Ari Emanuel, the CEO of Endeavor and one of Hollywood’s most outspoken voices in the fight against antisemitism, will be honored at the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s National Tribute Gala.
At the annual fundraiser for Swc, which has taken place since 1977 and brings together many of the most powerful and influential people in the business, Jews and non-Jews alike, Emanuel will receive the organization’s highest honor, the Humanitarian Award, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.
Emanuel, 63, will be feted by colleagues — and give an acceptance speech — at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel on May 22. Members of the public can purchase tickets to attend, starting at $1500 a plate, but, in a first, the event will be closed to the press.
Emanuel famously does not mince his words, especially on matters related to antisemitism and Israel. Among other things, he led the industry’s boycott of Kanye West after the rapper went...
At the annual fundraiser for Swc, which has taken place since 1977 and brings together many of the most powerful and influential people in the business, Jews and non-Jews alike, Emanuel will receive the organization’s highest honor, the Humanitarian Award, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.
Emanuel, 63, will be feted by colleagues — and give an acceptance speech — at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel on May 22. Members of the public can purchase tickets to attend, starting at $1500 a plate, but, in a first, the event will be closed to the press.
Emanuel famously does not mince his words, especially on matters related to antisemitism and Israel. Among other things, he led the industry’s boycott of Kanye West after the rapper went...
- 5/10/2024
- by Scott Feinberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Should Sony and Apollo get their hooks into Paramount Global their strategy would be to keep theatrical release output steady between both studios –not reduced– while cutting the more burdensome parts of the conglom, read auctioning off CBS, the linear channels like MTV and Paramount Plus streaming service.
The news about theatrical output is per Deadline tonight, while the New York Times reported earlier that Sony and Apollo have plans to cut Paramount’s TV assets in their $26 billion bid for the entertainment company. Per the Nyt, Sony hasn’t shared their plan with Paramount and its consiglieres who decided on May 4 to hold separate talks with Sony/Apollo and continued negotiations with David Ellison’s Skydance/Red Bird. Talks have eased between Paramount and Skydance, though the latter remains interested.
Many have pointed out that a Sony merger with Paramount would put the former under scrutiny with the FCC...
The news about theatrical output is per Deadline tonight, while the New York Times reported earlier that Sony and Apollo have plans to cut Paramount’s TV assets in their $26 billion bid for the entertainment company. Per the Nyt, Sony hasn’t shared their plan with Paramount and its consiglieres who decided on May 4 to hold separate talks with Sony/Apollo and continued negotiations with David Ellison’s Skydance/Red Bird. Talks have eased between Paramount and Skydance, though the latter remains interested.
Many have pointed out that a Sony merger with Paramount would put the former under scrutiny with the FCC...
- 5/9/2024
- by Anthony D'Alessandro
- Deadline Film + TV
Getting ahold of Paramount-owned franchises could be a dream for Sony, but big regulatory issues stand in its way.
Sony has spent the last decade doing things a little differently than Hollywood-based entertainment companies. That makes plenty of sense, considering that so much of Sony’s revenue comes from other sources than its TV and movie productions; video game sales and hardware manufacturing are the company’s true bread and butter. But the company could be about to undergo a big shift, as it has joined private equity company Apollo Global Management to make a $26 billion offer to acquire Paramount Global. There are plenty of obstacles to clear before a deal can be made, but if the transaction does eventually go through, Sony will be able to evolve to a new level of content arms dealing that has made the company so successful in recent years.
Key Details: Paramount owns some highly popular franchises,...
Sony has spent the last decade doing things a little differently than Hollywood-based entertainment companies. That makes plenty of sense, considering that so much of Sony’s revenue comes from other sources than its TV and movie productions; video game sales and hardware manufacturing are the company’s true bread and butter. But the company could be about to undergo a big shift, as it has joined private equity company Apollo Global Management to make a $26 billion offer to acquire Paramount Global. There are plenty of obstacles to clear before a deal can be made, but if the transaction does eventually go through, Sony will be able to evolve to a new level of content arms dealing that has made the company so successful in recent years.
Key Details: Paramount owns some highly popular franchises,...
- 5/8/2024
- by David Satin
- The Streamable
There’s a new, scary reality sinking in for both Paramount shareholders and its board of directors: What if nobody buys Paramount?
Not much more than a week ago it felt like a foregone conclusion that David Ellison would buy out Shari Redstone’s controlling stake in Paramount Global for a few billion bucks, and force Paramount to buy his Skydance for a few billion more bucks than that. That’s what Redstone wanted to happen at least, and what Redstone wants she’s pretty well set up to get. She has the shares to force whatever outcome she wants and stop whatever one she doesn’t.
But there was another suitor who could no longer be ignored.
Apollo Global Management, a private-equity fund, has been knocking on Redstone’s door for months. It’s pounding now. At first, Apollo offered $11 billion to buy out Paramount’s studio. No way,...
Not much more than a week ago it felt like a foregone conclusion that David Ellison would buy out Shari Redstone’s controlling stake in Paramount Global for a few billion bucks, and force Paramount to buy his Skydance for a few billion more bucks than that. That’s what Redstone wanted to happen at least, and what Redstone wants she’s pretty well set up to get. She has the shares to force whatever outcome she wants and stop whatever one she doesn’t.
But there was another suitor who could no longer be ignored.
Apollo Global Management, a private-equity fund, has been knocking on Redstone’s door for months. It’s pounding now. At first, Apollo offered $11 billion to buy out Paramount’s studio. No way,...
- 5/7/2024
- by Tony Maglio and Brian Welk
- Indiewire
Mattel's next "big" movie may have found its director, as Deadline reports today that Sam Hargrave has closed a deal with Skydance and Mattel Films to helm the toy company's upcoming film "Matchbox." Hargrave is best known as the director of the Netflix film "Extraction" and its sequel; Netflix has said the first film in the franchise is one of the most-watched original movies it's ever released.
Mattel, the company that brought fans a billion-dollar "Barbie" movie, is clearly looking for another huge hit, and based on his track record at Netflix, Hargrave is able to get audiences seated. The first "Extraction" film dropped in 2020, starred Chris Hemsworth, and was reportedly watched by 99 million households during its first month on the streamer. While Netflix's data and viewership measurements are notoriously opaque, that's still a hell of a number, and it's one that could translate to success when it comes to "Matchbox.
Mattel, the company that brought fans a billion-dollar "Barbie" movie, is clearly looking for another huge hit, and based on his track record at Netflix, Hargrave is able to get audiences seated. The first "Extraction" film dropped in 2020, starred Chris Hemsworth, and was reportedly watched by 99 million households during its first month on the streamer. While Netflix's data and viewership measurements are notoriously opaque, that's still a hell of a number, and it's one that could translate to success when it comes to "Matchbox.
- 5/7/2024
- by Valerie Ettenhofer
- Slash Film
Exclusive: After successfully launching the Extraction film franchise at Netflix, director Sam Hargrave has his eyes set on another potential franchise with a piece of IP that is revving its engines to get out the gate. Sources tell Deadline that Skydance and Mattel Films have closed a deal with Hargrave to direct a live-action movie based on Matchbox, Mattel’s iconic real-world die-cast toy vehicle line. David Coggeshall and Jonathan Tropper are penning the script.
Skydance’s David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and Don Granger will produce alongside Robbie Brenner for Mattel Films. The project will be shepherded by Aimee Rivera for Skydance and Elizabeth Bassin and Andrew Scannell for Mattel Films.
The iconic Matchbox brand was invented in 1953 by automotive enthusiast Jack Odell to solve a challenge for his daughter, who was allowed to take a toy to school only if it was small enough to fit in a matchbox.
Skydance’s David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and Don Granger will produce alongside Robbie Brenner for Mattel Films. The project will be shepherded by Aimee Rivera for Skydance and Elizabeth Bassin and Andrew Scannell for Mattel Films.
The iconic Matchbox brand was invented in 1953 by automotive enthusiast Jack Odell to solve a challenge for his daughter, who was allowed to take a toy to school only if it was small enough to fit in a matchbox.
- 5/7/2024
- by Justin Kroll
- Deadline Film + TV
Whatever fate befalls Paramount Global after the smoke clears, one of the Hollywood Trivial Pursuit questions someday will be which heavy hitters have issued statements of support for Skydance’s proposed acquisition of Paramount’s holding company, National Amusements Inc. — and which didn’t.
Even as the Paramount special committee passed on the offer from David Ellison’s company May 4, sources say the Skydance-RedBird alliance has not given up. The premise, a source with knowledge of the situation tells The Hollywood Reporter, is that the rival Apollo/Sony Pictures offer now up for Paramount’s consideration will fail for multiple reasons, with Skydance still waiting in the wings.
