The Daily - Netflix vs. Paramount: Inside the Epic Battle Over Warner Brothers
Episode Date: December 9, 2025Netflix announced plans on Friday to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery’s studio and streaming business, in a deal that would send shock waves through Hollywood.On Monday, Paramount made a hostile bid f...or the studio, arguing that the Netflix deal would be “anti-competitive.”The Times journalists Nicole Sperling, Kyle Buchanan and Lauren Hirsch discuss what it all means for the future of TV and film.Guest:Nicole Sperling, a New York Times reporter in Los Angeles who covers Hollywood and the streaming revolution.Kyle Buchanan, a pop culture reporter and the awards-season columnist for The New York Times.Lauren Hirsch, a New York Times reporter who covers the biggest stories on Wall Street, including mergers and acquisitions.Background reading: Netflix planned to buy Warner Bros. Discovery in $83 billion deal to create a streaming giant.Paramount made a hostile bid for Warner Bros. Discovery.Photo: Aleksey Kondratyev for The New York TimesFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
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From New York Times, I'm Michael Bobarrow.
This is the Daily.
To hear the CEO of Netflix tell it, his $83 billion offer to buy Warner Brothers studios will benefit everyone.
We think this deal with Warner Brothers is good for shareholders.
We think it's good for consumers.
We think it's good for creators.
We think it's great for the entertainment industry as a whole.
To hear the CEO of Paramount tell it, that same offer is a monopolistic disaster.
Allowing the number one streaming service to combine with the number three streaming service is anti-competitive.
That's like saying Coke can buy Pepsi.
Today, the blockbuster deal that is rocking Hollywood, the competing hostile takeover bid that it's inspired,
and what it all means for the future of TV and TV.
and film, and for all of us, the viewers.
I spoke with three of my colleagues, Nicole Sperling,
Kyle Buchanan, and Lauren Hirsch.
It's Tuesday, December 9th.
I want to welcome the three of you.
to the first ever edition of the Roundtable
Hollywood edition, Lauren Hirsch.
Hello.
Nice to have you in the studio.
And joining us from Los Angeles and its environs,
Nicole Spurling, nice to have you on.
Hello.
And Kyle Buchanan, thanks for making time for us.
Hi, Michael.
So we usually put together these panels
to make sense of major moments in politics and government,
but the world of business gave us a story so big
and so high stakes.
And so theatrical that it could not be contained, I believe, to a single guest.
And that story, of course, is the emerging fight over who will control Wonder Brothers Studios,
this storied Hollywood institution, which is why we've asked the three of you on.
And I just want to explain what each of you bring to the conversation.
Nicole, you write about Netflix streaming and the business of Hollywood.
Am I capturing you correctly?
Yes, that is correct.
Kyle, you cover the movies for the times
and the actors and the directors
involved in making them
you brilliantly profile them
week in, week out, and you cover the awards season.
Is that do you justice?
That scratch the surface,
and only the surface.
And Lauren, you write about corporate mergers
and you've been steeped in the details
of this particular deal.
Yes.
Okay.
So just to give us a little bit of a roadmap,
we're going to spend a lot of time
in this conversation talking through the implications
of Warner Brothers' discovery
ending up in the hands of either of its current major suitors.
But I think we have to start at the boardroom level
because that's literally where it begins.
There are a lot of moguls
and multi-billion-dollar media brands involved in this battle.
And so we're going to bring each of the major players
on stage one by one.
Kyle, give us the Cliff Notes version
of the protagonist of this story, Warner Brothers.
Yeah, Warner Brothers is one of Hollywood's crown jewels.
It's been around over 100 years.
It was founded in Hollywood's Golden Age.
It's made movies from Casablanca to Batman.
I was on that backlock the other day,
and you're walking past film and TV history wherever you go.
It's run by a guy named David Zasloff,
who came over when Warner Brothers merged with Discovery.
