Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Exclusive | AOC broke law by spending k in campaign cash on ketamine-therapy shrink for ‘personal use’: complaint

Exclusive | AOC broke law by spending $19k in campaign cash on ketamine-therapy shrink for ‘personal use’: complaint

March 28, 2026
Jeffries silent as Rep Cherfilus-McCormick faces expulsion threat

Jeffries silent as Rep Cherfilus-McCormick faces expulsion threat

March 28, 2026
Which Actors Have Appeared on Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’?

Which Actors Have Appeared on Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’?

March 28, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Exclusive | AOC broke law by spending $19k in campaign cash on ketamine-therapy shrink for ‘personal use’: complaint
  • Jeffries silent as Rep Cherfilus-McCormick faces expulsion threat
  • Which Actors Have Appeared on Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’?
  • Team USA Olympic star Amber Glenn ‘exhausted’ after more figure skating heartbreak
  • Illinois victim’s father warns of more deaths over immigration policy
  • 3 Best Peacock Movies to Binge-Watch This Weekend (March 28-29): ‘News of the World’ and More
  • How 2026 pursuit of elusive World Series rings can bolster three Mets, Yankees’ Hall of Fame candidacies
  • The jobs most vulnerable to AI — as new study predicts 9 million American workers to be displaced by bots in 5 years
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » The faces behind Paramount’s Warner Bros. Discovery-takeover victory
The faces behind Paramount’s Warner Bros. Discovery-takeover victory
Business

The faces behind Paramount’s Warner Bros. Discovery-takeover victory

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 1, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

We all know that Paramount Skydance finally won the bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery.

But who was the real winner in this takeover tussle of the century?

The epic, six-month tango between some of the largest players in media for the owner of the Warner Bros. studio, HBO Max streamer and CNN came to a suitably stunning finish late Thursday — although regular readers of this column probably weren’t too surprised.

Let’s start with Netflix and its co-CEO Ted Sarandos, the architect of the streaming giant’s thwarted bid to snare WBD. Until just days ago, he had remained the official frontrunner. Ted can best be described as both a winner and a loser.

He’s a winner here for the simple reason that he walked away, albeit after lots of drama. That’s because Netflix didn’t need to do this deal. Shares of Netflix soared more than 10% after I posted on my X feed that Netflix was going to cave.

Deals like this aren’t how Netflix became one of the biggest and most successful media com panies ever created. It has grown organically. Yet Sarandos spent months cobbling together mountains of debt while inviting regulatory scrutiny. By dropping out, Sarandos can go back to building his business.

More From Charles Gasparino

Now here’s why Sarandos is a loser: He went there. Why this seasoned media mogul thought all this was a good deal for shareholders (he lost $200 billion in market value during negotiations) — and why he thought he had a shot with the Trump antitrust cops in combining the No. 1 and No. 3 streamers — is still a mystery.

It’s also still unclear if the feds have completely dropped their early Section 2 Sherman Act monopoly inquiry into Netflix’s already powerful size and its ability to squeeze consumers.

Then there’s David Zaslav, the CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery.

He’s a clear winner. I’ve known Zas for years, when he toiled through the infrastructure of NBCUniversal, then decamped as CEO of Discovery Inc.

He got his big break running a bona fide media conglomerate in 2022 when AT&T spun out Warner Media and his mentor, the legendary John Malone, arranged a new company combining it with Discovery and making Zas its CEO. He got off to a rocky start, taking heat for cost cuts because of all the debt involved and for not delivering on results.

But slowly, Zas began to rebuild what is now Warner Bros. Discovery. In 2025, his company was poised for something big, but you wouldn’t know it from its stock price. Then magic happened: first, an unsolicited bid by Paramount Skydance at $19 a share when his stock was at around $12.

Then he went to work dangling WBD in front of a who’s who of media and tech companies. He got plenty of interest until there were just two, Netflix and Paramount Skydance.

Zas wanted at least $30 a share and people laughed. Last week, he got his number plus a buck as Paramount swooped in with a $31 a share, $80.5 billion offer.

Paramount Skydance chief David Ellison is also a winner, and not just for pulling off the defining media deal of his generation. He also displayed the wisdom to put one of the best media dealmakers in the business, Gerry Cardinale, in charge of his pursuit of WBD.

