Well WBD shareholders will be happy as the WBD share price more than tripled from before Ellison made his first bid.Have mergers like this ever really worked out for either? Mergers in general are great for the banks/firms running the merger because they get paid up front. And executives are always looked after because executives are always looked after. But the merged companies rarely function well and usually manage to lose significant stock value. So unless a shareholder bails out mid-acquisition frenzy, odds are they get screwed too.
Personally, I don't care about killing movie theaters. I don't actively hate them or wish them any harm, but let me watch it from home, as well. Heck, I wouldn't be opposed to a two-day exclusivity window for theaters, either. But three months? That's not necessary.The problem with a Netflix takeover of Warner Brothers film division is that Netflix wants to kill the movie theater business.
I would prefer good movies. The fact they are shit doesnt really change where to watch them. i am not going to bother watching shit at home either.Do people want more movies in theaters? Theatres have been shit for at least a decade, probably more. I'd much rather get the movie at home as soon as possible. It seems like such a weird angle to use to object to the merger. Oh no, I won't be able to go to a crowded mall and surround myself with a gaggle of assholes so that I can be overcharged to watch a movie on a screen that's worse than what I have in my living room. What ever shall I do?
If Paramount were to buy WB, licensing fees would likely skyrocket. And due to a lack of competition I think we'd be looking at even less originality and even more dreck coming out of Hollywood.The movie theater industry is one of the biggest critics of Netflix’s WB acquisition due to fear that the streaming leader won’t release as many movies to theaters for as long and may drive down licensing fees.
Not just that (and Saudi Arabia), but the Ellison dynasty, too. They've already publicly promised to 'overhaul' (read: shift to right-wing) CNN if they win the bid.There's a reason for that:
https://www.axios.com/2025/12/08/jared-kushner-paramount-warner-bros-netflix
Translation: "John Oliver had better watch his back."Paramount has already successfully navigated the current regulatory landscape under US President Donald Trump and merged with rival studio Skydance in August.
I long to live in your world, where making something easier makes people less likely to do it.Totally off-topic, but I wonder how much longer people will post "photoshopped" image memes, now that it has become easier than breathing. ...
Historically, the only consistent long-term winners in a merger or acquisition of any substantial size are the shareholders of the company being acquired, assuming they cash out at the time of the merger. And yes, those who exact their pound of flesh as a transaction fee. There are, of course exceptions.Have mergers like this ever really worked out for either? Mergers in general are great for the banks/firms running the merger because they get paid up front. And executives are always looked after because executives are always looked after. But the merged companies rarely function well and usually manage to lose significant stock value. So unless a shareholder bails out mid-acquisition frenzy, odds are they get screwed too.
Yup. I've been through half a dozen corporate takeovers. First you insist nothing will change. Then the company will try some desperate bid to radically increase profits, which will either work, or grievously wound the company. Then when it doesn't work, more corner cutting and layoffs. Then comes some short term financial shenanigans, then the company's husk is sold to some other sucker. Leveraged buyouts almost always spell doom.Leveraged buyouts often screw over the company eventually. Look at Hostess Bakery in the U.S. It was bought out so many times they eventually couldn't even make the interest payments on the loans used to buy them and went bankrupt.
As I alluded to in the post above yours, the purpose of a leveraged buyout is to allow larger shareholders of the acquired company to maximize the value of their investment in a company that is heading in the wrong direction. Any current holders of WB stock should be looking to cash out as soon as this deal closes, if not right now. Take your money and run. Let that debt from the transaction be someone else's liability.Yup. I've been through half a dozen corporate takeovers. First you insist nothing will change. Then the company will try some desperate bid to radically increase profits, which will either work, or grievously wound the company. Then when it doesn't work, more corner cutting and layoffs. Then comes some short term financial shenanigans, then the company's husk is sold to some other sucker. Leveraged buyouts almost always spell doom.
Yup. Look at what happened to Teen Vogue.Conde Nast fires people for that.
The netflix acquisition is better. It’s not great, not by any measure, but it’s better than Paramount. For one thing the news gets spun off, not merged into what’s basically targeted to become a state media conglomerate.It's not like the Netflix acquisition is any better.