And it's been a little bit of a rocky road since that merger.
Why?
Well, you know, Discovery has a lot of flailing television channels
at this point, a lot of cable channels,
which includes CNN that they're trying to get rid of in some fashion.
So there's been an expectation that Warner Brothers Discovery would be up for sale or broken up into parts.
And, of course, one of those parts is HBO, the gold standard of television.
Yes.
Lauren, I think this is where you come into the conversation
because the realization that Warner Brothers Discovery is going to be broken up, potentially sold,
brings in our second protagonist in this story, which is,
Paramount. So just give us the quick back story of Paramount's place in this showdown.
Before Paramount Skydance, as it's now known, there was Skydance, which was run by David Ellison,
the son of Oracle founder Larry Ellison. Really rich family. Really rich family, which is important
to this story. Larry helped finance David's acquisition of Paramount, which just closed a couple
months ago. And we should just say that was a very small brand eating a very huge brand.
Very huge brand. It has CBS. It has the studio behind the Godfather, Mission Impossible.
It's a huge company. And all of a sudden, David Ellison comes on the scene as a media mogul.
But what also becomes very evident is he is a small media mogul in comparison to David Zazoff
over at WBD, Ted Sarandos at Netflix. What's really important,
right now when media is streaming
and Paramount Plus, Paramount
streaming business is a drop in the bucket
when compared to those. Right. The undisputed
leader of streaming is Netflix, about
300 million. I think Paramount Plus
is at about 80 million
subscribers. So so
many fewer. Right. And so
key to Ellison's
strategy, frankly, even before
they closed his purchase of Paramount
was buying Warner Brothers Discovery.
So once Warner Brothers
discovery made clear that a
be considering some kind of option, like splitting its business in half,
David Ellison pounce, and he has made a number of bids trying to buy Warner Brothers.
Great summary.
And that, of course, brings us to Nicole Netflix, which clearly understands that Warner Brothers
is kind of in trouble, maybe up for sale, and that Paramount has his eyes on it.
Yes, and it's the giant.
It is the one that has transformed the movie industry.
Netflix was the upstart. It was the disruptor. And when they came in and started streaming content, it has prompted every other studio in town to start their own streaming business to take on their own loads of debt in order to create this huge infrastructure. And they have not been able to do it as well as Netflix has done when it comes to acquiring subscribers all over the place. They also have the ethos of they have to constantly grow. And they are constantly going into new areas of business. They
went into games. They started an advertising tier. And they are constantly in that growth mindset.
And now they feel that the best way to do so is to acquire this storied legacy studio that has an
incredible library of content that Kyle mentioned earlier. And to exploit that content in the
ways that only Netflix can. They have the best optimization. They have the best tech. They can do
things with content that the other streaming services can't do. And Lauren, why is it that a
all these offers. It's Netflix offer that Warner Brothers accepts, not Paramounts.
So Warner Brothers Board ran a process, and they spoke to bidders. They asked Paramount.
They asked Netflix to tell them what they were willing to put up, how they were hoping to finance it.
And it came to the conclusion that Netflix's offer, which was only for part of Warner Brothers' discovery, its streaming and studio business, was better for its shareholders than they offer that Paramount put on the table.
Now, Paramount doesn't agree with that.
Right.
They don't agree with that so much that they're making a hostile bid for Warner Brothers Studios,
which is not all that normal in this generation of business.
And I want you just quickly explain how a hostile takeover works and if it's ever seen as a good idea.
Sure.
So the way the hostile bid works is a bidder says your board isn't all that good.
They aren't doing, you know, well by you.
We're going to go directly to the shareholders.
and we're going to give you $30 for each share in cash.
Wouldn't you rather do that than sell the Netflix?
And the reason why hostile bids often don't work,
and we hear a lot less about them these days,
is because companies have a number of mechanisms
that they can use to protect themselves.
That being said, hostile bids can be successful,
but they're not fun.
