• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers
 
Puck logo
 
what im hearing

Hello and welcome back to What I’m Hearing.

 

For those new here, I’m Matt Belloni, a former entertainment lawyer and editorial director of The Hollywood Reporter. My private emails come twice a week—Thursdays and Sundays—to members of Puck, our new media company covering the centers of power and influence in America. Sign up here, or gift a membership to your smartest friend.

 

Discussed in today’s email: Mathew Rosengart, Kathleen Kennedy, Barbara Broccoli, Karen Bass, Rick Rosen, David Zaslav, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Bob Chapek, and The Price Is Right.

 

First, a feel-good story…

Sponsored by Amazon Prime Video

amazon studios
disney

Britney’s Lawyer Celebrated Her Freedom with Steak and Tequila

Mathew Rosengart ran circles around the clowns controlling Spears’ life for the past 13 years.

matt belloni

MATT BELLONI

The man who made #FreeBritney a reality hasn’t slept much in four months. He’s worked almost non-stop. He’s lost 10 pounds. So I’m happy to report that Mathew Rosengart took his wife, the publicist Mara Buxbaum, and some friends (including Jeff Ross, Conan O’Brien’s longtime producer) to the Polo Lounge in Beverly Hills on Friday night, hours after an L.A. judge terminated Britney Spears’ infamous conservatorship. Rosengart had a steak and some Don Julio.        

 

I’ve known Mat for years, care of his legal work for clients like Sean Penn and Casey Affleck, and I predicted back in July that the former federal prosecutor would run circles around the clowns controlling Spears’ life for the past 13 years. Even so, his success was surprisingly swift and total, leveraging Jamie Spears with the threat of sitting for a deposition and responding to interrogatories. Jamie quickly petitioned to end the entire conservatorship rather than answer probing questions about his role in it.

 

Hopefully Jamie and Lou Taylor, Jamie’s close friend and Britney’s former business manager, will still face accountability for their actions—and the money they personally siphoned out of the estate. Rosengart subpoenaed both of them, and—shocker—Jamie doesn’t think any further discovery is necessary, given that he’s no longer a conservator. As Ronan Farrow and Jia Tolentino noted this week in The New Yorker, Taylor is so far refusing to turn over even basic documents, like her contract with the estate, and it’s never been made public exactly what she was paid during her decade of management. I’d love to see that number—as would a judge, I imagine. She also hired infamous Hulk Hogan and Trump media attorney Charles Harder, who, besides being a blowhard (he told me to “Fuck off” during my last chat with him, when he was spinning for former Amazon executive Roy Price), is not a very good lawyer, in my opinion.            

 

As for Rosengart, he’s not planning a victory lap just yet. He’s been turning down interview requests, including 60 Minutes and the various Britney documentarians. (I may do something with him down the line, but for now, he’s not on the record in this story either.) But I can reveal that Rosengart did accept one media opportunity. He’s a Bruce Springsteen superfan (70 shows and counting), so he agreed to do a guest DJ set on SiriusXM’s E Street Radio. That tapes this week.

ADVERTISEMENT

 

Prime Video presents the Amazon Original comedy series WITH LOVE, written and created by Gloria Calderón Kellett, and follows the Diaz siblings, Lily and Jorge, who are both on a mission to find love and purpose. Each of the five episodes, set during a different holiday throughout the year, follows Lily, Jorge Jr. and the Diaz family over the course of 12 months as they experience the highs and lows of life during some of the most heightened days of the year.

with love

WITH LOVE is awards eligible and available on December 17th at ConsiderAmazon.com.

Who Won the Week: Taylor Sheridan

 

Sure, Britney was freed, Taylor Swift scored with a re-recorded album, and Peter Jackson sold his VFX unit for $1.6 billion. But did you see those Yellowstone numbers? Sheridan’s contemporary cowboy soap returned to 8 million live viewers and 14.7 million after three days—on the impossible-to-find Paramount Network, and without a next-day streaming play.

Now, on to a topic that is often discussed at Disney, but few want to do so publicly...

 

It’s Time to Take Star Wars Movies Away from Kathy Kennedy

 

I’m betting I wasn’t the only one who chuckled when the news broke on Tuesday that the Patty Jenkins Star Wars film—the one that Disney trumpeted with a video of the Wonder Woman director saying her goal was the “greatest fighter pilot movie ever made”; the one that had a title, Rogue Squadron, and a release date, in 2023; and the one with the it’s-really-taken-this-long? designation as the first Star Wars film to be directed by a woman—was not happening. Well, not not happening, just delayed indefinitely, if you believe Disney. Scheduling problems, prior commitments, we’ll regroup next year, yadda yadda.