So despite much Wall Street skepticism over a proposed deal that favors controlling shareholder Shari Redstone over other investors, “Skydance has been on an extremely aggressive PR campaign in the last month to convince everyone how legitimate they are,” says a prominent media mogul.
Even as the Paramount special committee passed on the offer from David Ellison’s company May 4, sources say the Skydance-RedBird alliance has not given up. The premise, a source with knowledge of the situation tells The Hollywood Reporter, is that the rival Apollo/Sony Pictures offer now up for Paramount’s consideration will fail for multiple reasons, with Skydance still waiting in the wings.
So despite much Wall Street skepticism over a proposed deal that favors controlling shareholder Shari Redstone over other investors, “Skydance has been on an extremely aggressive PR campaign in the last month to convince everyone how legitimate they are,” says a prominent media mogul.
- 5/6/2024
- by Kim Masters
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
If no deal for the sale or merger of Paramount Global comes to fruition, talks of a combination of Paramount+ with Peacock could revive.
The saga of Paramount’s ownership future has had more twists and turns than a Hollywood blockbuster. The narrative took a new direction this weekend, as Paramount’s exclusive negotiating window with David Ellison and his production house Skydance Media ended on May 3 without a deal being struck. Despite initially not initially appearing interested, Paramount is now considering an offer from Sony and Apollo Global Management, and various reports indicate that the media conglomerate hasn’t ruled out doing business with Skydance either. But the probability that Paramount will not find a merger and acquisition partner in the current business environment is rising, and if that happens, the company’s controlling shareholder Shari Redstone will have to determine what comes next for the legacy media outlet.
The saga of Paramount’s ownership future has had more twists and turns than a Hollywood blockbuster. The narrative took a new direction this weekend, as Paramount’s exclusive negotiating window with David Ellison and his production house Skydance Media ended on May 3 without a deal being struck. Despite initially not initially appearing interested, Paramount is now considering an offer from Sony and Apollo Global Management, and various reports indicate that the media conglomerate hasn’t ruled out doing business with Skydance either. But the probability that Paramount will not find a merger and acquisition partner in the current business environment is rising, and if that happens, the company’s controlling shareholder Shari Redstone will have to determine what comes next for the legacy media outlet.
- 5/6/2024
- by David Satin
- The Streamable
Another big Hollywood name rooting for a Paramount-Skydance deal is Jeffrey Katzenberg, who says that outcome would be “a great win for Paramount and for people in the industry.”
Speaking a the Axios Bfd Talks: LA this evening, the DreamWorks co-founder and former Walt Disney Studios head acknowledged that the situation is complicated. “There’s a reason why the David Ellison deal did not fly, which I think is unfortunate. Because I think David is a phenomenal entrepreneur, and he is super ambitious, and loves the movie business, the studio business. I think that would have been a great win for Paramount and for people in the industry.”
“The economic complexity of how this has sort of played out, over decades, by the way, makes it really hard to get to a successful outcome. But not impossible. And I would say don’t count Ellison out,” said Katzenberg whose...
Speaking a the Axios Bfd Talks: LA this evening, the DreamWorks co-founder and former Walt Disney Studios head acknowledged that the situation is complicated. “There’s a reason why the David Ellison deal did not fly, which I think is unfortunate. Because I think David is a phenomenal entrepreneur, and he is super ambitious, and loves the movie business, the studio business. I think that would have been a great win for Paramount and for people in the industry.”
“The economic complexity of how this has sort of played out, over decades, by the way, makes it really hard to get to a successful outcome. But not impossible. And I would say don’t count Ellison out,” said Katzenberg whose...
- 5/6/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith and Dominic Patten
- Deadline Film + TV
Paramount Global has reportedly begun talks with Sony Pictures and private equity firm Apollo after the exclusive 30-day negotiating window with David Ellison’s Skydance Media expired on Friday.
Sony and Apollo are said to have put a $26bn cash offer on the table for the consideration of Shari Redstone, whose family owns Paramount Global controlling shareholder National Amusements, and a special committee.
Redstone has the power to veto any deal and was said to favour Skydance, whose CEO Ellison has long been a co-financing partner for Paramount on hits like the Mission: Impossible franchise and Top Gun: Maverick and...
Sony and Apollo are said to have put a $26bn cash offer on the table for the consideration of Shari Redstone, whose family owns Paramount Global controlling shareholder National Amusements, and a special committee.
Redstone has the power to veto any deal and was said to favour Skydance, whose CEO Ellison has long been a co-financing partner for Paramount on hits like the Mission: Impossible franchise and Top Gun: Maverick and...
- 5/6/2024
- ScreenDaily
Paramount Global goes back to playing the field this week with two suitors still pursuing the company that has been surrounded by a highly public M&a drama for months. And it’s unlikely to end any time soon.
The company reached the end of its 30-day exclusive negotiating window with Skydance Media on May 3 without coming to an agreement. Sony Pictures Entertainment and Apollo Global Management, meanwhile, are moving forward with a $26 billion all-cash offer that raises regulatory and political concerns in this election-year environment. The special committee of Paramount Global’s board of directors that has been handling the M&a negotiations now intends to proceed with discussions with both the Skydance and Sony/Apollo groups, as reported Sunday by the New York Times and confirmed by multiple sources.
That decision leaves Skydance CEO David Ellison and his backers, which include Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital, with a...
The company reached the end of its 30-day exclusive negotiating window with Skydance Media on May 3 without coming to an agreement. Sony Pictures Entertainment and Apollo Global Management, meanwhile, are moving forward with a $26 billion all-cash offer that raises regulatory and political concerns in this election-year environment. The special committee of Paramount Global’s board of directors that has been handling the M&a negotiations now intends to proceed with discussions with both the Skydance and Sony/Apollo groups, as reported Sunday by the New York Times and confirmed by multiple sources.
That decision leaves Skydance CEO David Ellison and his backers, which include Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital, with a...
- 5/5/2024
- by Cynthia Littleton
- Variety Film + TV
A special committee of Paramount’s board of directors decided over the weekend to formally open negotiations with Sony Pictures Entertainment and private equity group Apollo Global Management, an individual with knowledge told TheWrap. The decision follows an exclusive negotiation period between Paramount and Skydance ending Friday with no deal made.
A spokesperson for the special committee declined to comment.
Sony Pictures stepped into the race by making a joint informal offer with private equity firm Apollo Global Management of $26 billion, all cash, for Paramount. When it comes to Skydance, it received the public backing Sunday of two big names: director James Cameron and Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel, who voiced their support for David Ellison’s Skydance acquiring Paramount in an interview with the Financial Times.
The committee also pushed for further negotiations with Skydance. The exclusive negotiating window closing with no deal and not being extended doesn’t mean...
A spokesperson for the special committee declined to comment.
Sony Pictures stepped into the race by making a joint informal offer with private equity firm Apollo Global Management of $26 billion, all cash, for Paramount. When it comes to Skydance, it received the public backing Sunday of two big names: director James Cameron and Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel, who voiced their support for David Ellison’s Skydance acquiring Paramount in an interview with the Financial Times.
The committee also pushed for further negotiations with Skydance. The exclusive negotiating window closing with no deal and not being extended doesn’t mean...
- 5/5/2024
- by Mike Roe, Sharon Waxman
- The Wrap
Updated with Paramount’s board decision to begin new negotiations: A special committee of the Paramount Global board decided at a meeting yesterday to begin talking with Sony and Apollo following the expiration of a month-long negotiating window with Skydance on Friday night.
The committee met over the weekend to consider its approach to the preliminary $26 billion cash bid, including the assumption of debt, made jointly by the entertainment giant and global private equity film.
But the David Ellison studio is still in the mix as Paramount seeks to continue those talks – just non-exclusive, obviously, Deadline has learned.
That’s a deal that won’t have any regulatory issues in closing, and is the one that Par’s controlling shareholder Shari Restone prefers.
Paramount shareholders hate the Skydance deal, just as much of Hollywood detests the idea of Paramount and Sony merging – a combination that would need to pass regulatory scrutiny.
The committee met over the weekend to consider its approach to the preliminary $26 billion cash bid, including the assumption of debt, made jointly by the entertainment giant and global private equity film.
But the David Ellison studio is still in the mix as Paramount seeks to continue those talks – just non-exclusive, obviously, Deadline has learned.
That’s a deal that won’t have any regulatory issues in closing, and is the one that Par’s controlling shareholder Shari Restone prefers.
Paramount shareholders hate the Skydance deal, just as much of Hollywood detests the idea of Paramount and Sony merging – a combination that would need to pass regulatory scrutiny.