You have a company out there screaming how terrible your board is.
Like kind of a nuclear option.
Nuclear option.
And, you know, one of the most famous hostile bids
that was successful was actually done by David Ellison's father, Larry Ellison, in his acquisition
of PeopleSoft. So they can work, and I will tell you in my conversations today, I'm not getting
the sense that Paramount is going to be timid about its pursuit.
This is the moment where I have to say that my favorite hostile takeover of all, and Kyle,
I hope you appreciate this, is Gordon Gecko's takeover of Teldar paper. Yes. Greed is good.
Greed is good, and greed is never ending. It is utterly rapacious, and these conglomerates that are
already so gigantic show, no signs of slowing their appetite.
There are producers on our team who want to make sure I have explained properly that
Gordon Gecko is a character from Wall Street, the movie.
Now, if you needed that explanation, I'm frankly sad for you.
I want to discuss what the world looks like if either of these companies end up taking over
Warner Brothers.
And I think we should start with the version where Netflix takes over Warner Brothers, because
that's the deal that's already been announced.
and is in the works.
So, Nicole, what does buying Warner Brothers precisely do for Netflix
and its 300 million subscribers given this Crown Jewel library that it has?
How does it work?
Well, it will initially give them additional subscribers
when you include the subscribers from HBO Max.
They say that they have about a 75% overlap when it comes to subs,
but that still will increase their subscribers.
driver base, especially in the U.S. where they already feel like they're pretty saturated.
It also allows them to go into two different businesses that they're not currently in.
Yes, they make television shows, but they don't have a television studio, and they're not able to
sell television shows to other entities, which is something Warner Brothers does all the time.
Ted Lassau that you see on Apple TV, that's a Warner Brothers television show.
So they can go into that business as well.
They also are going into the domestic and international theatrical movie business, which is something
they have never wanted to be in much to the chagrin of many movie directors who want desperately
to both be in theaters and be on Netflix. Netflix has always just resisted being in theaters.
Their whole thing is we want to bring our product right to the consumers right away.
And this pesky business of theatrical distribution, which costs the time.
ton of money because you have to spend a ton of money to market movies so that people will go to
theaters is inefficient and it doesn't give consumers what they want when they want it.
Got it. So the key thing that this does for Netflix is it beefs up its central business,
its reason for being, which is streaming to people at home, just to be very clear about that.
There's another way to look at it too, and it's perhaps a less charitable one.
Netflix is trying to take a competitor off of the board. That competitor,
is not Warner Brothers.
That competitor is movie theaters.
There is a lot of hand-dringing in the business this week
about what the loss of Warner Brothers might do
for the already somewhat tenuous theatrical exhibition market.
Well, just spell that out,
because I think those of us who have come up
in the kind of post-theater world,
imagine the theater to be destined for the dustbin someday anyway.
So just walk us through what this deal would do
to the timeline of,
of theaters already pretty big problems.
Fewer movies would come out.
Fewer big movies, fewer small movies,
movies of every stripe.
And when you're starting to take those movies off the board,
you are left with really big gaps in the calendar
that make it kind of unreasonable for a lot of theaters to operate.
You look at Warner Brothers alone.
The big hits that studio had this year
from Minecraft to sinners to weapons to one battle after another
without those movies this year in theatrical distribution,
would be a disaster.
And it's already not easy.
The pandemic, the double whammy of the actors and writers strikes,
and, yes, the seg to streaming that this deal will almost certainly hasten,
just make that not-so-rosy future look even more discouraging.
And I think that a lot of people in Hollywood don't necessarily expect Netflix
to honor the initial terms of the deal where Netflix is owner Ted Serandos is saying,
sure, we're still going to put Warner Bros. movies out in theaters for now. Then that will evolve.
Everyone can see what that writing on the wall means, and it doesn't mean lengthy theatrical windows.
It means eventually those movies are going to get to Netflix as soon as possible, and the consumer will know they don't have to see it in theaters.