Ellison is the son of tech billionaire Larry Ellison, who provided financial backing for the deal, so it’s tempting to write him off as a lucky sperm kid. I’m here to tell you he’s smart and insightful and knows what he doesn’t know. He started with a small indie film producer, saw the depressed values in media and snapped up Paramount, with its studio, low-ranked streamer and once-prominent CBS unit.

Now, Ellison sits on top of one of the biggest media companies in the world. He snared what looked like a white whale by playing the long game: lawsuits challenging WBD’s initial decision to sell to Netflix, hostile bids and plenty of acrimony. Yes, there’s lots of debt in this deal, and there will be cost-cutting. But as I see it Ellison really didn’t overpay at the end.

People thought he would use his dad’s money to win by throwing $34 a share at Zas but he stopped at $31. The reason: Cardinale, the best bidding-war banker in the business.

He also listened to his GC, Makan Delrahim, and pops and didn’t overpay. Cardinale & Co., saw the regulatory shoals faced by Netflix.

If Ellison is a winner, so is Cardinale and the people around him.

Elsewhere, another winner is PSKY’s reliably smart and accessible flack, Melissa Zukerman; another loser: Netflix board member and partisan Democrat Susan Rice, who irritated the White House with some dumb comments about President Trump at the worst possible time.

But if those are the latest scores, indications are that the hard part may be what comes next, as this new media giant, whatever it’s called, weighs painful cost cuts and rejiggering to stay competitive. Stay tuned for the next crop of winners and losers.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Costco says your next checkout could take under 10 seconds thanks to new automated pay stations

Costco says your next checkout could take under 10 seconds thanks to new automated pay stations

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink took home nearly M last year for leading world’s largest investment firm

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink took home nearly $38M last year for leading world’s largest investment firm

California Gov. Gavin Newsom bans state officials from making bets on Polymarket, Kalshi with insider info

California Gov. Gavin Newsom bans state officials from making bets on Polymarket, Kalshi with insider info

DOJ issues subpoenas as probe of Warner Bros. Discovery-Paramount deal intensifies: report

DOJ issues subpoenas as probe of Warner Bros. Discovery-Paramount deal intensifies: report

FCC’s Carr says NFL could lose antitrust protections for shifting games to streaming

FCC’s Carr says NFL could lose antitrust protections for shifting games to streaming

Staggering amount wiped from Mark Zuckerberg’s fortune as Meta stock falls after back-to-back court losses

Staggering amount wiped from Mark Zuckerberg’s fortune as Meta stock falls after back-to-back court losses

Bill Gates’ pal Boris Nikolic asked Jeffrey Epstein for ‘nude’ pics of ‘hot girls,’ bantered about strippers

Bill Gates’ pal Boris Nikolic asked Jeffrey Epstein for ‘nude’ pics of ‘hot girls,’ bantered about strippers

Mike Lindell ‘served court papers’ during on-camera interview at CPAC — and hurls documents aside

Mike Lindell ‘served court papers’ during on-camera interview at CPAC — and hurls documents aside

Sony jacking up PlayStation 5 prices for 2nd time in less than a year — here’s how much it will cost you

Sony jacking up PlayStation 5 prices for 2nd time in less than a year — here’s how much it will cost you

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Jeffries silent as Rep Cherfilus-McCormick faces expulsion threat

Jeffries silent as Rep Cherfilus-McCormick faces expulsion threat

March 28, 2026
Which Actors Have Appeared on Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’?

Which Actors Have Appeared on Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’?

March 28, 2026
Team USA Olympic star Amber Glenn ‘exhausted’ after more figure skating heartbreak

Team USA Olympic star Amber Glenn ‘exhausted’ after more figure skating heartbreak

March 28, 2026
Illinois victim’s father warns of more deaths over immigration policy

Illinois victim’s father warns of more deaths over immigration policy

March 28, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
3 Best Peacock Movies to Binge-Watch This Weekend (March 28-29): ‘News of the World’ and More

3 Best Peacock Movies to Binge-Watch This Weekend (March 28-29): ‘News of the World’ and More

March 28, 2026
How 2026 pursuit of elusive World Series rings can bolster three Mets, Yankees’ Hall of Fame candidacies

How 2026 pursuit of elusive World Series rings can bolster three Mets, Yankees’ Hall of Fame candidacies

March 28, 2026
The jobs most vulnerable to AI — as new study predicts 9 million American workers to be displaced by bots in 5 years

The jobs most vulnerable to AI — as new study predicts 9 million American workers to be displaced by bots in 5 years

March 28, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.