 

I talked to a few insiders this week that said the real culprit was the dreaded “creative differences”; specifically, Jenkins couldn’t agree on the script with Lucasfilm executives, including senior V.P. Michelle Rejwan. That’s not unusual, of course, but it’s a laughably recurring problem at Lucasfilm under president Kathleen Kennedy, say agents: Top filmmakers are dying to make a Star Wars movie—until they sign on and experience the micromanagement and plot-point-by-committee process. It happened to the Game of Thrones guys, David Benioff and Dan Weiss, who were hired to create a new trilogy but bailed. It also happened to Rian Johnson, writer and director of 2017’s The Last Jedi, whose own planned trilogy was shelved. Jenkins wasn’t willing to dick around, and she has other projects, notably Wonder Woman 3 at Warner Bros., where she enjoys more creative freedom. (Disney and personal representatives for Jenkins and Kennedy declined to comment.)

 

You’ll forgive my skepticism when it comes to Kennedy’s management of the Star Wars film franchise. Since 2012, when Disney paid $4 billion for George Lucas’ company and installed Kathy (everyone calls her Kathy) as his handpicked steward, Disney has sold billions of dollars in toys, books, games and merchandise; incorporated Star Wars lands into its theme parks; pioneered virtual production techniques at Industrial Light and Magic; and generated a slew of TV projects, including The Mandalorian, by far the most important series to Disney+. But when it comes to the Star Wars films—the basis of the franchise, and the skillset that Kennedy, one of the most successful and prolific film producers of all time, brought to the company—what a mess.

 

It might seem hyperbolic to say that, given that the five Star Wars movies under Disney’s umbrella, beginning with 2015’s The Force Awakens and ending with 2019’s The Rise of Skywalker, have collectively grossed about $6 billion. But the litany of botched productions and missed opportunities could form the curriculum for a film school seminar called Franchise Mismanagement. Let’s briefly revisit:

 

  • A dormant franchise: After the commercial and creative disappointment of 2019’s The Rise of Skywalker, there isn’t a single Star Wars film project on track to make it to release before 2024, so at least five years between movies. Sure, there are 10 TV projects in the works—mostly for Disney+, which is what Disney C.E.O. Bob Chapek cares most about—but an extended absence from theaters isn’t exactly what then-C.E.O. Bob Iger wanted when he initially declared that fans could expect a new movie every year.

  • The production chaos: Remember when Kennedy was forced to bring in Tony Gilroy to completely overhaul director Gareth Edwards’ cut of 2016’s Rogue One, the first standalone film, which was “a mess,” at least in Gilroy’s words? Or when, on the second standalone, 2018’s Solo, Kennedy actually fired the comedy filmmakers Phil Lord and Chris Miller mid-production, reportedly for injecting too much…wait for it….comedy during shooting? She then enlisted late-career Ron Howard, and the bland version of Solo failed to crack $400 million worldwide, becoming the first Star Wars movie to lose money, while Lord and Miller went on to win an Oscar that same year for the brilliant Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse. Then on 2019’s Rise of Skywalker, she fired filmmaker Colin Trevorrow, scrapped his script, and desperately convinced Force Awakens’ J.J. Abrams to return—for a hefty price. One source told me that Abrams ended up making tens of millions of dollars on the project, and he would have made more if the film had performed as expected, which it didn’t because many found the story—bringing back the long-dead Emperor, for instance—to be a series of cynical retreads.

  • Which brings us to the baffling creative choices: Star Wars is tough because fans feel such personal ownership over the characters and mythology. Everything is scrutinized. But Kennedy’s management of those expectations seemed to shift film-to-film. Force Awakens, after a rocky development, was considered a well-executed mix of fan service and fresh characters. But after allowing Johnson to kill off Luke Skywalker and the villain Snoke in Last Jedi, Kennedy and Co. freaked when superfans didn’t like some of the creative deviations from the Star Wars canon. So rather than defend or extrapolate on his ideas for Episode IX, Lucasfilm just minimized or ignored them. The Force could inhabit anyone, until it couldn’t... that kind of thing. It all contributed to a sense that even though this is the premiere, A+ Hollywood franchise, the overall story wasn’t mapped out, and nothing really mattered to its overseers.

  

That’s what really baffles the film executives I talked to: The apparent lack of long-term planning or I.P. management for which Disney is typically the standard-bearer. Kennedy made five films based on the most beloved property in the galaxy and then…there was nowhere to go, no storylines to follow, no characters that demanded more, no filmmakers whose next installment the fans were jonesing to see. And because Solo flopped, everyone is going to be skeptical about any character-based standalones. Kennedy seemed to approach the franchise like a producer; just finish this movie, make it as good as you can, and then deal with the next one later. And it caught up with her big time.

I know it’s unfair to compare Lucasfilm to Marvel, a unicorn hit factory that is blessed with thousands of characters from decades of comics. But Lucas’ Star Wars galaxy isn’t exactly bereft of stories, as Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni have proven with the Mandalorian spinoffs like the upcoming Book of Boba Fett and Ahsoka series. (And yes, if I’m criticizing Kennedy for the Star Wars film output, I need to also give her credit for what Favreau and Filoni have accomplished, which is pretty stunning.)