In fact, maybe they shouldn't go to theaters at all.
Nicole, is that a justified fear? And let me just spell out how that fear has been expressed.
there have been letters written from theater owners
saying that the Netflix ownership of Warner Brothers
is a disaster for them.
There have been movie producers and writers,
Kyle, crack me if I'm wrong,
who've written a note, I believe it was anonymously,
saying this would be really bad for them.
The whole world of people who make movies
that end up playing in a theater
have been talking about Netflix buying Warner Brothers
as kind of end times for the theater.
And I'm curious if you think Kyle is right
that Hollywood thinks that any assurances to the contrary are meaningless?
Well, Netflix has never given any assurances that they really believe in the theatrical experience to begin with.
Ted Sarando's the co-CEO of Netflix, has constantly dismissed the theatrical experience.
He's called it marketing stunt.
He's said it's outdated.
He's constantly kind of maligned to the whole thing to a point where no one really believes him.
And though now they're in this business because they have to,
to say they're in this business in order to get this deal to close, it is not a crazy idea
that they're only going to do it so that they can get the deal through and we'll ignore
the theatrical market moving forward.
I mean, let's be clear, the theatrical market and what is required to sell movies into
theaters is really an inefficient business.
If you have a newcomer come in and say, like, hey, look at how this movie business works,
they would say, this is ridiculous.
Like, you have to spend $50 million to market a movie in the U.S.
so that people will show up on opening weekend.
You spend two to three years making the movie.
You spend this much to market.
You can know on Saturday morning if you're dead in the water
and the movie's been deemed either a hit or a failure.
It happens that quickly.
It's like gambling with ridiculous odds.
I can see Kyle's head exploding.
I know him to be a lover of the thing.
I'm also a lover of theatrical experience, but as a business proposition, it's not a great idea.
On the flip side, though, that is the way to create cultural conversation. It's the way to make
something last for a long period of time. You can go out and ask lots of people what their
favorite Netflix movie is. I don't think anyone has a real answer. You can go out and ask people
what their favorite Disney movie is, or you can ask them what their favorite movie was they saw in
theaters last year. And even if you don't see it in theaters, you know that Barbie was on
3,000 screens and was a huge deal. And then you at some point will find that movie. That
whole cultural conversation really starts in the movie theater. And while it is completely
inefficient, it's kind of the way it's been working all this time. Kyle, are you really convinced
that a Netflix-owned Warner Brothers doesn't really put any movies in the theater? I mean, it could
in theory, very easily do both, if for no other reason to create a cultural conversation,
to create buzz for the story you end up covering every year, which is awards season, Oscar's Golden Globes.
Yeah, I mean, it's been amply proven that movies that come out in theaters tend to do better
once they make their way to streaming because there has been that cultural conversation already
because it did feel like an event. Movies that just appear on streaming often make no noise
whatsoever. So you would think it would be in Netflix's best interest to still put movies out in
theaters. They do a very perfunctory theatrical release for their Oscar contenders, but they'd really
rather people see those movies in the comfort of their own home. Those are really just done to
satisfy Oscar rules and filmmakers who are agitating to have some sort of theatrical component.
But I think once there's no more theatrical component to be had, if theaters really do go the way of the
dodo. That's not going to be something
that Netflix is crying about whatsoever.
Right. And, Carl, you've actually explained this to me.
When you send a movie to
the theater, the theater
takes a lot of the money.
So if you're Netflix,
giving up whether it's 50 or 40
or 30% of your revenue to
some theater, doesn't make
a whole lot of sense when your central business is sending
a streaming video to my bedroom
in Brooklyn. And I think, you know,
Netflix has had movies that can and do
make money if they're released in theaters,
K-pop Demon Hunters had two sort of stunty weekends where it made money.
Certainly the Knives Out franchise, the last two of which have appeared on Netflix.
Those movies can make money in theaters if they were given really robust long releases.
