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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy Is Warner Bros. for Sale at All?
Its product has never been more critically or financially successful. Why is it auctioning itself off?
https://prospect.org/2025/12/10/why-is-warner-bros-for-sale-at-all/

The Golden Globe nominations came out on Monday, and two films dominated: One Battle After Another with nine nominations and Sinners with seven. On the television side, The White Lotus led with six nominations. These productions have something in common: They are all products of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD), which has also dominated the box office this year. A record seven straight Warner Bros. releases debuted with more than $40 million in receipts in their opening week this year, the most consistent run of success in movie history.
This all begs the question: Why did a critical darling and commercial juggernaut publicly auction itself off, and why is it now caught in a bidding war between Netflix, with which Warner Bros. agreed to a merger last week, and Paramount, which made a hostile takeover bid on Monday? Why is a successful movie and streaming studio, whose finances are going to look better once it sheds its dying cable channels as planned, so desperate for a new corporate parent? Understanding why demonstrates the pathology of the modern economy, Wall Streets drive to consolidate, and why Americans feel helpless in an age of corporate power.
The simplest answer for why Warner Bros. wants a merger is to cover for other failed mergers. The history is long and complex, but heres a short version: Warner Communications was formed out of the historic Warner Bros. studio and other assets in the 1970s, and merged with Time, Inc., to form Time Warner in 1990. Time Warner merged with AOL, known famously as the worst merger in history, in 2001, leading to a decade of downsizing and spin-offs; Time Warner was eventually left with Warner Bros., HBO, and the Turner network of channels that included CNN, TNT, TBS, TCM, and others. AT&T then bought Time Warner in 2016, surviving a protracted challenge from the Trump administration. If that wasnt the worst merger in history, it was the second-worst, leading to a spin-off within a couple of years and yet another merger with Discovery Media. We know how that worked out, since WBD is on the block once again.
These mergers created a horrific financial legacy: $53 billion in debt as of 2022. Each was attractive in its time to executives and corporate synergists, but bad for the actual business. The creative talent managed to thrive despite the mismanagement, building on the reputations of HBO and the Warner Bros. studio. But the debt left the company in constant crisis. And the real driver of the merger wave was not the promise of creating a successful end product, but money. David Zaslav, who only took over WBD three years ago, is promised up to a $500 million payday if a sale closes, because his contract allows his 21 million share options to immediately vest in that circumstance.
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TheProle
(3,863 posts)Everything's for sale.
Polybius
(21,323 posts)For the right price.
Initech
(107,135 posts)In what era is any of this OK?
The Saudis are not, nor will they ever be our friends. Mohammed Bin Salmon is an enemy to freedom and democracy.
Mark.b2
(717 posts)from that neighborhood. Youre right; they are not our friends.
Xolodno
(7,283 posts)When they took Marvel, everyone thought it was a waste of money, they got all the characters no one else wanted, but saw value and well, we know how that worked out. Even buying the ones Marvel had sold off later, only Spider Man remains and unable to use some of them on the east side of the Mississippi for their attractions. Universal is probably holding on to that to get something they want later.
Warner Brothers on the other hand, made some really bad merger choices. Disney walked away from buying twitter as they knew it would not fit their formula. WB, should have looked harder at AOL. Not that Disney hasn't made a few bad choices every now and then, they bought Lycos and renamed it "Go". Obviously it didn't catch on, but they didn't get into a bidding war over it and got it cheap.
