get his accountants to commit
fraud.
He purposely hires introverts who won't push back.
And Garth has an enforcer, his VP of Finance and Administration, Gordon Eckstein.
Gordon's been called a dictator and a bully, and frequently calls staff stupid.
Sachi, will you read what Gordon allegedly screamed
at an accountant who pointed out
potential financial inconsistencies?
Yeah, he said, shut the fuck up.
You're not paid to think.
Okay, I find this odd because that's expressly
what one would pay an accountant to do.
Yeah, that's literally their job.
But with these new fake books, Garth's company looks like a total success,
and he's feeling invincible.
To give you a sense,
Garth is writing his autobiography
while still in his 40s.
It's called Closer to the Sun,
and the theme is basically that Icarus
should have just tried harder.
And throughout this financial disaster,
Garth keeps paying himself millions of dollars
in compensation each year.
He's committed to producing amazing musicals,
but he isn't willing to make personal sacrifices
to actually make them profitable.
Garth again finds himself on the top of a crumbling empire,
and he knows exactly what will save him, another musical.
And he knows exactly what will save him. Another musical.
Being a part of a royal family might seem enticing, but more often than not, it comes
at the expense of everything.
Like your freedom, your privacy, and sometimes even your head.
Even the Royals is a podcast from Wondery that pulls back the curtain on royal families,
past and present, from all over the world
to show you the darker side of what it means to be royalty.
Like the true stories behind the six wives
of Henry VIII, whose lives were so much more than just,
divorced beheaded died, divorced beheaded survived.
Or Esther of Burundi, a princess who fled her home country
to become France's first black supermodel.
There's also Queen Christina of Sweden,
an icon who traded in dresses for pants,
had an affair with her lady-in-waiting,
and eventually gave up her crown
because she refused to get married.
Throw in her involvement in a murder
and an attempt to become Queen of Poland,
and you have one of the most unforgettable legacies
in royal history.
Follow Even The Royals on the Wondery app
or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge Even the Royals ad-free right now
on Wondery+.
Are you in trouble with the law?
Need a lawyer who'll fight like hell to keep you out of jail?
We defend and we fight just like you'd want
your own children defended.
Whether you're facing a drug charge,
caught up on a murder rap, accused of committing war crimes,
look no further than Paul Bergrin.
All the big guys go to Bergrin because he gets everybody off.
You name it, Paul can do it.
Need to launder some money?
Broker a deal with a drug cartel?
Take out a witness?
From wondering, the makers of Dr. Death and Over My Dead Body comes a new series about a lawyer who broke all the rules.
Isn't it funny how witnesses disappear or how evidence doesn't show up or somebody doesn't
testify correctly?
In order to win at all costs.
If Paul asked you to do something, it wasn't a request.
It was an order.
I'm your host, Brandon James Jenkins.
Follow Criminal Attorney on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to Criminal Attorney early and ad free right now
by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
It's the summer of 1997,
and Maria Messina is about to take a much closer look at Live Ent's books.
Maria is in her early 30s, she's got blonde hair,
and she's a single mom with a little girl at home.
Normally, she isn't allowed this much access
to the company's finances.
That's despite the fact that she's the CFO
and she actually worked as Live Enth's auditor
for years before being hired here.
But right now, her boss, Gordon Eckstein, is out of town,
and so the accounting staff
has just handed her LiveInt's second quarter finances to review.
She's shocked by what she reads.
According to the report, the company lost nearly $20 million over the last few months
alone.
That really doesn't make sense because LiveInt posted a profit in the first quarter of the
year.
Maria's confused, but waits until Gordon gets back
to talk with him about it. She doesn't really want to talk to Gordon because he's a nightmare to work
for. He's arrogant and abusive and even threw a clock at Maria during one of his outbursts.
He also relentlessly hits on her. He makes inappropriate comments and sends her flowers
even after she asks him not to.
And he has a habit of arranging for them to be seated next to each other at the company's
shows.
Gordon and Garth have also seemingly made a point of shutting Maria out of the financial
reporting process.
She isn't even invited to executive meetings.
But when Gordon gets back from vacation, Maria notices that, all of a sudden, instead of
showing millions in losses,
the latest financial reports show the company has made more than $7 million.