But I don't think it's in Netflix's best interest to do so.
They are perfectly willing to leave that short-term money on the table if it guarantees them a long-term future
where streaming is dominant above all else.
Okay, so these are the clear downsides.
the Netflix Warner Brothers deal for the creative community and the theater goer. I want to talk about
the upside for a minute. And if you're a Netflix subscriber, I wonder if you're now going to get
more for your money, specifically if you're a Netflix subscriber who also pays for something like
HBO Max, which it would acquire in this deal. And I think it's safe to say, I'm going to do a very
quick poll. Who among us subscribes to HBO and Netflix? Everybody? Yes. I do. Yep. Everybody. Okay.
So, in theory, you might be paying less for those two when they're housed under the same roof, right?
Yeah, that's the argument Netflix is making, that that's what they will provide consumers is a cheaper price.
Whether or not that's true, you know, prices keep going up.
They keep raising prices on consumers.
So, you know, they may start with it lower and then that price may rise.
It wouldn't be the first time we've seen that happen.
Suffice it to say, there will be less competition between the two of them when they're owned by the same place.
If they want the price to go up, it will go up, if they want the price to go down.
Exactly.
It will go down.
Lauren, Netflix is making a pretty interesting argument about why this merger, which puts a lot of things in one box, which is suddenly Netflix box, is not monopolistic.
And I wonder if you and Nicole, feel free to chime on this, too, can briefly summarize Netflix's case for why this is not something that the Trump administration should work.
about when it comes to antitrust.
So if you look at just share of streaming, Netflix is already a giant, and now it's acquiring
an HBO, another streamer.
If you look just a little pocket, red flags all over the place.
Netflix is arguing that's the wrong way to be looking at it.
They'd say, when you're thinking about what to do tonight, where you're going to watch content,
you're not thinking which streamer am I going to watch.
You're thinking, what am I going to consume?
That could be TV on the cable.
That could be TikTok.
That could be YouTube.
that is all different kinds of things.
So it's saying that regulators, when they're looking at control of the market,
should be thinking about that backdrop, not just streaming.
Nicole, does that argument feel compelling?
Yes, I mean, that is Netflix's argument.
According to Nielsen, you know, they're sixth when it comes to total TV watching.
YouTube is number one, and they are sixth.
If they combine with HBO and HBO Max, there'll be 9% of TV viewing.
that still puts them in this metric beneath Disney and all of their services, which that includes
ESPN and Hulu and everything like that. And basically at the same place as NBCUniversal, which counts
both their linear operations like NBC and also their cable operations too. So that's the way they
want the regulators to analyze this, whether or not that's the case that will be made remains to be
scene. Paramount, of course, as the rival bidder is arguing that it is, of course, monopolistic
and that it does present a big threat. It's also important to note that TikTok and YouTube don't
buy scripted television. When the first word of this merger leaked, I was at a poker game with a
bunch of working actors, and I just saw the despair on their faces. They've already been squeezed so
much. These are actors who live in Los Angeles, who have to travel out of state and out of country
often just to work. And now there are going to be fewer places that are buying the TV shows and
movies that they hope to work on.
Okay, so we're about to take a break. And when we come back, we're going to talk about whether
the alternative deal, which is paramount buying Warner Brothers, is any better, whether it comes
to the creative community and its concerns about this deal and all the antitrust issues
that it raises as well.
So we'll be right back.
Okay, welcome back to our Hollywood Edition Roundtable,
Nicole, Lauren, and Kyle,
I want you all to conjure the second possibility
that it's Paramount that wins Warner Brothers.
Somehow the Netflix deal blows up
and what it would mean if Paramount prevails
for all the constituencies that we have been talking about so far.
are the movie makers, consumers, and regulators.
So, Carl, let me start with you.
Who wins and who loses in a paramount victory here?
To forecast what that might look like,
I'd already look at how Skydance has treated paramount
since they made that merger.