Heads, the billionaires win; tails, the customers lose. There only outcome here that's actually positive is if the acquisition is blocked entirely.
We can already. They've started using betting odds and reporting them as if they are election polling, so they're already propaganda and not news anymore.One can almost write CNN's obituary as an independent news gathering organization...especially if it becomes aligned with CBS.
Damn, there is little to hope for in the coming year, is there? Big money can gobble everything up, and own any politician.
I feel like I might be living on a completely different planet, because IME the theater experience is miles better these days than it was a decade ago. Most of the cinemas in my area have undergone upgrades and renovations so that the seats are arguably better than what I have at home, the food options are pricey but still pretty good, the screen/sound is better than what I own/can afford, and since I don't go to opening night showings I tend to avoid the worst of the mouth-breathing crowds. And to top it off, the ticket prices aren't really any higher than they already were a decade ago, so it's not like I'm paying any extra for the improved experience.Do people want more movies in theaters? Theatres have been shit for at least a decade, probably more. I'd much rather get the movie at home as soon as possible. It seems like such a weird angle to use to object to the merger. Oh no, I won't be able to go to a crowded mall and surround myself with a gaggle of assholes so that I can be overcharged to watch a movie on a screen that's worse than what I have in my living room. What ever shall I do?
Exactly how I feel. With streaming releases often only a few days after theatre releases, for the first time in my life theatres have to actually compete and provide a nice service for the money. For a major movie release, I'll gladly go to a theatre now.I feel like I might be living on a completely different planet, because IME the theater experience is miles better these days than it was a decade ago. Most of the cinemas in my area have undergone upgrades and renovations so that the seats are arguably better than what I have at home, the food options are pricey but still pretty good, the screen/sound is better than what I own/can afford, and since I don't go to opening night showings I tend to avoid the worst of the mouth-breathing crowds. And to top it off, the ticket prices aren't really any higher than they already were a decade ago, so it's not like I'm paying any extra for the improved experience.
Take that away, and my movie consumption falls off a cliff. The improved theater experience has had me seeing more stuff in theaters than I did pre-COVID.
There's a reason Orban attended CPAC. He's taught the Republicans how he did it.Larry Ellison has apparently already asked Trump for a list of names of CNN journalists he wants fired. So yeah if the Ellison's buy it, CNN will go straight into the wood chipper until it becomes another Newsmax or some such garbage. They put Bari Weiss in at CBS, I could see them putting someone like Ben Shapiro or Tucker Carlson as editor in chief at CNN. Straight out of the playbook of Victor Orban.
Perhaps this is a big YMMV situation, and I've been unlucky with what's available in my area. I have two bigish theatres near me, both owned by the same company. They did the recliner seat upgrades at some point in the past ten years and that's about it. The screens are fine, but my OLED is better, especially in dark scenes. The only place they have me beat is audio volume. The food is still junk and absurdly expensive. I paid over $60, just for the tickets, to take my family of four to see Zootopia 2 on the weekend. That would have been less than $10 if it was available digitally. There are two or three other small theatres, but they still have the old style seats and their screens are even worse. Maybe if I was going to movies by myself the value wouldn't be so bad.I feel like I might be living on a completely different planet, because IME the theater experience is miles better these days than it was a decade ago. Most of the cinemas in my area have undergone upgrades and renovations so that the seats are arguably better than what I have at home, the food options are pricey but still pretty good, the screen/sound is better than what I own/can afford, and since I don't go to opening night showings I tend to avoid the worst of the mouth-breathing crowds. And to top it off, the ticket prices aren't really any higher than they already were a decade ago, so it's not like I'm paying any extra for the improved experience.
Take that away, and my movie consumption falls off a cliff. The improved theater experience has had me seeing more stuff in theaters than I did pre-COVID.
Not in this case... It's all about what is best for those who can approve or block the deal.It’s all about what’s best for the shareholders, never the customers.