So Maria goes to Gordon's office to confront him.
But when she asks him what's going on, he puts his feet up on his desk,
folds his arms behind his head, and tells her,
it's just income smoothing. Everyone does it.
Maria asks if Garth knows about the shifting numbers,
and Gordon tells her,
where do you think this comes from?
Income smoothing is what I call it when I steal money.
I am simply smoothing my income and also someone else's.
It is a term I have never heard before,
so I love it.
It's one I'm going to use.
While Maria tells Gordon, now that she knows they're lying,
there's no way she can go to an upcoming meeting with an auditor.
Gordon erupts.
He tells her she has to be there and to, quote,
shut the fuck up while other executives pass off
the fake financial statements as if they're real.
Maria later says she's too terrified to do anything
about what she's learned.
She may feel like she has no choice
but to go along with it
because Live End is taking significant financial risks.
Garth has already launched a brand new musical
in Los Angeles and has plans to take it to Broadway too.
The show is ragtime.
It's big and complicated.
The LA
production alone costs 10 million dollars. Plus, in this case, LiveEnt
doesn't own the theater, so they need to sell a minimum of half a million dollars
in tickets a week, or the theater can kick them out. The future of the show and
their company is on the line. If they get evicted from LA, the bad press will tank
the show before it ever gets to Broadway,
and they'll never recoup their investment.
So Maria starts knowingly cooking the books.
Okay, so she didn't know.
Now they tell her.
And so she's like, I know.
I'm gonna help them with the fraud.
Incredible work across the board.
Also, usually I feel like with our stories like this, the accountant who finds out everything's a lie is usually the fraud. Incredible work across the board. Also, usually I feel like with our stories like this,
the accountant who finds out everything's a lie
is usually the hero.
Yeah.
We'll see.
Well, meanwhile, Garth is going even further with his scams.
He gets colleagues to buy tickets to Ragtime
and reimburses them whether they see the show or not.
One of Garth's employees buys almost $400,000 worth of tickets
with his personal credit card and checkbook,
and LiveEnt pays him back,
claiming that money is repayment for non-existent services.
The scheme works, and LiveEnt scrapes by in LA.
But Ragtime's ticket worries will only intensify
when it moves to Broadway.
It's set to open in a few months at a theater
that LiveEnt is renovating in Manhattan,
the Ford Center for the Performing Arts.
Because it's Garth, the pre-show renovations
cost more than $22 million.
The theater will seat more than 1,800,
and Garth claims it will have the biggest stage,
backstage area, and orchestra pit on Broadway.
The expenses of ragtime and the renovations
are putting Live-Ent in a tighter
squeeze than ever before. Maria begs LiveEnt executives to come clean in the year-end reports
and post losses that reflect reality. But it turns out Garth is calling in help from
sources with deep pockets.
In February 1998, Michael Ovitz is sitting down for a meeting in New York with Garth.
Michael is in his 50s and he looks kind of like Nathan Lane.
Brown hair, thin glasses, and a sweet hangdog look.
But Michael is a Hollywood shark.
He co-founded CAA, the talent agency, and in the 80s was often called the most powerful
man in Hollywood.
A couple years ago, he surprised everyone by leaving CAA to become the president of
the Walt Disney Company, working with one of his close friends, Disney chairman Michael
Eisner. But their relationship went south, and Michael left that job just over a year
later. Michael's now in the midst of a professional transition. He just sailed out of Disney with a $200 million
golden parachute.
So he's looking to invest a little money,
and if he can, stick it to Eisner,
his number one frenemy.
That's why he's talking to Garth.
Garth describes Live Enth's unique business model
and talks up the company's widely respected output.
At this point, they've earned more than a dozen Tony Awards.
But Michael's ears perk up when Garth describes
the newly renovated Ford Center for the Performing Arts.
That theater just happens to be on 42nd Street,
across from the new Amsterdam Theater,
which is owned by Disney.
Garth offers him the chance to buy a controlling stake
in Live-End for $20 million
and the chance to face off with Eisner fromEnt for $20 million and the chance to face
off with Eisner from across the street. Michael shakes Garth's hand. He's in.