You know, David Ellison has signaled a sort of willingness
to accommodate Trump.
He has installed Barry Weiss to run CBS News.
It has taken on a little bit of a right-word slant.
there's also speculation that part of the reason that Ellison wants Warner Bros. Discovery at all
is to remake CNN and no matter that would please Trump.
When it comes to the film studio, it's hard to imagine then that Ellison would be as eager to greenlight films
like One Battle After Another or Sinners.
Right, one battle through another, the only one of the two I've actually seen,
is clearly a movie about a world where revolutionaries take on a Trump-like administration.
Yeah, and not shy about those things at all.
So you're raising the specter right off the bat
that a Paramount-owned Warner Brothers studio
becomes somewhat potentially politically neutered,
and that would be a worry for the creative class in Hollywood.
Yeah, absolutely.
You know, directors have to deal with enough terrible studio notes as it is.
I think anybody trying to get anything
that is truly iconoclastic through this system
deserves kudos,
and it's only going to be all the worse
if you feel like you've got to report to the president, too.
But in terms of the movie business, Nicole,
since you know very well how streaming-centric Netflix is,
if Paramount were to take over Warner Brothers,
it would clearly want to put things on Paramount Plus
its streaming business,
but it sounds like the theater would be in less danger in that arrangement?
Yes, I think the theater would be in less danger in this arrangement.
They're steeped in the traditional theatrical,
business model. They have said that they would release up to 30 movies a year, which is just
all that the theaters want to hear. That's what they want. That helps with that cadence that
Kyle was talking about. But on the flip side, there's more redundancies between those two
companies. They're already laying off four to five thousand employees. There's only going to be more
redundancies if they buy Warner Brothers, and there's going to be a lot more layoffs in that scenario as
well. So from an employment standpoint, at the studio level, you would expect a ton of people losing
their jobs. Consolidation isn't good in any scenario here, and people are going to be hurt. It's
either on the creative community side or on the studio executive side. There's just going to be a lot
of changes. No matter who ends up winning. Exactly.
Lauren, what is Paramount's argument to Warner Brothers about why
it should be seen as the ideal suitor for the whole company
rather than for just a piece of it the way Netflix is arranging the deal.
It has two main arguments, cash and certainty.
So the bid they put out today is $30.
The hostel takeover.
The hostel takeover, $30 to shareholders.
It's clean, it's money.
You can put in your pocket, be done with it.
And when you say clean in your pocket, it's not borrowed?
So Netflix is using some stock.
So there's less uncertainty.
You don't need to worry about whether or not Paramount's shares go up or down or how the deal performs after it closes.
Shareholders can take the cash, put it in their pocket, and walk away.
Now, they can only do that if the deal closes.
So the other thing that Paramount is pushing really hard is regulatory certainty.
Larry Ellison, David's father, is close with Trump.
And some people thought he may have helped them in successfully,
acquiring Paramount which faced its own challenges. So much like Netflix is going to say that you
should be broadening the market with which you look at streaming, Paramount is going to argue you need
to look at the evolution of the entertainment industry and it's now competing against big tech
like Netflix, like Google, like Amazon, and it needs to be bigger in order to compete with them.
In other words, Paramount may be making an argument, who knows how compelling it will be,
that what the world really needs is a bigger streaming rise.
to Netflix?
So Paramount will say, yes, if we do this deal, we will be a very large studio.
But guess what?
Traditional studios are no longer the only ones making content.
So look at the competition in that perspective, not just among the traditional old-line studios.
Got it.
And therefore, this is not anti-competitive.
Competitive.
So I'm curious, as a consumer, I think one of the curiosities we all have is which one of
these companies, if they were to prevail, would make better stuff.
Netflix is now kind of famous for a formula in which you get lots of stuff, but some of it
ain't so good.
Some of it is good.
Some of it's really good.
What happens if they win?