- 5/5/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
Both James Cameron and Ari Emanuel offered their support this weekend of Skydance’s bid to acquire Paramount.
Though reports earlier this week suggested that Paramount’s special board committee was leaning against accepting Skydance’s offer, Cameron and Emanuel told The Financial Times on Sunday that they supported Skydance founder David Ellison’s potential leadership.
The deal, first offered during a 30-day exclusive negotiating window at the beginning of April, would see Skydance, joined by financial partners RedBird Capital and Kkir, acquire controlling shareholder Shari Redstone’s stake in the company and then merge Skydance into Paramount, keeping it as a publicly traded company, with new leadership at the helm.
“I love the Ellison idea,” Cameron, whose 1997 film Titanic remains one of Paramount’s most successful movies, said. “If he gets . . . to run Paramount creatively, it could be a huge boon for this business in these ailing times. David’s proven himself.
Though reports earlier this week suggested that Paramount’s special board committee was leaning against accepting Skydance’s offer, Cameron and Emanuel told The Financial Times on Sunday that they supported Skydance founder David Ellison’s potential leadership.
The deal, first offered during a 30-day exclusive negotiating window at the beginning of April, would see Skydance, joined by financial partners RedBird Capital and Kkir, acquire controlling shareholder Shari Redstone’s stake in the company and then merge Skydance into Paramount, keeping it as a publicly traded company, with new leadership at the helm.
“I love the Ellison idea,” Cameron, whose 1997 film Titanic remains one of Paramount’s most successful movies, said. “If he gets . . . to run Paramount creatively, it could be a huge boon for this business in these ailing times. David’s proven himself.
- 5/5/2024
- by Zoe G Phillips
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Warren Buffett’s two-year dalliance with Paramount Global has come to an end.
The famed investor and Berkshire Hathaway CEO says that his company has exited its position in Paramount. Buffett disclosed the news during Berkshire’s annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska, on Saturday.
“We sold it all, and we lost quite a bit of money, that happens in this business too,” Buffett told the crowd, adding that he was the one who decided to buy into the company in the first place (there had been speculation that one of Buffett’s deputies may have initiated the trade). “I did it all by myself, folks.”
Berkshire surprised Wall Street when it disclosed a $2.6 billion stake in Paramount in May 2022. Later that year, it added even more shares, ultimately becoming the largest shareholder in the company (or at least its non-voting shares, with Shari Redstone and the Redstone family’s National Amusements...
The famed investor and Berkshire Hathaway CEO says that his company has exited its position in Paramount. Buffett disclosed the news during Berkshire’s annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska, on Saturday.
“We sold it all, and we lost quite a bit of money, that happens in this business too,” Buffett told the crowd, adding that he was the one who decided to buy into the company in the first place (there had been speculation that one of Buffett’s deputies may have initiated the trade). “I did it all by myself, folks.”
Berkshire surprised Wall Street when it disclosed a $2.6 billion stake in Paramount in May 2022. Later that year, it added even more shares, ultimately becoming the largest shareholder in the company (or at least its non-voting shares, with Shari Redstone and the Redstone family’s National Amusements...
- 5/4/2024
- by Alex Weprin
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Although exclusive talks between Paramount Global and Skydance Media are expected to end without a deal, questions linger about controlling shareholder Shari Redstone’s duty to minority investors, some of whom have vocally opposed the merger on grounds that their interests have taken a backseat in negotiations.
A Paramount investor, in a complaint filed on April 30 in Delaware Chancery Court, moved to force the company to turn over records related to talks with David Ellison’s Skydance. The Employees’ Retirement System of Rhode Island alleged that Redstone has “conflicting interests” undermining the company’s motives to find a better deal than the one offered by Skydance.
The legal move could be a precursor to a lawsuit challenging any potential deal in which common shareholders perceive as enriching Redstone at their expense. It follows several law firms, in the wake of Paramount’s deal talks with Skydance, announcing investigations into whether...
A Paramount investor, in a complaint filed on April 30 in Delaware Chancery Court, moved to force the company to turn over records related to talks with David Ellison’s Skydance. The Employees’ Retirement System of Rhode Island alleged that Redstone has “conflicting interests” undermining the company’s motives to find a better deal than the one offered by Skydance.
The legal move could be a precursor to a lawsuit challenging any potential deal in which common shareholders perceive as enriching Redstone at their expense. It follows several law firms, in the wake of Paramount’s deal talks with Skydance, announcing investigations into whether...
- 5/3/2024
- by Winston Cho
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Paramount Global says Chris McCarthy is the company’s “interim principal executive officer,” a necessity required by the SEC that apparently does not signal he has more decision-making power among a trio of top executives who stepped up to replace Bob Bakish this week in a new Office of the CEO.
Security & Exchange Commission rules require a person, not an office, to conduct with over the normal course of business. It’s not clear why McCarthy, president and CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks, received the designation (maybe he drew the short straw).
The other two in the CEO office are George Cheeks, president and chief executive CBS, and Brian Robbins, president of Paramount Pictures and president-ceo of Nickelodeon.
The filing says that Bakish, who formally exited April 30, will continue as a senior advisor to the company through October 31 “to help ensure a seamless transition of his duties.
Security & Exchange Commission rules require a person, not an office, to conduct with over the normal course of business. It’s not clear why McCarthy, president and CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks, received the designation (maybe he drew the short straw).
The other two in the CEO office are George Cheeks, president and chief executive CBS, and Brian Robbins, president of Paramount Pictures and president-ceo of Nickelodeon.
The filing says that Bakish, who formally exited April 30, will continue as a senior advisor to the company through October 31 “to help ensure a seamless transition of his duties.
- 5/3/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
After weeks of negotiations, Skydance’s proposed merger with Paramount Global appears to be on the ropes.
Paramount’s special board committee appears to have cooled on the offer, which would have seen the David Ellison-led studio, joined by financial partners RedBird Capital and Kkr, acquire controlling shareholder Shari Redstone’s stake in the company and then merge Skydance into Paramount, keeping it as a publicly traded company, with new leadership at the helm.
Skydance had been in a 30-day exclusive negotiating window, and had proposed a revised offer last weekend that would have offered some sweeteners for Paramount common shareholders, some of whom had been vocally opposed to the deal. That window ends today, and is not likely to be extended.
Another source close to the deal says that talks between the sides continue.
Paramount has another offer on the table: A $26 billion all-cash deal from Apollo and Sony Pictures.
Paramount’s special board committee appears to have cooled on the offer, which would have seen the David Ellison-led studio, joined by financial partners RedBird Capital and Kkr, acquire controlling shareholder Shari Redstone’s stake in the company and then merge Skydance into Paramount, keeping it as a publicly traded company, with new leadership at the helm.
Skydance had been in a 30-day exclusive negotiating window, and had proposed a revised offer last weekend that would have offered some sweeteners for Paramount common shareholders, some of whom had been vocally opposed to the deal. That window ends today, and is not likely to be extended.
Another source close to the deal says that talks between the sides continue.
Paramount has another offer on the table: A $26 billion all-cash deal from Apollo and Sony Pictures.
- 5/3/2024
- by Kim Masters and Alex Weprin
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Upadted: After months of M&a talks, Paramount Global and controlling shareholder Shari Redstone might be going it alone after all — for now.
Insiders tell Variety that the expectation at the company is that neither of the two offers in play — Skydance Media-RedBird Capital Partners and Sony Pictures Entertainment-Apollo Global Management — will come to fruition. And Redstone is said to have concluded that the deal currently on the table from David Ellison’s Skydance, a longtime partner of Paramount Pictures, will not be possible.
As of Friday morning, the special committee established by Paramount Global’s board to evaluate M&a proposals had not notified Skydance one way or the other about its best and final offer, which would involve Skydance acquiring Redstone’s National Amusements Inc. and merging Skydance and Paramount Global, per a source familiar with the talks. The exclusive 30-day negotiating window between Skydance and...
Insiders tell Variety that the expectation at the company is that neither of the two offers in play — Skydance Media-RedBird Capital Partners and Sony Pictures Entertainment-Apollo Global Management — will come to fruition. And Redstone is said to have concluded that the deal currently on the table from David Ellison’s Skydance, a longtime partner of Paramount Pictures, will not be possible.
As of Friday morning, the special committee established by Paramount Global’s board to evaluate M&a proposals had not notified Skydance one way or the other about its best and final offer, which would involve Skydance acquiring Redstone’s National Amusements Inc. and merging Skydance and Paramount Global, per a source familiar with the talks. The exclusive 30-day negotiating window between Skydance and...