This feels like one of those moments you think about later and you're like,
I shouldn't have done that. Yeah, I feel like this is the downside of being fueled by spite.
And unfortunately for Michael, things at Live-In get off to a bad start.
Just two months later, Ragtime loses a Tony
for best musical to Disney's The Lion King.
That's when Garth fuels his stomach drop
while sitting in the audience at the awards show.
It's a missed opportunity to get enormous free advertising
to boost Ragtime's ticket sales,
and even worse for Michael,
it's a missed chance to claim victory over Eisner.
Then, just a few days after the Tony Awards,
Michael's team officially assumes management control of Live Ent.
As part of the deal,
Michael insisted on appointing his own management team.
Garth is able to stay on as chief creative director and vice chairman,
but Michael's team will handle day-to-day operations.
And when they take over, they find out LiveEnt's finances are a mess.
Michael hires an auditing firm to look over everything,
but LiveEnt's accountants evade questions and refuse to cooperate.
Michael confronts Garth, but Garth chalks it up to minor accounting irregularities.
Michael confronts Garth, but Garth chalks it up to minor accounting irregularities. Then in August, a group of live-end accountants come forward, led by Maria, the CFO.
They're terrified of being found out and possibly serving jail time if regulators get involved.
They give Michael and his team the other set of books.
The real books reveal what Michael suspected.
That he just paid a lot of money for a company in immense debt
with very questionable financial practices.
He's going to lose his entire investment.
To try and save his own neck,
Michael turns everything over to the authorities.
The next week, Michael suspends Garth from his own company.
He has security escort Garth from the Toronto office
and changes the locks. The next day, both the US and
Canadian stock exchanges suspend trading of LiveInt stock. Three
months later, LiveInt declares bankruptcy and Michael releases
the company's real financial statements to the public. After
stock trading resumes, LiveInt shares plummet 95% and the company loses $100 million
before trading is suspended again.
And in January 1999, the SEC sues Garth and LiveEnt for securities fraud.
The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York also charges Garth and other LiveEnt
executives with 16 felony counts for violating federal
securities laws.
But Garth flees to Canada before he can be arrested.
Despite the financial disaster Garth created, under his leadership, LiveInt has received
19 Tony Awards, built and restored theaters all across North America, and claims it will
generate 25% of all North American commercial theater receipts by the end of the year.
But none of it is enough to keep Garth out of prison.
In Canada, the wheels of justice spin slowly.
After Garth fled the U.S., it took more than three years
for the Canadian government to file charges against him.
And then it took another six years
for his trial to even begin. All the while, Garth kept working. Despite the charges against him. And then it took another six years for his trial to even begin. All the while,
Garth kept working. Despite the charges against him, Canadians were still eager to work with the
beloved visionary who put the country's theater scene on the map. Garth produced live events,
a Christian film, and CFL halftime shows. He was also producer and judge on a CBC reality show called Triple Sensation, where
he looked for kids who can sing, dance, and act.
But in March 2009, Garth is finally found guilty of fraud and forgery.
Plus, he's barred from ever being involved in the finances of a Canadian theater production.
A few months later, he's sentenced to seven years in prison.
Garth appeals and loses, but he manages to get his sentence reduced to five years.
The trial publicly uncovers the extent of Live Ence fraud.
Like at one point, Live Ence accountants made a loss of $41 million look like a profit of
$14 million.
Garth's brazenness is almost impressive.
Sachi, will you read what the judge said during sentencing?
Yeah, the judge said,
The exponential growth of the company was analogous to an athlete taking a performance-enhancing drug.
The result may be spectacular, but the means involve cheating.
Oof.
Reminds me of another scam flancer named Lance Armstrong.
Yeah, it is truly full circle here.
But Garth isn't willing to let a criminal conviction stop
him from producing theater.
While he's locked up, Garth becomes
obsessed with the idea of turning
an old movie into a musical.
It's called Madame Swizotska, and it's
about the relationship between a music teacher
and her prodigy piano student who
escaped apartheid South Africa.
Garth works on adapting the story from his jail cell.
Then he's granted parole after serving just 17 months.
At this point, Garth's in his early 60s.
He's a free man and he's ready to start rehearsals
on his first post-conviction show.