What happens if Paramount wins to the quotient of really, really good, and garbage?
Michael, are you familiar with a movie called Alien vs. Predator?
No.
There is a tagline that has outlasted this movie,
and that tagline is, whoever wins, we lose.
And, you know, you can say,
well, maybe buying Warner Bros.,
which has put out some all-time classics,
would make Netflix movies and television a little bit better.
That's possible.
But it's hard to say,
especially as these companies merge,
what creative executives are staying on board,
what redundancies start to happen,
who gets absorbed into what studio,
and what executives can't play fair
because suddenly they're rubbing shoulders
with somebody else who's at their level
that they don't like.
It's very hard to say how this will shake out,
and much as we'd like to say
that this would create better content for a consumer,
and certainly HBO itself is considered
the premium destination for television
right how does HBO change if it gets utterly absorbed into Netflix and what kind of independence
would HBO retain if either company acquired it it's difficult to forecast and what's interesting is
Netflix has always admired HBO and thought it was the you know gold standard that they wanted to
emulate so you could imagine that they will try and preserve it in the best way possible but then
once they realize how expensive those development processes are that they engage in in order to get the kind of prestige content that seems to beat them every year at the Emmys, they may not be as encouraged to spend that kind of money in order to make the few great shows that do win those prizes every year.
Right. Game of Thrones does not come cheap. That's just a reality.
So Carl and Nicole, what you're both saying, I believe, is that if you're Netflix or Paramount, you have some.
some incentive not to pay top dollar for prestige television,
and that, of course, would be sad for those of us who grew up watching
not just Game of Thrones, but Sex in the City, The Sopranos.
I'm on my seventh full-series re-watch.
So that would be sad.
Yes.
You would expect these companies to try to retain that prestige that HBO brings,
But we've already seen with the last HBO merger with Warner Brothers Discovery that Zaslov was all too willing to water down that HBO brand.
I mean, how many times did that icon on your phone or your television change from HBO to HBO max to just Max?
And then back to HBO because they couldn't come up with a coherent corporate identity.
Zasloff thought that HBO was too prestigious.
He wanted to water it down with all this drek that was imported over from Discovery, all of the...
all these reality shows, things you'd never see on HBO,
but that he thought would open that brand up.
So as much as we might like to think that these corporations have more sense
than to mess with the HBO brand, Time has told us
that in the name of increasing shareholder value,
all sorts of misbegotten bids might be taken.
Right.
And I don't know if you'd agree with this,
but Netflix has taught us something really important,
which is that people will pay and keep paying for volume.
over a complete devotion to quality?
I mean, Netflix wants both.
They want volume and they want quality.
You know, it's very clear that they're still in the awards game.
The Golden Globe announcements were this morning,
and they were bested by Warner Brothers.
So, I mean, they have a big awards operation.
It's something they still believe in a lot,
but they also want to make what's best for you.
What they've always said, and they compete with sleep.
They want you there as often as possible.
So they will give you Wednesday.
They will give you the diplomat.
They will give you a variety of programming just as long as you stay on that service.
Okay.
So I think we've reached the moment in the conversation where we need to give listeners a little bit of a roadmap of what to expect is about to happen and who is most likely to ultimately win control of this crown jewel, Warner Brothers.
So I wonder if the three of you can venture a responsible.
journalistically informed guess about whether a hostile takeover bid for the entirety of Warner Bros. Discovery might prevail, Lauren, or if we think the existing deal in which Netflix gets the streaming and studio part of the business already announced is the likeliest outcome.
Well, to the extent that passed this precedent, hospital bids more often do not work than they do.
So just based off that, I would put my metaphorical money on Netflix.
Okay. Nicole?
The problem with that scenario is that we have an unpredictable president who's inserted himself into this process.
Literally, I will be involved in this decision, he said.
Exactly. So I don't know how we can use past as president right now because I just don't know what's going to happen.
And I just think I'll hold and not bet on that either.