- 5/3/2024
- by Todd Spangler
- Variety Film + TV
As the exclusive window for merger discussions between Paramount Global and David Ellison’s Skydance Media enters its final hours, the future of the company remains uncertain.
There has been no official decision on an extension on the exclusivity window between Skydance and Paramount, which is set to expire Friday night. A spokesperson for Paramount declined to comment. Representatives for Skydance did not immediately return TheWrap’s request for comment.
Paramount’s board faces three potential options now. It could carry on with negotiations with Skydance, a deal that has proven highly unpopular with shareholders. It could let the exclusivity deadline expire and pivot to consideration of a $26 billion all-cash joint bid by Sony and Apollo Global Management. Or it could go it alone under its new Office of the CEO after the departure last week of CEO Bob Bakish.
The tough decision comes as Paramount shares have fallen 36.8% in the past year.
There has been no official decision on an extension on the exclusivity window between Skydance and Paramount, which is set to expire Friday night. A spokesperson for Paramount declined to comment. Representatives for Skydance did not immediately return TheWrap’s request for comment.
Paramount’s board faces three potential options now. It could carry on with negotiations with Skydance, a deal that has proven highly unpopular with shareholders. It could let the exclusivity deadline expire and pivot to consideration of a $26 billion all-cash joint bid by Sony and Apollo Global Management. Or it could go it alone under its new Office of the CEO after the departure last week of CEO Bob Bakish.
The tough decision comes as Paramount shares have fallen 36.8% in the past year.
- 5/3/2024
- by Lucas Manfredi
- The Wrap
The fat-trimming of Paramount’s streaming operations comes amidst the company’s efforts to find a buyer or merger partner.
Paramount Global is pulling out of the kids’ streaming game. As first reported in February, the company is shutting down its kid-focused streaming platform Noggin and laying off its entire staff. Few details were available about the move to sunset Noggin at the time, but now Viacom is providing more information about when viewers can expect to see Noggin log off for the final time, allowing Paramount to focus its streaming efforts more on Paramount+.
Key Details: Noggin will shut down on July 2, and all billing will stop by May 30 at the latest. Many Noggin titles will continue to be available on Paramount+. Paramount is still working through merger talks with Skydance Media. 7-Day Free Trial $5.99+ / month ParamountPlus.com
For a limited time, get 50% off a year of Paramount+ With Showtime with Code: Thechi.
Paramount Global is pulling out of the kids’ streaming game. As first reported in February, the company is shutting down its kid-focused streaming platform Noggin and laying off its entire staff. Few details were available about the move to sunset Noggin at the time, but now Viacom is providing more information about when viewers can expect to see Noggin log off for the final time, allowing Paramount to focus its streaming efforts more on Paramount+.
Key Details: Noggin will shut down on July 2, and all billing will stop by May 30 at the latest. Many Noggin titles will continue to be available on Paramount+. Paramount is still working through merger talks with Skydance Media. 7-Day Free Trial $5.99+ / month ParamountPlus.com
For a limited time, get 50% off a year of Paramount+ With Showtime with Code: Thechi.
- 5/3/2024
- by David Satin
- The Streamable
Three days after he was named to the newly formed Office of the CEO of Paramount Global, George Cheeks, President and CEO of CBS, faced reporters at the unveiling of the broadcast network’s fall 2024 schedule.
On Monday, Bob Bakish exited as Paramount Global CEO, replaced by a trio of senior executives, division heads Cheeks, Chris McCarthy and Brian Robbins who comprise the Office of the CEO.
Cheeks quipped about having an uneventful week and spoke briefly of his partnership with McCarthy and Robbins in his opening remarks.
Related: ‘Blue Bloods’ Future Is Sealed: The Long-Running Series Will Wrap For Good In December
“We are in the process of finalizing our strategic plan which we are going to roll out as soon as possible,” he said, echoing the trio’s comments from Monday.
Related: Upfronts 2024: Pilot Buzz & Other Development Updates In Another Atypical Broadcast Cycle
Cheeks also stressed...
On Monday, Bob Bakish exited as Paramount Global CEO, replaced by a trio of senior executives, division heads Cheeks, Chris McCarthy and Brian Robbins who comprise the Office of the CEO.
Cheeks quipped about having an uneventful week and spoke briefly of his partnership with McCarthy and Robbins in his opening remarks.
Related: ‘Blue Bloods’ Future Is Sealed: The Long-Running Series Will Wrap For Good In December
“We are in the process of finalizing our strategic plan which we are going to roll out as soon as possible,” he said, echoing the trio’s comments from Monday.
Related: Upfronts 2024: Pilot Buzz & Other Development Updates In Another Atypical Broadcast Cycle
Cheeks also stressed...
- 5/2/2024
- by Nellie Andreeva
- Deadline Film + TV
Deadline’s Most Valuable Blockbuster tournament is back. While studios during Covid wildly embraced the theatrical day-and-date model when cinemas were closed, they soon realized there’s nothing more profitable than a theatrical release and the downstreams that come with it. If anything, theatrical is the advertisement for a movie’s longevity in subsequent home entertainment windows. Entering the conversation in 2023 were the streamers, such as Apple, who have also realized the necessity of theatrical to eventize their movies. The financial data pulled together here for Deadline’s Most Valuable Blockbuster Tournament is culled by seasoned and trusted sources.
The Film
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem
Paramount
When Paramount Pictures CEO Brian Robbins was looking to revive the beloved Nickelodeon-owned Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird property Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles for the big screen, he got some input from Playmates executives involved in the brand’s licenses: they...
The Film
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem
Paramount
When Paramount Pictures CEO Brian Robbins was looking to revive the beloved Nickelodeon-owned Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird property Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles for the big screen, he got some input from Playmates executives involved in the brand’s licenses: they...
- 5/2/2024
- by Anthony D'Alessandro
- Deadline Film + TV
Partners Sony and Apollo have formally reached out to Paramount’s special board committee asking to discuss a potential $26 billion cash offer, Deadline has learned. It comes as Par’s exclusive negotiating window with David Ellison’s Skydance is set to expire.
Paramount share are up more than 13% on the news. Investors would vastly prefer a Sony/Apollo acquisition to a Skydance deal as it is currently configured, even after Skydance made a revised offer, that was said to be its best and last, last week.
Sony and Apollo’s overture is really jus a start, a non-binding expression of interest, Deadline has learned, in meeting and exploring the contours of a possible deal. While Skydance has been given access to Paramount’s books for the last month, Sony and Apollo have yet to do any due diligence.
The partners would buy out the whole company and take it private.
Paramount share are up more than 13% on the news. Investors would vastly prefer a Sony/Apollo acquisition to a Skydance deal as it is currently configured, even after Skydance made a revised offer, that was said to be its best and last, last week.
Sony and Apollo’s overture is really jus a start, a non-binding expression of interest, Deadline has learned, in meeting and exploring the contours of a possible deal. While Skydance has been given access to Paramount’s books for the last month, Sony and Apollo have yet to do any due diligence.
The partners would buy out the whole company and take it private.
- 5/2/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith and Anthony D'Alessandro
- Deadline Film + TV
In the latest twist in Paramount Global’s M&a saga, Sony Pictures Entertainment and Apollo Global Management have made a bid to take Paramount private with an all-cash buyout offer of $26 billion.
Sony and private-equity giant Apollo submitted a letter with the non-binding offer Wednesday to Paramount Global, as first reported by the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. The bid, which would include the assumption of debt and could be negotiated, would be a premium over the company’s current $22 billion enterprise value.
The tag-teamed buyout bid comes as Paramount Global board’s special committee established to consider M&a proposals is evaluating the best and final offer from Skydance Media to merge Paramount and Skydance while keeping Paramount Global public. Shari Redstone, the controlling shareholder of Paramount Global, is known to prefer consummating a deal with David Ellison’s Skydance, whose bid is backed by RedBird Capital Partners and Kkr.
Sony and private-equity giant Apollo submitted a letter with the non-binding offer Wednesday to Paramount Global, as first reported by the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. The bid, which would include the assumption of debt and could be negotiated, would be a premium over the company’s current $22 billion enterprise value.
The tag-teamed buyout bid comes as Paramount Global board’s special committee established to consider M&a proposals is evaluating the best and final offer from Skydance Media to merge Paramount and Skydance while keeping Paramount Global public. Shari Redstone, the controlling shareholder of Paramount Global, is known to prefer consummating a deal with David Ellison’s Skydance, whose bid is backed by RedBird Capital Partners and Kkr.
- 5/2/2024
- by Todd Spangler
- Variety Film + TV
Amazon is doubling down on its Alex Cross series.