Paramount has already successfullynavigated the current regulatory landscape underbribed US President Donald Trump
Perhaps this is a big YMMV situation, and I've been unlucky with what's available in my area. I have two bigish theatres near me, both owned by the same company. They did the recliner seat upgrades at some point in the past ten years and that's about it. The screens are fine, but my OLED is better, especially in dark scenes. The only place they have me beat is audio volume. The food is still junk and absurdly expensive. I paid over $60, just for the tickets, to take my family of four to see Zootopia 2 on the weekend. That would have been less than $10 if it was available digitally. There are two or three other small theatres, but they still have the old style seats and their screens are even worse. Maybe if I was going to movies by myself the value wouldn't be so bad.
You comment presents that the home experience is not together, that the parent always turns on the movie and walks away. The together-ness is the important part and doesn't require "the theater experience". Yeah, it's fun to go to the theater sometimes, but it's not really the important part of the memory. I have great memories of renting movies with my friends and watching the all night at one of our homes... memories made "by plopping down on (a) couch". My kids (15 & 8) have fine memories of watching movies together from a couch, with popcorn and candy, as they do watching movies in a theater. With the elder, we enjoyed catching up on MCU thru Avengers: Infinity War from the couch, because it was together. We watched Star Wars 1-9 and director's cut of The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings. It was a family event, not "sitting them on the couch and telling them have at it."I bet your kids will remember you taking them out to see Zootopia 2 as apposed to just sitting them on the couch and telling them have at it.
I still remember the day I went to see Star Wars back in 1977. I still remember the day me and my friends from high school went to see ROTJ when it came out in the mid 80's. Hell I even remember going out with my friends to the late night showing of Shocker at my local downtown theater post high school back in the 80's. Terrible movie but great memories.
You don't get that by plopping down on your couch.
HBO hasn't been Premium since they tacked the MAX wart onto it. Now they have to earn that title back. Maybe start by dropping the advert infested tiers.Here is the link to the article I had alluded to earlier in the thread. Where before the Netflix acquisition announcement the HBO Max CEO alluded to the brand being a premium service as opposed to Netflix's model.
You can kiss that premium model goodbye once Netflix takes over.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/t...n-casey-bloys-hbo-ip-max-original-1236432357/
I didn't, but downvoted your response to it for implying everyone should conform to your ideology.
Alas, tiers that are infested with advertising is where everybody is going now, including Netflix (after many years of saying they would never do that). Most of them are heavily pushing the "with ads" options; recent promotions from them have not included deals on the no-ads tiers. Paramount+ is a notable exception; they recently offered half off an annual subscription that covered both with ads and ad-free tiers. Peacock even admits that they make more money on their with-ads tier than on ad-free subscribers; they have been particularly successful at targeting and selling ads.HBO hasn't been Premium since they tacked the MAX wart onto it. Now they have to earn that title back. Maybe start by dropping the advert infested tiers.
Some of the cost savings are legitimate. For example, if Netflix wins they're likely to eliminate HBO Max and fold it into Netflix. (Even if they keep HBO Max alive as a separate service, they would likely eliminate the HBO Max infrastructure and make the back end part of Netflix.) They won't need some of the existing staff if they do that. Paramount would do the same, except that they would probably fold Paramount+ into HBO Max rather than the other way around.Shareholders of the 'winning' company are in a tougher spot. Can the winner fire enough employees and raise prices fast enough to cover the debt cost of the acquisition?
Many employees will find out soon what "Improved Efficiencies" mean when the layoff notices start.
I just wonder if there will be a direct Trump bribe. ‘Pay xxx dollars and you get your little merger’. Maybe Netflix and Paramount could bid for the privilege.
It's not like the Netflix acquisition is any better.
Heads, the billionaires win; tails, the customers lose. There only outcome here that's actually positive is if the acquisition is blocked entirely.
And thats why they are no longer Premium. Now HBO is an also ran. AppleTV has firmly taken the Premium title, and they did it by traveling the trail that Home Box Office blazed 30 years ago.Alas, tiers that are infested with advertising is where everybody is going now, including Netflix (after many years of saying they would never do that). Most of them are heavily pushing the "with ads" options; recent promotions from them have not included deals on the no-ads tiers. Paramount+ is a notable exception; they recently offered half off an annual subscription that covered both with ads and ad-free tiers. Peacock even admits that they make more money on their with-ads tier than on ad-free subscribers; they have been particularly successful at targeting and selling ads.
