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Former Sony CEO Says Greenlighting The Interview Was His Biggest Mistake in New Memoir

The book frames the 2014 breach’s chaos as the result of a rushed, rivalry-fueled decision that bypassed Sony’s usual checks.

Overview

  • In February 2026 excerpts, Michael Lynton reflects on approving the Seth RogenJames Franco comedy and links that choice to the 2014 Sony hack.
  • Lynton says peer pressure and studio competition swayed him, citing a rivalry between Amy Pascal and Universal’s Stacey Snider and a hasty go-ahead after a table read.
  • He writes that Sony’s head of IT told him about 70% of servers being irreparably damaged, leaving the studio unable to make or release films or access core systems.
  • He describes leaks of emails, scripts and personal data, including, he says, his daughters’ health records appearing online via a site prompting visitors to type “Die Sony.”
  • The FBI reported evidence pointing to likely North Korean involvement, and Lynton recalls Barack Obama calling the decision a mistake as industry relationships frayed and support was sparse.