The tech giant’s Prime Video streaming platform has ordered a second season of Cross, a drama starring Aldis Hodge and based on James Patterson’s best-selling novel series about a detective and forensic psychologist who delves into the minds of killers in order to catch them. The renewal comes ahead of the show’s debut — a date for which hasn’t been set.
Additionally, Wes Chatham, Matthew Lillard and Jeanine Mason are set to join the cast for the second season. Ryan Eggold, Isaiah Mustafa, Alona Tal, Johnny Ray Gill, Eloise Mumford and Siobhan Murphy star with Hodge in season one.
Prime Video declined to comment.
Cross landed a series order at Prime Video in October 2022 after more than two years in development. The show comes from Paramount Television Studios and Skydance Television, which also produce Prime Video’s Reacher...
The tech giant’s Prime Video streaming platform has ordered a second season of Cross, a drama starring Aldis Hodge and based on James Patterson’s best-selling novel series about a detective and forensic psychologist who delves into the minds of killers in order to catch them. The renewal comes ahead of the show’s debut — a date for which hasn’t been set.
Additionally, Wes Chatham, Matthew Lillard and Jeanine Mason are set to join the cast for the second season. Ryan Eggold, Isaiah Mustafa, Alona Tal, Johnny Ray Gill, Eloise Mumford and Siobhan Murphy star with Hodge in season one.
Prime Video declined to comment.
Cross landed a series order at Prime Video in October 2022 after more than two years in development. The show comes from Paramount Television Studios and Skydance Television, which also produce Prime Video’s Reacher...
- 4/30/2024
- by Rick Porter
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Amazon Prime Video’s upcoming series based on James Patterson’s Alex Cross novels is being renewed for Season 2, Variety has learned from sources.
The show, which stars Aldis Hodge as Cross, has yet to debut its first season or even set a premiere date. But according to sources, Amazon was impressed enough with what they have seen from the first season to greenlight the second and begin casting. Jeanine Mason has reportedly already been cast in Season 2.
Reps for Amazon declined to comment.
If “Cross” proves to be popular, it would be the latest successful Amazon series based on a long-running novel character. The company found themselves with a massive hit on their hands courtesy of “Reacher” starring Alan Ritchson, based on the Jack Reacher novels written by Lee Child. Likewise, Amazon’s longest-running series to date was the cop drama “Bosch,” based on the Harry Bosch novels written by Michael Connelly.
The show, which stars Aldis Hodge as Cross, has yet to debut its first season or even set a premiere date. But according to sources, Amazon was impressed enough with what they have seen from the first season to greenlight the second and begin casting. Jeanine Mason has reportedly already been cast in Season 2.
Reps for Amazon declined to comment.
If “Cross” proves to be popular, it would be the latest successful Amazon series based on a long-running novel character. The company found themselves with a massive hit on their hands courtesy of “Reacher” starring Alan Ritchson, based on the Jack Reacher novels written by Lee Child. Likewise, Amazon’s longest-running series to date was the cop drama “Bosch,” based on the Harry Bosch novels written by Michael Connelly.
- 4/30/2024
- by Joe Otterson
- Variety Film + TV
The board room and executive suite drama at Paramount Global escalated on Monday, with Bob Bakish leaving his role as CEO and a trio of executives taking over just days before an exclusive negotiating window for a sale to David Ellison’s SkyDance Media and partners closes.
Veteran company leaders Chris McCarthy, George Cheeks and Brian Robbins will make up an “Office of the CEO,” running Paramount on a day-to-day basis for now. The three will work with the Paramount board and CFO Naveen Chopra.
“We’re finalizing a long-term strategic plan to best position this storied company to reach new and greater heights in our rapidly changing world,” McCarthy told a conference call following Paramount’s first-quarter earnings report after the market close on Monday that lasted just nine minutes and didn’t allow for analysts’ questions. As of 11:15 a.m. Et on Tuesday, Paramount shares were down 4.3 percent,...
Veteran company leaders Chris McCarthy, George Cheeks and Brian Robbins will make up an “Office of the CEO,” running Paramount on a day-to-day basis for now. The three will work with the Paramount board and CFO Naveen Chopra.
“We’re finalizing a long-term strategic plan to best position this storied company to reach new and greater heights in our rapidly changing world,” McCarthy told a conference call following Paramount’s first-quarter earnings report after the market close on Monday that lasted just nine minutes and didn’t allow for analysts’ questions. As of 11:15 a.m. Et on Tuesday, Paramount shares were down 4.3 percent,...
- 4/30/2024
- by Georg Szalai
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Apple TV+ has announced the premiere date for first installment of its upcoming animated adventure trilogy WondLa, hailing from Skydance Animation and based on the New York Times bestselling book series The Search for WondLa by Tony Diterlizzi.
Showrun and executive produced by Bobs Gannaway, the seven-episode first season of WondLa will premiere globally on Apple TV+ on Friday, June 28.
WondLa centers around Eva, voiced by Jeanine Mason, a curious, enthusiastic and spirited teenager being raised in a state-of-the-art underground bunker by Muthr, a robot caretaker, voiced by Emmy Award nominee Teri Hatcher (Desperate Housewives).
On her 16th birthday, an attack on Eva’s bunker forces her onto the Earth’s surface which is now inhabited by aliens, covered with other-worldly fauna, and no other humans to be found. In fact, it’s no longer called Earth but Orbona.
Otto, a loveable giant water bear with whom Eva shares telepathic...
Showrun and executive produced by Bobs Gannaway, the seven-episode first season of WondLa will premiere globally on Apple TV+ on Friday, June 28.
WondLa centers around Eva, voiced by Jeanine Mason, a curious, enthusiastic and spirited teenager being raised in a state-of-the-art underground bunker by Muthr, a robot caretaker, voiced by Emmy Award nominee Teri Hatcher (Desperate Housewives).
On her 16th birthday, an attack on Eva’s bunker forces her onto the Earth’s surface which is now inhabited by aliens, covered with other-worldly fauna, and no other humans to be found. In fact, it’s no longer called Earth but Orbona.
Otto, a loveable giant water bear with whom Eva shares telepathic...
- 4/30/2024
- by Mirko Parlevliet
- Vital Thrills
Paramount Global’s ouster of CEO Bob Bakish did not reassure investors that there’s a favorable exit in store for the media conglomerate.
Shares of the company were down more than 4% in trading Tuesday morning to under $12/share, after Bakish’s exit was officially announced and he was replaced by three senior execs tasked with running Paramount Global — for now, anyway.
Wall Street analysts said the dismissal of Bakish, who was said to oppose Paramount Global’s prospective merger with David Ellison’s Skydance Media, along with the company’s refusal to take questions during its first-quarter 2024 earnings call Monday was evidence that an M&a deal is nearing. Paramount’s Q1 results were decent, as the company boosted Paramount+ streaming subs to more than 71 million and significantly narrowed streaming losses, while its TV group saw revenue up 1% thanks largely to the Super Bowl on CBS. But the financial results...
Shares of the company were down more than 4% in trading Tuesday morning to under $12/share, after Bakish’s exit was officially announced and he was replaced by three senior execs tasked with running Paramount Global — for now, anyway.
Wall Street analysts said the dismissal of Bakish, who was said to oppose Paramount Global’s prospective merger with David Ellison’s Skydance Media, along with the company’s refusal to take questions during its first-quarter 2024 earnings call Monday was evidence that an M&a deal is nearing. Paramount’s Q1 results were decent, as the company boosted Paramount+ streaming subs to more than 71 million and significantly narrowed streaming losses, while its TV group saw revenue up 1% thanks largely to the Super Bowl on CBS. But the financial results...
- 4/30/2024
- by Todd Spangler
- Variety Film + TV
The three Paramount Global executives installed to run the company after Bob Bakish was removed as CEO sought to reassure employees that they have a long-term strategy.
On Monday, Paramount Global said Bakish was stepping down as CEO and leaving the board. In his place, the company established an “Office of the CEO” committee led by three divisional heads: George Cheeks, president and CEO of CBS; Chris McCarthy, president and CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks; and Brian Robbins, president and CEO of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon.
The shake-up added further fuel to the uncertainty about the media conglomerate’s future. Bakish’s exit came as the Paramount Global board and controlling shareholder Shari Redstone were working to close a deal to merge Paramount with David Ellison’s Skydance Media.
The three new heads of Paramount Global’s Office of the CEO sent a memo to staff after the news was announced.
On Monday, Paramount Global said Bakish was stepping down as CEO and leaving the board. In his place, the company established an “Office of the CEO” committee led by three divisional heads: George Cheeks, president and CEO of CBS; Chris McCarthy, president and CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks; and Brian Robbins, president and CEO of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon.
