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California to Paramount: Assimilate This
Gizmodo
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Published about 3 hours ago

California to Paramount: Assimilate This

Gizmodo · Feb 27, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

After Netflix dropped out of the race to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount is poised for victory—but it's not there yet.

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After this week’s double punch of news that, first, the Warner Bros. Discovery board had decided Paramount’s latest bid was the “superior proposal” and that Netflix’s response was not to raise its own offer but rather to back out entirely, it’d be tempting to assume Hollywood’s biggest deal in years is signed, sealed, and delivered. But… not so fast, says California Attorney General Rob Bonta. “Paramount/Warner Bros. is not a done deal,” Bonta wrote on X after the news broke. “These two Hollywood titans have not cleared regulatory scrutiny—the California Department of Justice has an open investigation, and we intend to be vigorous in our review.” As Deadline reminds us, Bonta’s office opened an inquiry into the Warner Bros. acquisition—regardless of which suitor, Netflix or Paramount, ended up victorious—just last week. On February 20, the AG explained, “The film and entertainment industry not only has historical importance to our state, it also is a critical sector that buoys the state’s economy of California and touches the lives of Americans daily. The proposed Warner Brothers transactions must receive a full and robust review, and California is taking a very close look.” While ownership of Warner Bros. is technically a business deal, political fervor has also built up around the issue, seemingly an unavoidable circumstance in America today. And that’s not going to change no matter what happens next. As CNN—a Warner Bros.-owned outlet that will find itself under the same ownership as the recently overhauled CBS, if Paramount finalizes its purchase—writes, “[President Donald] Trump was and remains a major X factor in the transaction. Although presidents typically stay out of antitrust investigations, Trump strongly suggested that he favored a Paramount deal because of Ellison’s politics.” So far, neither Trump nor California Governor Gavin Newsom, a noted Trump opponent, has spoken out on this latest development in the Warner Bros. sale. Whatever happens, it sounds like Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav isn’t too worked up about the outcome. According to Business Insider, he did admit to WBD staffers that the speed of the turnaround was a surprise even to him. But Zaslav emphasized they’d be OK even if the regulatory approval, estimated to take six to 12 months, doesn’t come through, because of the large “breakup fee” Paramount must pay if that happens. “The deal may not close,” Business Insider quoted Zaslav as saying. “If it doesn’t close, we get $7 billion, and we get back to work.” Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.


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Just months after Netflix struck a deal to acquire the Warner Bros. studio, HBO, HBO Max, and Warner Games, the streaming giant has backed out of the arrangement, declining to raise its offer beyond Paramount’s “best and final” bid. It’s just the latest twist in the acquisition saga, which started with a bidding war that reportedly also involved Apple, Amazon, and Comcast. Once Netflix and Warner Bros. came to an agreement on December 5th, Paramount tried to force its way into the deal, announcing a hostile bid worth $108.4 billion in cash. Unlike Netflix’s deal, Paramount’s includes an acquisition of all of Warner Bros. Discovery, including its cable networks. But after several rejections, Paramount persistently upped its bid. It eventually came back with an all-cash offer at $31 per share and promised to cover the $7 billion regulatory termination fee if its deal with WBD doesn’t close, along with the $2.87 billion termination fee it must pay Netflix for abandoning its deal. Warner Bros. Discovery determined that the deal is “superior,” leading Netflix to walk away, saying it’s “no longer financially attractive.” There are already questions about where the deal will go from here, and concerns from regulators about the proposed acquisition. You can follow along below for all of the latest updates as they come in. Netflix walks away from its deal to buy Warner Bros. after Paramount came back with a better offer Warner Bros. says Paramount’s latest offer is superior to its current deal with Netflix. Paramount CEO David Ellison is Sen. Lindsey Graham’s guest at the State of the Union. Warner Bros. says Paramount Skydance’s new bid might become better than Netflix’s. Ted Sarandos: “This is a business deal, it’s not a political deal.” DOJ reportedly begins antitrust investigation into Netflix’s merger with Warner Bros. Trump says Netflix will ‘pay the consequences’ if it doesn’t fire Susan Rice Warner Bros. Discovery gives Paramount one week