Garth isn't legally allowed to be involved
in a production's finances in Canada,
but he can be involved on the production's finances in Canada, but
he can be involved on the creative side, and his friends are happy to work with him again,
fraud be damned.
Here's what Adrian Noble told CBC News.
He's the director of Madame Suzotska.
He was found guilty.
He went to prison.
He did his time.
And he came out, and he's getting on with it.
There was never any, ever, any question whether or not he was a brilliant producer or not.
That was never, ever, ever a question.
Listen, maybe he had good taste,
but the thing is, is being a producer
is not like being an actor or a writer on a project.
You have to be involved in the money side of it.
You have to wear both hats.
And so you can't really be a brilliant producer
if you're also
stealing money from the production. Exactly. And even though he's maybe not a good producer,
in March 2017, six years after his conviction, Garth makes his theatrical comeback. The new musical,
Sazotska, opens in Toronto. In classic Garth fashion, the cast is huge and the production
is extravagant and expensive. But it's a total flop. Critics panned the show because of its
overly complicated plot and tone-deaf portrayal of South African apartheid. Now Garth is exiled
from America and a bust in Canada. But just when it seems like his luck has finally run out,
the American courts drop the charges against him,
saying his time in prison in Canada is enough.
He's free to return to the US.
So Garth sets out to stage a Broadway comeback
like the theater world has never seen.
All he has to do is create a new show that's a smash hit,
prove that he really is the greatest showman,
and everyone will
love him again. the largest catalog of ad-free top podcasts included with your Prime membership. To start listening, download the Amazon Music app for free
or go to amazon.com slash ad-free podcasts.
That's amazon.com slash ad-free podcasts
to catch up on the latest episodes without the ads.
And I feel like a legend.
It's 2017, and Suzy Medak walks the halls of California's Berklee Repertory Theater, mulling over a major dilemma.
Suzy has a great pixie cut and decades of theater experience, mostly as Berklee Rep's
managing director.
And Garth Zabinski recently came to them with a proposal proposal to host the world premiere of his new musical Paradise Square.
The question Suzy's wrestling with is, should Berkeley Rep work with him?
He's a convicted criminal, and his shows are historically way too expensive.
This one would require a cast of 32 and an eight-person band, which would be the most
expensive show Berklee Rep has ever done by far.
But the show is interesting and ambitious.
Paradise Square is about the Five Points neighborhood of Lower Manhattan and how it met its tragic
end during the draft riots of 1863.
The neighborhood was home to both Irish immigrants and freed Black Americans, and the musical has real tough conversations about race.
Plus, Garth made Suzy an offer she can't turn down.
He says he'll spend $3 million of his own money on the production.
Is it actually his own money?
Did he take it from an old lady somewhere?
Did he rob a bank?
Well, Suzy knows that she and the theater leadership
need to think long and hard about Garth's proposal
and how much they can trust him.
Everything would have to be in writing.
Garth clearly has his own motivation for making this work.
The show would be a triumphant return, and if he fails,
he'd almost certainly be out of chances
to produce theater in the US.
Eventually, Susie and her partners at Berkeley Rep
decide to move forward with Paradise Square.
Sachi, will you read what she later told the New York Times?
She said,
We took the position that in an enlightened society,
when somebody does something wrong,
you want to think that after they pay their dues,
they can be resurrected in society.
Yeah, Sarah, I mean, this is why you and I don't like jails
because we don't really think they work.
I mean, it also is interesting who gets the chance
to repay their dues to society and who's trusted to.
Yes, how many chances, how many dollars worth of chances
are you willing to give somebody?
I certainly wouldn't do this twice.
No, but in January 2019, six months after the US charges are dropped against Garth,
Berklee Rep premieres Paradise Square.
It gets mixed reviews, but audiences seem to like it,
and its run is extended by popular demand for two more months.
That's just enough buzz for the show to make the move to Broadway.
Garth may have eeked his way into a second chance,
but he's about to find out if Paradise Square
will erase his past mistakes and give his career new life,
or if it will end up being Paradise Lost.
It's October, 2021, and Joaquina Calucango
is in a rehearsal room in Chicago,
preparing for a pre-Broadway production of Paradise Square.