The shake-up added further fuel to the uncertainty about the media conglomerate’s future. Bakish’s exit came as the Paramount Global board and controlling shareholder Shari Redstone were working to close a deal to merge Paramount with David Ellison’s Skydance Media.
The three new heads of Paramount Global’s Office of the CEO sent a memo to staff after the news was announced.
- 4/29/2024
- by Todd Spangler
- Variety Film + TV
In a memo to employees Monday, Chris McCarthy, George Cheeks and Brian Robbins — who are together running Paramount after the ouster of CEO Bob Bakish — thanked Bakish for his tenure at the company, while signaling a new strategy ahead.
Paramount announced Bakish was out at the company Monday, just ahead of releasing first-quarter earnings, with McCarthy, Cheeks and Robbins making up the “Office of the CEO” upon his ouster. The three executives will work with the Paramount board and CFO Naveen Chopra.
“We’d like to thank Shari and the Board for putting their trust in us. This new structure will allow us to continue leveraging the power of the entire company. Ours is a partnership built on respect, camaraderie and, most importantly, a shared love of Paramount Global, its employees and our world-class content,” the memo reads.
The company did not take any questions during the earnings call Monday,...
Paramount announced Bakish was out at the company Monday, just ahead of releasing first-quarter earnings, with McCarthy, Cheeks and Robbins making up the “Office of the CEO” upon his ouster. The three executives will work with the Paramount board and CFO Naveen Chopra.
“We’d like to thank Shari and the Board for putting their trust in us. This new structure will allow us to continue leveraging the power of the entire company. Ours is a partnership built on respect, camaraderie and, most importantly, a shared love of Paramount Global, its employees and our world-class content,” the memo reads.
The company did not take any questions during the earnings call Monday,...
- 4/29/2024
- by Caitlin Huston
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Paramount Global revenue in the first quarter climbed 6% year-on-year as Paramount+ added 3.7m subscriptions to reach 71m-plus and the streaming business cut losses by more than 40%.
Less than 30 minutes after the company announced the departure of CEO Bob Bakish and the establishment of a new leadership triumvirate comprising divisional heads George Cheeks, Chris McCarthy, and Brian Robbins, the trio led a whistlestop earnings call before signing off to the strains of Mission: Impossible without taking analysts’ questions.
Overall revenue for the period ending March 31 climbed 6% year-on-year from $7.4bn to $7.7bn, while operating loss improved 66% from $1.2bn to $417m.
Streaming losses...
Less than 30 minutes after the company announced the departure of CEO Bob Bakish and the establishment of a new leadership triumvirate comprising divisional heads George Cheeks, Chris McCarthy, and Brian Robbins, the trio led a whistlestop earnings call before signing off to the strains of Mission: Impossible without taking analysts’ questions.
Overall revenue for the period ending March 31 climbed 6% year-on-year from $7.4bn to $7.7bn, while operating loss improved 66% from $1.2bn to $417m.
Streaming losses...
- 4/29/2024
- ScreenDaily
Paramount Global revenue in the first quarter climbed 6% year-on-year as Paramount+ added 3.7m subscriptions to reach 71m-plus and the streaming business cut losses by more than 40%.
Less than 30 minutes after the company announced the departure of CEO Bob Bakish and the establishment of a new leadership triumvirate comprising divisional heads George Cheeks, Chris McCarthy, and Brian Robbins, the trio led a whistlestop earnings call before signing off to the strains of Mission: Impossible without taking analysts’ questions.
Overall revenue for the period ending March 31 climbed 6% year-on-year from $7.4bn to $7.7bn, while operating loss improved 66% from $1.2bn to $417m.
Streaming losses...
Less than 30 minutes after the company announced the departure of CEO Bob Bakish and the establishment of a new leadership triumvirate comprising divisional heads George Cheeks, Chris McCarthy, and Brian Robbins, the trio led a whistlestop earnings call before signing off to the strains of Mission: Impossible without taking analysts’ questions.
Overall revenue for the period ending March 31 climbed 6% year-on-year from $7.4bn to $7.7bn, while operating loss improved 66% from $1.2bn to $417m.
Streaming losses...
- 4/29/2024
- ScreenDaily
As a buyer group led by David Ellison’s Skydance Media aims to iron out a potential deal to take over Paramount Global, many eyes on Wall Street are also watching carriage talks between the entertainment conglomerate and cable giant Charter Communications. On April 30, that deal expires.
Last year, Charter played hardball with Disney in a negotiating showdown that led to a brief blackout last fall before the companies struck a broad carriage deal covering traditional pay TV networks and streaming services, which finance experts called a blueprint for future sector agreements and a potential “tipping point” in the relationship between content and distribution giants.
Depending if, when, how, and what Charter and Paramount agree on in a new pact could affect the value of Paramount and therefore its takeover price target and its strategic positioning for the future. It’s no surprise then that industry observers have their eyes...
Last year, Charter played hardball with Disney in a negotiating showdown that led to a brief blackout last fall before the companies struck a broad carriage deal covering traditional pay TV networks and streaming services, which finance experts called a blueprint for future sector agreements and a potential “tipping point” in the relationship between content and distribution giants.
Depending if, when, how, and what Charter and Paramount agree on in a new pact could affect the value of Paramount and therefore its takeover price target and its strategic positioning for the future. It’s no surprise then that industry observers have their eyes...
- 4/29/2024
- by Georg Szalai
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
George Cheeks, Brian Robbins and Chris McCarthy, the Paramount Global executives chosen to occupy the Office of the CEO as a replacement for the departing Bob Bakish, sought to reassure Wall Street on Monday that they have a plan.
The remarks, which took up just two minutes at the start of Paramount’s first-quarter earnings call, featured short comments from each exec, with the trio being played off by the Mission: Impossible theme. Cheeks began by thanking Bakish for his leadership.
“Paramount Global has the greatest content in the world,” he continued. “We’ve got incredible assets at this company.”
Equally as important, McCarthy said, is the fact that the three execs stepping in for Bakish are well-acquainted with each other. “We’re true partners,” he said, with a “deep respect for each other.”
The company is finalizing a long-term strategic plan, McCarthy added, built on three pillars: optimizing hit content,...
The remarks, which took up just two minutes at the start of Paramount’s first-quarter earnings call, featured short comments from each exec, with the trio being played off by the Mission: Impossible theme. Cheeks began by thanking Bakish for his leadership.
“Paramount Global has the greatest content in the world,” he continued. “We’ve got incredible assets at this company.”
Equally as important, McCarthy said, is the fact that the three execs stepping in for Bakish are well-acquainted with each other. “We’re true partners,” he said, with a “deep respect for each other.”
The company is finalizing a long-term strategic plan, McCarthy added, built on three pillars: optimizing hit content,...
- 4/29/2024
- by Dade Hayes
- Deadline Film + TV
Paramount has just unleashed its first quarter financials and they look pretty promising, although all eyes are on the shakeup in the C-suite. Revenue was higher across the board, albeit a hair shy of Wall Street expectations. Operating losses narrowed. Free cash flow rose, a key metric since it allows the company to pay down debt.
After a bleak Q4, TV and media group advertising jumped 14%, buoyed by Super Bowl Xviii on CBS in February. The studio had two winners in Mean Girls and Bob Marley: One Love. Paramount+ ended the quarter with more than 71 million subscribers, beating expectations and up from 65.7 million at the end of 2023.
The number hit just after the company confirmed that CEO Bob Bakish is departing, replaced with three division heads in a new office of the CEO amid drama-filled takeover talks with David Ellison’s Skydance.
In Bakish’ absence, CFO Naveen Chopra delivered the...
After a bleak Q4, TV and media group advertising jumped 14%, buoyed by Super Bowl Xviii on CBS in February. The studio had two winners in Mean Girls and Bob Marley: One Love. Paramount+ ended the quarter with more than 71 million subscribers, beating expectations and up from 65.7 million at the end of 2023.
The number hit just after the company confirmed that CEO Bob Bakish is departing, replaced with three division heads in a new office of the CEO amid drama-filled takeover talks with David Ellison’s Skydance.
In Bakish’ absence, CFO Naveen Chopra delivered the...
- 4/29/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
Paramount Global unveiled its first-quarter financial results Monday as controlling shareholder National Amusements, led by Shari Redstone, is in exclusive sale negotiations with a group led by David Ellison’s Skydance, as well as Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital and Kkr.
During the latest quarter, the company hit 71 million Paramount+ streaming subscribers worldwide, up from 67.5 million Paramount+ customers at the end of its fourth quarter, with 3.7 million customers added during the past three months.
