It is the end of anticipation.
The bidding war for Warner Bros Discovery has officially begun, and the contenders couldn’t be more different in ambition, scale, and desperation. Paramount-Skydance, Comcast, and Netflix have all submitted preliminary offers, setting the stage for what could be the biggest Hollywood reshuffle in decades.
Paramount’s bid, backed by Larry Ellison’s deep pockets, is reportedly for the entire company, cable networks and all.
For a studio fighting for relevance, absorbing HBO, Warner Bros Pictures, and DC Comics might be the only way to stay alive. A combined Paramount–WBD would instantly control nearly a third of all theatrical box office share in North America. But the real question: can a struggling studio revive another struggling studio?
Comcast’s interest feels more strategic.
They want the crown jewels, the film/TV studios and HBO, not the cable leftovers. With Universal’s theme parks booming, adding Batman and Superman would create an IP machine unmatched by anyone else. A Universal–Warner merger would command over 43% of North American theatrical market share. But would regulators ever let that kind of dominance pass?
Then there’s Netflix, the unexpected suitor. The company that “doesn’t buy, it builds” now wants access to century-old IP: Harry Potter, DC, Lord of the Rings. Netflix’s streaming dominance is clear, but its lack of evergreen franchises has always been its Achilles heel. Acquiring Warner Bros would change that overnight.
And yet, the board already rejected a $60 billion offer. More bids will come. More negotiations will follow.
Should one company be allowed to own this much of Hollywood’s past and future?
Because whichever bidder wins, the rest of the industry will be forced to rethink everything.