After a long delay because of the pandemic,
the cast has recently begun rehearsals
ahead of its opening next spring.
Joaquina is a young black actress
with a powerful singing voice and a strong resume.
She's coming off her first Tony nomination
for best actress in a play,
but this is her first time originating
a leading role on Broadway.
It's a big deal for her.
The show's producer, Garth Drabinski,
has called the company in for an important discussion.
He wants to talk about the racial implications of a show
that features interracial couples during the Civil War.
But as Garth tells a group about how important
the show's message is, he veers off into a tangent about why he left the N-word in another one of his plays,
a revival of Showboat.
But Garth doesn't say the N-word, he says the whole word.
Sarah, this might be controversial,
but I don't think anybody named Garth should say that word.
I think you're right.
Listen, if there are any black Garths out there, please email us.
Maybe we're wrong. But I don't think a Garth can say the N-word.
No. And after Garth's speech, Joaquina's union, Actors' Equity, sends a letter
asking for Garth to be removed from the production.
But he refuses. He doesn't seem to care that he's coming across as old,
tone-deaf, and offensive. Joaquina puts the tension aside and focuses on her leading role.
But when Paradise Square opens in Chicago, it gets middling reviews and has poor ticket sales.
And a lot of this is due to Garth. With his overbearing presence and constant rewrites,
he's exhausting the actors and crew.
Everyone hoped the Chicago premiere would build hype for its upcoming Broadway run,
but now it's clear the musical needs major tweaking.
It's becoming obvious that the musical is in trouble,
but for Joaquina, the musical is bigger than a paycheck.
This is her big starring moment, so she stays with the show.
In April, Paradise Square officially opens on Broadway.
Tuaquina is overjoyed, as she tells a red carpet reporter at the premiere.
I feel overwhelmed.
There was so much love in that space.
And to have all of those people that love us support us like that,
there's no greater feeling than that.
Reviews for the show aren't completely positive,
but they are glowing toward Joaquina.
The show still manages to get 10 Tony nominations,
and Garza and his team have high hopes this will boost ticket sales.
Joaquina is asked to perform live at the Tonys,
and when she gets up on stage, she absolutely kills it.
She sings her big Act One number, Let It Burn.
Joaquina goes on to win the Tony for best lead actress in a musical,
the show's only win. She celebrates and parties all night and doesn't even go to bed until 10 p.m.
the next day. At her first post-Tony's performance of Paradise Square, Duaquina gets a two-minute
standing ovation when she walks on stage for the first time. But none of this is enough
to save the show.
Paradise Square announces it will close on July 17, 2022 after less than six months.
Duaquina and the cast agree to stay on until the end, even though it's unclear if the
show will run out of money by then.
The production's directors and choreographers have already filed complaints about missed
payments and the unions are asking questions.
Soon, Actors' Equity comes after the producing team for roughly $200,000 in missed payments.
The show simply can't afford its own budget and there is no larger company's cash flow
to save Garth this time.
Then, three days before the show closes, Actors' Equity announces they're putting Garth on their
do-not-work list. It's a lifelong ban, and it effectively ends Garth's career in the arts.
Sachi, will you read what the actors wrote to their union about Garth?
They wrote,
Garth has withheld benefits and pay from many members
and has created an unsafe, toxic,
and frequently hostile work environment.
When presented with these concerns from the company,
Garth has continually been dismissive, defensive,
and often abusive.
As has been said about Garth,
every day there is a new way to disrespect someone,
and today is no different.
Yeah, you can't be a good producer if you're a piece of shit.
Yes, and if you're driven entirely by your own ego
and do not give a shit about how anyone's getting paid.
But Garth is still absorbing the news when Paradise Square closes on Broadway a few days later.
The producers don't come close to recouping their $15 million investment.
Garth tries to sue actors' equity,
seeking $50 million in damages for defamation
and added antitrust claims.
He argues that because he wasn't head producer
on Paradise Square and his name wasn't on the show's
paychecks, he can't be liable for the producers not paying.
But the union doesn't buy this.
It's clear that Garth was running the show.
Garth tries his best, but after all his lies and exploits,
his lawsuits against equity are thrown out.