And the studio shrunk its streaming loss to $286 million for the first quarter, an improvement over a $511 million loss in Q1 2023. Direct-to-consumer revenue rose 24 percent to $1.87 billion, as advertising and subscription revenues were both up, driven by growth from Pluto TV and Paramount+.
Elsewhere, TV media revenue rose 1 percent to $5.2 billion and filmed entertainment revenue rose 3 percent to $605 million, driven by business from Mean Girls and Bob Marley: One Love.
Paramount’s latest earnings were released...
During the latest quarter, the company hit 71 million Paramount+ streaming subscribers worldwide, up from 67.5 million Paramount+ customers at the end of its fourth quarter, with 3.7 million customers added during the past three months.
And the studio shrunk its streaming loss to $286 million for the first quarter, an improvement over a $511 million loss in Q1 2023. Direct-to-consumer revenue rose 24 percent to $1.87 billion, as advertising and subscription revenues were both up, driven by growth from Pluto TV and Paramount+.
Elsewhere, TV media revenue rose 1 percent to $5.2 billion and filmed entertainment revenue rose 3 percent to $605 million, driven by business from Mean Girls and Bob Marley: One Love.
Paramount’s latest earnings were released...
- 4/29/2024
- by Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Paramount Global CEO Bob Bakish is out as the company unveiled a triumvirate leadership team shortly before its Q1 earnings report on Monday, amid ongoing uncertainty over who will eventually own the company.
Paramount Global has established an Office of the CEO comprising George Cheeks, president and CEO of CBS, Chris McCarthy, president and CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks, and Brian Robbins, president and CEO of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon.
It is understood Bakish, who has worked with controlling shareholder Shari Redstone for more than 25 years since he joined Viacom in 1997, did not favour the bid...
Paramount Global has established an Office of the CEO comprising George Cheeks, president and CEO of CBS, Chris McCarthy, president and CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks, and Brian Robbins, president and CEO of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon.
It is understood Bakish, who has worked with controlling shareholder Shari Redstone for more than 25 years since he joined Viacom in 1997, did not favour the bid...
- 4/29/2024
- ScreenDaily
In a shocking move that is shocking nobody this afternoon, Paramount Global President and CEO Bob Bakish is out. In are his (hopefully) crack replacement team. The “Office of the CEO” gang consists of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon CEO Brian Robbins, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios President and CEO Chris McCarthy, and CBS President and CEO George Cheeks.
Paramount Global reported its quarterly earnings on Monday, hence the timing. Company executives, those who remain at least, will host a conference call with Wall Street analysts (and the media listening in) at 4:30 p.m. Et.
“Paramount Global includes exceptional assets and we believe strongly in the future value creation potential of the Company,” Shari Redstone, the chair of Paramount’s board, said in a statement. “I have tremendous confidence in George, Chris, and Brian. They have both the ability to develop and execute on a new strategic plan and to work together as true partners.
Paramount Global reported its quarterly earnings on Monday, hence the timing. Company executives, those who remain at least, will host a conference call with Wall Street analysts (and the media listening in) at 4:30 p.m. Et.
“Paramount Global includes exceptional assets and we believe strongly in the future value creation potential of the Company,” Shari Redstone, the chair of Paramount’s board, said in a statement. “I have tremendous confidence in George, Chris, and Brian. They have both the ability to develop and execute on a new strategic plan and to work together as true partners.
- 4/29/2024
- by Tony Maglio
- Indiewire
It’s official: Bob Bakish is out as CEO of Paramount Global, the company announced Monday. The exec’s departure after nearly three decades at Paramount Global and predecessor Viacom comes as the media conglomerate’s board and controlling shareholder Shari Redstone are trying to lock down a deal to merge with Skydance Media.
Three of the company’s divisional heads will divvy up duties in the newly formed “Office of the CEO”: George Cheeks, president and CEO of CBS; Chris McCarthy, president and CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks; and Brian Robbins, president and CEO of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon.
Word emerged over the weekend that Bakish was expected to exit the company imminently. Paramount Global said Bakish is “stepping down from his role as CEO” and from the board of directors. Bakish has agreed to remain employed with the company as a senior adviser from May 1 to Oct.
Three of the company’s divisional heads will divvy up duties in the newly formed “Office of the CEO”: George Cheeks, president and CEO of CBS; Chris McCarthy, president and CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks; and Brian Robbins, president and CEO of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon.
Word emerged over the weekend that Bakish was expected to exit the company imminently. Paramount Global said Bakish is “stepping down from his role as CEO” and from the board of directors. Bakish has agreed to remain employed with the company as a senior adviser from May 1 to Oct.
- 4/29/2024
- by Todd Spangler
- Variety Film + TV
Paramount Global CEO Bob Bakish is officially out at the company.
The entertainment conglomerate — in the middle of a sales process — is turning to a handful of top executives to run the company.
Chris McCarthy, George Cheeks and Brian Robbins will make up an “Office of the CEO,” running Paramount on a day-to-day basis for now. The three executives will work with the Paramount board and CFO Naveen Chopra.
According to Paramount’s quarterly report, Bakish will officially step down on Tuesday, and has agreed to remain employed by the company through Oct. 31 as a “senior advisor.”
The dramatic change comes as Paramount is in the middle of an exclusive negotiating window with a potential buyer group consisting of David Ellison’s Skydance, RedBird Capital and Kkr, with talks circling a plan that would keep Paramount public but with Skydance and RedBird executives effectively running things and executing a new strategy.
The entertainment conglomerate — in the middle of a sales process — is turning to a handful of top executives to run the company.
Chris McCarthy, George Cheeks and Brian Robbins will make up an “Office of the CEO,” running Paramount on a day-to-day basis for now. The three executives will work with the Paramount board and CFO Naveen Chopra.
According to Paramount’s quarterly report, Bakish will officially step down on Tuesday, and has agreed to remain employed by the company through Oct. 31 as a “senior advisor.”
The dramatic change comes as Paramount is in the middle of an exclusive negotiating window with a potential buyer group consisting of David Ellison’s Skydance, RedBird Capital and Kkr, with talks circling a plan that would keep Paramount public but with Skydance and RedBird executives effectively running things and executing a new strategy.
- 4/29/2024
- by Alex Weprin and Georg Szalai
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Paramount Global’s CEO Bob Bakish is out. The executive who has been a presence at several iterations of the company since 1997 will exit, effective immediately. A triumvirate of division heads — Brian Robbins, George Cheeks and Chris McCarthy — will step in to lead the company for now in a new office of the CEO.
Robbins is president & CEO of Paramount Pictures & Nickelodeon and chief content officer, Movies and Kids & Family, Paramount+; Cheeks is president-ceo of CBS, and chief content officer, News and Sports, Paramount+; McCarthy is President & CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks.
The company said the “Office of the CEO is working with the Board to develop a comprehensive, long-range plan to accelerate growth and develop popular content, materially streamline operations, strengthen the balance sheet, and continue to optimize the streaming strategy. The Board has great confidence in the leaders comprising the Office of the CEO,...
Robbins is president & CEO of Paramount Pictures & Nickelodeon and chief content officer, Movies and Kids & Family, Paramount+; Cheeks is president-ceo of CBS, and chief content officer, News and Sports, Paramount+; McCarthy is President & CEO, Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks.
The company said the “Office of the CEO is working with the Board to develop a comprehensive, long-range plan to accelerate growth and develop popular content, materially streamline operations, strengthen the balance sheet, and continue to optimize the streaming strategy. The Board has great confidence in the leaders comprising the Office of the CEO,...
- 4/29/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
Three Paramount executives will take Bakish’s place until the question of Paramount’s ownership is determined.
It has been a tumultuous few months for Paramount Global as the venerated entertainment company has been regularly embroiled in rumors surrounding its ownership and, more recently, who will be in charge of the company. On Monday, some of those questions were answered as Paramount reported its first-quarter earnings for 2024. On the streaming front, the company’s flagship platform Paramount+ added 3.7 million customers worldwide during the first three months of the year to bring its global total to 71.2 million, up 18.67% year over year.
Key Details: Paramount+ saw 18.67% subscriber growth over the course of the past year. The streamer also boasted a 51% revenue jump year over year as well. CEO Bob Bakish stepped down from his post on Monday effective immediately and he will be replaced by a trio of executives while Paramount’s ownership is decided.
