Paramount ups bid for Warner Bros. as sale veers into politics
As Paramount moved Monday to sweeten its bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, a high-stakes political battle is playing out behind the scenes.
Paramountโs latest offer enhanced its earlier $30-a-share bid, valued at $108 billion, said a person familiar with the process who was not authorized to comment publicly. Details of the revised proposal, first reported by Bloomberg, were not immediately available.
The firm is leveraging both the dynastic wealth of Larry Ellisonโs empire and his ties to the Trump administration to dismantle Netflixโs rival $82.7-billion deal for Warner, which owns CNN, HBO and the premier Hollywood film and television studios, according to people close to the auction.
Over the weekend, President Trump turned up the heat, demanding that Netflix โIMMEDIATELYโ fire Susan Rice โ a former Obama and Biden administration official โ who serves on Netflixโs 13-member board or โpay the consequences.โ
Trump, in a Saturday night social media post, called the former ambassador โderanged … Sheโs got no talent or skills โ Purely a political hack!โ
Trump previously said he would not get involved in the pivotal Warner Bros. auction, instead leaving the matter to the Department of Justice, which is investigating whether a Netflix takeover, or Paramountโs alternative bid, would harm competition. Trump has been an outspoken critic of CNN and many of its on-air hosts.
Netflix won the bidding for the storied studio and HBO in December, prompting the spurned Paramount executives to launch a multipronged strategy to scuttle the Netflix deal.
Netflix co-Chief Executive Ted Sarandos sought to downplay the latest controversy, saying during a BBC interview Monday: โThis is a business deal, itโs not a political deal.โ
But Paramount, which declined to comment for this article, has not been shy about playing its political cards.
Warner Bros. Studio in Burbank.
(Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times)
The company, overseen by Larry Ellisonโs son, David, is trying to convince Justice Department regulators and Warner Bros. shareholders that the Netflix deal is too dicey and that they should instead side with Paramount, said sources who were not authorized to comment publicly.
Paramount has attempted numerous maneuvers to gain the upper hand.
โThis deal was never going to be decided on the merits of the offer or rigid antitrust considerations,โ said Gabriel Kahn, a professor at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. โThis was a classic Trump administration deal where proximity to the president counts a lot more than financial terms.โ
Trumpโs Saturday night outburst came after Rice, during a podcast interview last week, said that โit is not going to end wellโ for corporations, media outlets and law firms that โbent the kneeโ to Trump should Democrats regain control in Washington.
The comments of Rice, a Netflix director for eight years, came as Paramount-owned CBS was involved in a headline-grabbing dust-up with late-night talk-show host, Stephen Colbert, over Trumpโs Federal Communications Commission chairโs threat to modify a rule requiring that broadcasters to give political candidates equal time. Colbert has accused his company of kowtowing to Trump, which CBS has denied.
Netflixโs Sarandos and Paramountโs David Ellison have made separate treks to the White House.
In October, Paramount hired a former Trump administration official, Makan Delrahim, who oversaw the Justice Departmentโs antitrust division during Trumpโs first term, to quarterback Paramountโs campaign to win over regulators and politicians.
A formidable ally โ Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) โ recently visited Delrahim on Paramountโs Melrose Avenue lot in Los Angeles. While there, Cruz said he was a fan of the CBS show โNCIS,โ which prompted Paramount executives to put together an impromptu tour of the โNCIS Originsโ soundstages, according to a person familiar with the visit.
In December, Delrahim made a tactical move to apply for Justice Department approval of Paramountโs deal โ despite the absence of a signed agreement with the Warner Bros. board and the consent of its shareholders. The gambit was meant to speed the agencyโs approval should the Netflix deal crumble. Warner stockholders are expected to vote March 20.
Last week, Paramount announced that a major deadline had passed without pushback from the Justice Department. โThere is no statutory impediment in the U.S. to closing Paramountโs proposed acquisition of WBD,โ Paramount said in a regulatory filing.
Paramount faces a separate deadline late Monday to improve the finances of its proposed takeover to shake the support of Warner Bros. Discoveryโs board members for the Netflix deal.
Paramount wants to buy all of Warner Bros. Discovery, including CNN.
Netflix, in contrast, does not want the bulk of cable TV channels beyond HBO, and has offered $27.75 a share. It has the right to match any improved Paramount proposal.
Warner is planning to spin off the bulk of its channel portfolio, including HGTV, TBS and Cartoon Network, in a separate company. Its shareholders will receive stock in that entity, slated to be called Discovery Global.
Concerns over Netflixโs deal have been mounting.
Department of Justice regulators have sent inquiries to the three companies, according to one senior executive who was not authorized to speak publicly. The department is said to be looking at Netflixโs historic business strategy of steering most of its film releases to its streaming platform, often bypassing movie theaters. Sarandos has promised to maintain a 45-day theatrical window for Warner Bros. films.
Bloomberg has reported that regulators also are trying to determine whether Netflix has exerted leverage over creators in negotiations when acquiring programming to build its catalog.
This month, Republican lawmakers blasted Sarandos during a Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy, and Consumer Rights hearing to explore antitrust implications of the Warner Bros. sale. Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) sent Netflix a series of pointed follow-up questions, including: โIf allowed to proceed, what effect will the merger have on future competition?โ
Ted Sarandos, left, and David Zaslav at the 2026 Golden Globes.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
The hearing also veered into culture wars, with Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) suggesting Netflix was promoting a โtransgender ideologyโ to children, which Sarandos denied.
Another Missouri Republican, Sen. Eric Schmitt, accused Netflix of making some of โthe wokest content in the history of the world.โ
โNetflix has no political agenda of any kind,โ Sarandos told the lawmakers.
David Ellison also was invited to appear at the Feb. 3 hearing, but he declined โ which raised the eyebrows of some members of the panel.
Skydance Media founder and Chief Executive David Ellison, who leads Paramount, is shown in 2023 in New York.
(Evan Agostini / Invision / Associated Press)
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) challenged Ellison for failing to answer lawmakersโ questions under oath, including about his dealings with the president.
Ellison instead responded with a statement but Booker and other lawmakers wrote back, saying Ellisonโs statement โfailed to addressโ the issues raised by Booker.
โThe pattern of evasion, combined with Paramountโs apparent confidence that a politically sensitive transaction will clear without difficulty warrants serious scrutiny,โ Booker, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and others wrote in the Feb. 19 letter.
The Democrats instructed Ellison โto preserve records related to the proposed Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery transaction.โ
The move came days after Gail Slater, the Justice Departmentโs antitrust chief, was bounced from her job, reportedly after becoming a thorn in the side of some business interests. Slaterโs former top deputy, who also left the Justice Department, publicly warned that antitrust decisions are being influenced by corporate lobbyists โ not in the interest of ordinary Americans.
โWe see this happen again and again,โ USCโs Kahn said.
โLetโs not forget that Larry Ellisonโs Oracle was part of the consortium that purchased the U.S. operations of TikTok. Repeated complaints from the FCC about content at CBS have been heeded by the Ellison regime,โ Kahn said, adding: โThis is the reality of trying to do any business in the Trump administration: Itโs about payoffs and proximity.โ