But just to jump in on this, Nicole Vesfield's important, while the Allison seem to have a very strong relationship with Trump, I detected in Trump's answers over the weekend a certain fondness for the leadership of Netflix.
When the president wants to make life difficult for people and he's asked a question, he usually finds a way to make, like, difficult for them.
And I sensed a reluctance to denigrate Netflix or this deal.
Yes, I agree.
And, I mean, Ted Sarandos has made those pilgrimages to Mar-a-Lago.
He went and met with Trump in November at the White House to lay out the deal for him,
and I think probably explain how he would like that market that we discussed to be perceived,
that they're a share of television and not a share of streaming.
So with all that being said, I mean, the Netflix offer has been accepted by the Warner Brothers Board,
and they've entered into exclusive negotiations.
That puts them in the poll position
and the likely scenario would be that their bid goes through.
Kyle, finally?
I will say it's making for some tasty, unscripted drama.
I'm not eager for the season finale,
but in the meantime, they're keeping us fed.
I wonder if we need to end this conversation
with something a little higher altitude
about where the TV-movie-going experience is.
in this moment of consolidation,
because consolidation is the story
no matter who wins.
Absolutely.
And I think, obviously,
as has been borne out by this conversation,
fear about the future of theatrical distribution
is very justified.
But I think the even bigger-brained,
longer-range take on what is about to happen
is concern about the future of movies, period.
I don't know that as we move into an all-streaming future
and theatrical continues to die on the voice,
that it is in streamers' best interests to invest in movies as a two-hour medium.
They want to capture your attention and keep you on that service for as long as possible.
And by and large, a 10-hour limited series or a 20-hour reality show that costs virtually nothing
is the better way to do it than a discrete piece of two-hour entertainment that can be sequelized
sometime far in the future, if at all.
Other streamers have already realized this lesson
they're making fewer movies than they used to,
including Netflix.
Netflix used to put out a new movie every week.
They don't do that anymore.
I'm not sure that that would feel much more robust
if this acquisition goes through
because ultimately does it behoove them
to spend $250 million on a Superman movie?
Or would they rather that be a 12-episode series?
That will keep you on the service for 12 hours
instead of just two.
That is a profoundly sad assessment for the cinephiles out there,
of which I'm sure there are many.
I think for a fair number of people, that's going to be sad,
but it's also just their reality of being at home,
swimming in a sea of serial streaming shows.
Swimming and maybe drowning.
Lauren, Nicole, Kyle, thank you all very much. We appreciate it.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need, to know-day.
Members of Congress have put language into their latest defense.
spending bill that would require the Pentagon to provide them with the specific orders
that have led to the deadly airstrikes on boats in the Caribbean, and unedited videos of those
attacks. That requirement, supported by members of both parties, signals bipartisan frustration
with just how little information the Trump administration is giving Congress about the controversial
air strikes, which the White House claims are killing drug dealers.
And on Monday, the Supreme Court's conservative majority appeared ready to make it easier
for President Trump to fire independent government officials, despite laws meant to insulate
them from political pressure. Under questioning from Justice Clarence Thomas, a lawyer for
the president argued that Trump's authority to fire such officials, even
from independent federal commissions was total.
How far do you go with that?
Can it be arbitrary, completely arbitrary?
It is conclusive and preclusive.
So any review of arguably bad reasons for the president to remove an executive officer
would be subject to the political process, if it would not be subject to judicial review.
However, the court's liberal justices disagreed, saying that the White House argument
would give President Trump far too much authority.
So the result of what you want is that the president is going to have massive, unchecked, uncontrolled power.
Today's episode was produced by Claire Tennisgetter, Rochelle Bonja, and Luke Vanderpluk.
It was edited by Mark George with help from Paige Cowett.
Contains music by Alicia E. Tube and Pat McCusker.
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
That's it for the daily.
I'm Michael Bobarro.
See you tomorrow.