But Garth still won't stop fighting.
He appeals.
But as of August 2024, Garth's appeal was dismissed.
Garth is still arguing against his ban,
determined to return to the entertainment industry.
Sachi, I feel like the scam hit really close to home
in many ways.
One, funding in the arts,
and two, a real Canadian scammer.
Do you know how few producers of live shows
there are in Canada,
and this is the guy who got to do it twice.
It's outrageous what he got away with.
It's outrageous.
It 100% has to do with Canada's little sibling thing
with the US where it's like, look, see, we can do it too.
And maybe it's Garth doing it,
but look, we could still have a big show.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting too.
It feels a little bit like he got emboldened
by early success with Cineplex,
which wasn't really reinventing the wheel.
They were just like,
hey, what if we make the movie theaters super cute?
And even like the plays that he wants to put on
are adaptations and there's just very little
that's unique here.
This is one of my least favorite Canadian scammers.
I can't believe I'm saying that.
This like really pissed me off in many ways.
He gets caught with a scam and everything,
and then he gets a whole other chance.
The first time he gets caught and flees to Canada,
he has a job being a judge on CBC,
which maybe isn't like the coolest thing for him.
It's still like a job he got despite being a literal scammer.
Yeah. I guess, Sarah, the thing to learn is that if you're gonna scam,
then you need to do it under a role that people don't understand.
Like, no one knows what a producer does. That's what I've learned.
Yeah. I mean, also, the role of a producer can vary
between different productions and forms of art.
So I think, yeah, no one really 100% knows
what a producer does.
I just know that they aren't really supposed
to do what Garth did.
Maybe don't trust producers unless they're podcast producers.
Yeah, only trust the little wieners
who work in radio.
Like us.
If you like Scamplincerz, you can listen to every episode early and ad free right now
by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple podcasts.
Prime members can listen ad free on Amazon Music.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.
This is There's No Business Like Scam
Business. I'm Sarah Hegge.
And I'm Sachi Cole.
If you have a tip for us on a story
that you think we should cover, please
email us at scamfluencers at
wendree.com.
We use many sources in our research.
A few that were particularly helpful
were A Producer Seeks a Broadway
Comeback by Richard Zoglin for The New
York Times, As If We Never Said Goodbye
by Mark Herzberg for Forbes,
Peter Smalls' reporting for the Toronto Star,
and Garth Drabinski's memoir, Closer to the Sun.
Rachel Borders wrote this episode.
Additional writing by us, Sacha Cole and Sarah Hagge.
Olivia Briley and Eric Thurm are our story editors.
Fact Checking by Meredith Clark.
Sound Design by James Morgan.
Additional audio assistance provided by Adrian Tapia.
Our music supervisor is Scott Velasquez for Freesawn Sync. Our managing producers are
Matt Gant and Desi Blaylock. Janine Cornelo and Stephanie Jens are our development producers.
Our associate producers are Charlotte Miller and Lexi Peery. Our producers are John Reed,
Yasmin Ward and Kate Young. Our senior producers are Sara Enni and Ginny Bloom. Our executive producers are Jenny Lauer Beckman,
Marshall Louie and Erin O'Flaherty for Wondery.
Welcome to The Offensive Line.
You guys, on this podcast, we're gonna make some picks,
talk some and hopefully make you some money in the process. I'm your host, Annie Yegar.
So here's how this show's gonna work, okay? We're gonna run through the weekly slate of
NFL and college football matchups, breaking them down into very serious categories like
No Offense. No offense, Travis Kelce, but you gotta step up your game if Pat Mahomes
is saying the Chiefs need to have more fun this year. We're also handing out a series of awards and making picks for the top storylines
surrounding the world of football. Awards like the He May Have a Point Award
for the wide receiver that's most justifiably bitter.
Is it Brandon Iyuk, T. Higgins, or Devonte Adams?
Plus, on Thursdays we're doing an exclusive bonus episode on Wondery Plus,
where I share my fantasy football picks ahead of Thursday Night Football and the weekend's matchups.
Your fantasy league is as good as locked in.
Follow the offensive line on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can access bonus episodes and listen ad-free right now by joining Wondery+.