One reason I fear it is that it will change the movies and shows that get made. Producers will be expected to build ad-friendly break points to their shows, and shows that have corporate-unfriendly viewpoints may become impossible to make because nobody will want to buy ad time on them. Imagine pitching remakes of Network or Max Headroom in that environment...
That'll happen around the same time Raytheon pivots away from producing missiles and after the Coca Cola company goes bankrupt.Or option 3: Hollywood dies and opens the door for the rest of the world to replace its creatively bankrupt bean counter driven franchise machine with creative content.
It's already happening, actually. Indies have even been pushing mega-budget studios aside in the Academies.That'll happen around the same time Raytheon pivots away from producing missiles and after the Coca Cola company goes bankrupt.
This is where the primaries matter: they are an opportunity for people to choose better candidates. Once you're at the ballot box, the choice effectively comes down to whoever is the Democrat candidate, and whoever is the Republican candidate (yes, there'll be others, but because of the utterly insane way that the election is handed to whoever has a plurality, that's what it boils down to in the end. The US needs to fix its voting systems to anything other than "first past the post", but that's a separate discussion). At that point, hold your nose and vote Democrat, no matter how bad you might think the candidate is, because anything else is effectively a vote for the Republican, and that would be worse.
But if you get involved with the process that decides who gets put on the ballot box for the Democrats, you have the opportunity to push for better there.
So you aren't exactly wrong - but you are missing the point that there are other places where you can vote, and where that vote matters.
I feel the same way, because it's true. And it's also by design; partly because the swing states are only relevant as a direct result of election rigging. Were it not for the election rigging the comparatively small populations in the swing states would render them electorally irrelevant for the most part, as should be the case in a democracy. Instead, a relatively small minority of voters decide for the entire country, which is minority rule, not democracy.Here's my problem with the primaries:
If you live in a state that doesn't vote early in the primaries, all the Candidates that you might like may already have resigned their campaigns. The last time I remember having a primary that was still contested by the time I got to vote was Obama v. Clinton.
My state is also not a swing state, so my vote also doesn't have any influence on what President or Congress people get selected. I still vote, but I basically feel like the system has rendered my vote essentially meaningless.
Oh, but there is. In this case, two different groups of 0.1%ers want it. One of them has direct ties to the President through their Private Equity, the other has reach that, in the past, has allowed them to even overcome governmental bureaucracy. So now we get to see which group of privileged few gets to win, or if it all gets destroyed in the fighting.In today's reality, if the 0.1%ers want it, they get it regardless of how bad it is for investors.
So there's really no question at all.
You're looking at a different thing to what I'm looking at.If you live in a state that doesn't vote early in the primaries, all the Candidates that you might like may already have resigned their campaigns. The last time I remember having a primary that was still contested by the time I got to vote was Obama v. Clinton.
There are degrees of badness to the slate of billionaires in the world, and so long as we have to deal with them we should try to favor the less evil. That being said, there's still no such thing as an ethical billionaire.exactly. Thinking otherwise is one of the core issues of brain rot of thinking binary that all billionaires are interchangeable. People like Musk, Ellison, Adelsons , and Thiel have a manipulation and society change agenda to a level that Buffet or others dont
Case in point: there are now decades of Fox programs, many of which can be considered progressive or even leftist in philosophy. That doesn't magically make Fox News anything but a far right propaganda machine.That Paramount is contractually obligated to let South Park do its thing (for now) is not evidence that Paramount the parent entity is not an active propaganda outlet.
Many movies aren't filmed in Hollywood anymore because other states have offered some ridiculous tax breaks for the studios to go there. It has nothing to do with unionized workers. If a picture is being made by one of the Big Five, it's using union staff regardless of where it's being made.Most movies are not filmed in Hollywood anymore, because it's way to expensive to do so with all the unionized workers.