It has been a tumultuous few months for Paramount Global as the venerated entertainment company has been regularly embroiled in rumors surrounding its ownership and, more recently, who will be in charge of the company. On Monday, some of those questions were answered as Paramount reported its first-quarter earnings for 2024. On the streaming front, the company’s flagship platform Paramount+ added 3.7 million customers worldwide during the first three months of the year to bring its global total to 71.2 million, up 18.67% year over year.
Key Details: Paramount+ saw 18.67% subscriber growth over the course of the past year. The streamer also boasted a 51% revenue jump year over year as well. CEO Bob Bakish stepped down from his post on Monday effective immediately and he will be replaced by a trio of executives while Paramount’s ownership is decided.
- 4/29/2024
- by Matt Tamanini
- The Streamable
It’s the moment of truth or consequences for Paramount Global.
The entertainment giant, controlled by Shari Redstone via her family’s National Amusements holding company, is in the middle of arguably the most fateful week in its history, with critical business decisions set to collide.
On Sunday, the group of David Ellison’s Skydance, Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital and Kkr submitted a “best and final” offer that would see them acquire National Amusements and merge Paramount with Skydance, infusing the company with fresh cash and installing a new leadership team.
The expanded deal also includes sweeteners to try and convince hesitant common stockholders to support the deal, a source tells The Hollywood Reporter.
The move arrives as the fate of Bob Bakish as CEO is hanging in the balance, hours before Paramount was due to report a key Q1 2024 earnings report, with Wall Street anxious to see how...
The entertainment giant, controlled by Shari Redstone via her family’s National Amusements holding company, is in the middle of arguably the most fateful week in its history, with critical business decisions set to collide.
On Sunday, the group of David Ellison’s Skydance, Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird Capital and Kkr submitted a “best and final” offer that would see them acquire National Amusements and merge Paramount with Skydance, infusing the company with fresh cash and installing a new leadership team.
The expanded deal also includes sweeteners to try and convince hesitant common stockholders to support the deal, a source tells The Hollywood Reporter.
The move arrives as the fate of Bob Bakish as CEO is hanging in the balance, hours before Paramount was due to report a key Q1 2024 earnings report, with Wall Street anxious to see how...
- 4/29/2024
- by Alex Weprin
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Updated with details of revised Skydance offer: Deadline has learned that Skydance’s offer for Paramount, said to be its last and final, includes a sweetened $3 billion cash in injection — up by at least $1 billion contemplated previously. That’s key as a priority is Paramount holding enough cash on its balance sheet for an investment grade status with big ratings agencies.
The deal also includes a premium sweetener for a percentage of non-voting Class B shares, although details of that aren’t clear. Shari Redstone would take an unspecified haircut compared with the initial deal terms, below. Paramount’s all stock acquisition of Skydance, planned as a second step in the transaction, wouldn’t change, with a value remaining at about $5 billion.
It’s not clear what happens to the few other Class A shareholders beyond Redstone, but most, like Mario Gabelli, also hold B shares. Class A share have...
The deal also includes a premium sweetener for a percentage of non-voting Class B shares, although details of that aren’t clear. Shari Redstone would take an unspecified haircut compared with the initial deal terms, below. Paramount’s all stock acquisition of Skydance, planned as a second step in the transaction, wouldn’t change, with a value remaining at about $5 billion.
It’s not clear what happens to the few other Class A shareholders beyond Redstone, but most, like Mario Gabelli, also hold B shares. Class A share have...
- 4/29/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
Reports indicate Bakish could be out as soon as Monday as Paramount continues merger talks with Skydance Media.
Paramount Global has not completed its merger with Skydance Media, but it appears it’s taking the next step in that process. According to multiple reports, Paramount Global CEO Bob Bakish is set to resign from the company under pressure and could see his exit come as early as Monday. Bakish has been sitting in the top chair since 2018 when CBS and Viacom merged into Paramount Global, but his vision for the company’s future is no longer aligned with the goals of its controlling shareholder Shari Redstone.
Key Details: Bakish has been an opponent of the merger with Skydance. Executives at CBS are concerned about what will happen to the company’s TV networks after Bakish’s departure. Skydance CEO David Ellison plans to take the top spot at the new Paramount Global,...
Paramount Global has not completed its merger with Skydance Media, but it appears it’s taking the next step in that process. According to multiple reports, Paramount Global CEO Bob Bakish is set to resign from the company under pressure and could see his exit come as early as Monday. Bakish has been sitting in the top chair since 2018 when CBS and Viacom merged into Paramount Global, but his vision for the company’s future is no longer aligned with the goals of its controlling shareholder Shari Redstone.
Key Details: Bakish has been an opponent of the merger with Skydance. Executives at CBS are concerned about what will happen to the company’s TV networks after Bakish’s departure. Skydance CEO David Ellison plans to take the top spot at the new Paramount Global,...
- 4/29/2024
- by David Satin
- The Streamable
Confusion and anxiety reigned at a CBS-Politico joint party today ahead of the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner, with staffers shocked at news that Bob Bakish, CEO of parent Paramount Global, is set to exit abruptly as early as Monday morning.
There have been rumblings about Bakish for days as the company enters the final stretch of exclusive merger negotiations with David Ellison’s Skydance. But his imminent departure triggered a wave of anxious speculation tonight in Washington, D.C. Ellison has always been mostly interested in the movie studio and historic lot. Although it seems Skydance does plan to keep the company intact, at least for a time, network folks aren’t betting on it and felt uncertain about the future of CBS, and about who might be running Paramount Global in a few short days — a troika of top execs, a new chief executive?
“We knew changes were coming,...
There have been rumblings about Bakish for days as the company enters the final stretch of exclusive merger negotiations with David Ellison’s Skydance. But his imminent departure triggered a wave of anxious speculation tonight in Washington, D.C. Ellison has always been mostly interested in the movie studio and historic lot. Although it seems Skydance does plan to keep the company intact, at least for a time, network folks aren’t betting on it and felt uncertain about the future of CBS, and about who might be running Paramount Global in a few short days — a troika of top execs, a new chief executive?
“We knew changes were coming,...
- 4/28/2024
- by Dominic Patten and Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
Bob Bakish is expected to resign as Paramount Global CEO amid merger talks heating up with Skydance, IndieWire has learned and according to multiple media reports.
It’s expected that Bakish, who has been with the company since 1997, could step down as early as Monday, which would be ahead of the company’s earnings call on Monday afternoon. He was named CEO in 2019 back when the company was called ViacomCBS.
Reps for Paramount Global declined comment.
It’s a shocking move that comes just as Skydance is closing in on its acquisition of Shari Redstone’s National Amusements, the theater company that holds 77 percent of the controlling shares of Paramount Global.
The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that a Bakish ouster was a possibility, with some board members reportedly souring on his leadership, and CNBC first reported Saturday that his exit could be as soon as Monday. The WSJ says...
It’s expected that Bakish, who has been with the company since 1997, could step down as early as Monday, which would be ahead of the company’s earnings call on Monday afternoon. He was named CEO in 2019 back when the company was called ViacomCBS.
Reps for Paramount Global declined comment.
It’s a shocking move that comes just as Skydance is closing in on its acquisition of Shari Redstone’s National Amusements, the theater company that holds 77 percent of the controlling shares of Paramount Global.
The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that a Bakish ouster was a possibility, with some board members reportedly souring on his leadership, and CNBC first reported Saturday that his exit could be as soon as Monday. The WSJ says...
- 4/27/2024
- by Brian Welk
- Indiewire
Paramount Global is set to announce as early as Monday morning that Bob Bakish is stepping down as CEO amid talks with Skydance and ahead of the company’s quarterly earnings that afternoon.
News Bakish might exit started circulating Friday. Paramount’s controlling shareholder and executive chair Shari Redstone, while once clearly on the same page with the chief executive, is said to be unhappy with some of his more recent strategic moves including a decision not to unload Showtime and an aborted sale process for BET. Deadline has also heard that Bakish is not a fan of a deal with David Ellison’s Skydance, in opposition to Redstone. The two companies are towards the end of a exclusive month-long negotiating period.
Paramount is reporting first quarter earnings after market close Monday. Bakish is not expected to be on the call.
It’s not clear how the company would replace him.
News Bakish might exit started circulating Friday. Paramount’s controlling shareholder and executive chair Shari Redstone, while once clearly on the same page with the chief executive, is said to be unhappy with some of his more recent strategic moves including a decision not to unload Showtime and an aborted sale process for BET. Deadline has also heard that Bakish is not a fan of a deal with David Ellison’s Skydance, in opposition to Redstone. The two companies are towards the end of a exclusive month-long negotiating period.
Paramount is reporting first quarter earnings after market close Monday. Bakish is not expected to be on the call.
It’s not clear how the company would replace him.
- 4/27/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.