 

But it’s obvious that Marvel’s Kevin Feige, a fanatic for his genre, sees the bigger picture, and anticipates what his fans want before they want it. He’s also got a group of creative lieutenants that can manage all the projects, allowing Marvel to release three movies a year, plus the Disney+ series, and successfully enable filmmakers like the Russo brothers (Avengers), who were directing episodes of Community, or Taika Waititi (the Thor sequels), who was known only for tiny projects; or Nia DaCosta (Captain Marvel 2), off the Candyman horror reboot.    

 

After nearly a decade in charge, it seems clear Kennedy isn’t that person, and doesn’t have that team in place, for Star Wars  to thrive as a film franchise. If Feige, who is working on his own Star Wars film, can’t take on all the movies, and Favreau and Filoni don’t want it, then Chapek needs to find some new blood.

 

Kennedy has a lot of good things happening at Lucasfilm, and I’m told she recently re-upped her deal for another three years. She’s a producing legend, up there with the best who have ever done it. But Star Wars as a film franchise is a disaster, and someone else should be given a chance to fix it.

ADVERTISEMENT

with love

Quote of the Week

“He was tyrannical. He was disturbed. I started crying….He wished I was dead. Destroyed me. Destroyed my soul.”

–Sheila Nevins, the former HBO documentaries executive (now at ViacomCBS), describing her frayed relationship with former HBO programming chief Michael Lombardo, in James Andrew Miller’s new HBO oral history Tinderbox.

 

 

The David Zaslav Media Tour: An Update

 

From the glowing Vanity Fair profile, to the investor conferences and earnings calls, to this week’s Paley Center appearance, the David Zaslav media train is picking up steam. Next stop: The incoming Warner Bros. Discovery C.E.O. agreed to participate in an upcoming Variety cover profile (with photos!) that will call Zaslav the “Dealmaker of the Year.” Is it a great idea to wave that bit of personal press in front of federal regulators when the deal on which it’s predicated is not yet approved? Sure, why not.

 

 

Your Real Box Office Champion of 2021 Is…

 

Last year, most of the personal achievements in professional sports came with an asterisk due to the Covid-shortened seasons. The M.L.B. pitcher who won the Cy Young that year, for instance, started calling himself the Mickey Mouse Cy Young Award Winner on social media.

 

So who’s taking the Mickey Mouse Box Office Award for highest-grossing movie of 2021? It’s not Disney, actually. With its strong opening this weekend in Australia, No Time to Die is now projected to cross F9’s $721.1 million global number sometime around Thanksgiving, according to both MGM, its domestic distributor, and Universal, which handled most overseas territories. With neither Eternals nor Venom: There Will Be Carnage getting a China release, and nothing major coming before year’s end (except Spider-man: No Way Home, which drops Dec. 17 and will earn mostly in 2022), it’s safe to say the Bond film played a long game and came out on top.   

 

That’s a win with a big asterisk—2019’s champion, Avengers: Endgame, grossed between three and four times the likely Bond number. And if producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson were satisfied with the gross, they wouldn’t have signed off on MGM offering the movie on premium V.O.D. after just 30 days, well short of the 75-90 day window for Spectre. But it’s still notable, given the geezer-skewing audience for the franchise. Studio research showed that 25 percent of the over-35 audience said this was their first movie back in theaters, I’m told.       

 

Of course, this is just the Hollywood movie of the year. The actual top grosser will almost certainly be The Battle at Lake Changjin, a three-hour Chinese war film that has grossed $874 million and was released in only one country.

 

 

My Reading List

 

  • Shade alert: CBS would like to remind everyone (and especially Netflix) that Americans still watch a shit-ton of broadcast television. Gotta love that they picked The Price Is Right (8.6 billion minutes of viewing in the fall) to compare to Squid Game (10.45 billion minutes). [THR] 

  • Turns out people really like watching reality TV, even on streaming services. [Bloomberg] 
  • A MoviePass co-founder has bought the company and plans to relaunch it. Subscriptions have got to be the future of the exhibition business, right? [Insider] 

  • Death to Nielsen! Unless Nielsen agrees to our contractual terms! [NYT] 
  • Today in business irony: Universal Music is lengthening how long artists must wait to re-record their music, even as one of its biggest artists Taylor Swift, makes millions off re-recorded music. [WSJ] 

  • A great look at the Succession production design, and how they create lavish spaces for a super-rich family with “little regard for taste or beauty.” [Ringer]

 

 

Hollywood Picks a Favorite in L.A.’s Mayoral Race

 

The political donor class in Hollywood traditionally doesn’t get too involved in unsexy L.A. politics. But I feel like that’s changing a bit. I saw people like Damon Lindelof and Ava DuVernay and Mike Schur posting on social media about last year’s L.A. city council race, and now it seems the industry is lining up behind Karen Bass, the congresswoman (my congresswoman, actually) who has declared herself a candidate for L.A. mayor in next November’s election.

 

Jeffrey Katzenberg is all-in for Bass, who was on Biden’s shortlist for running-mate, and on Thursday, Sam Fischer, the Ziffren Brittenham lawyer and fundraising ringleader, hosted a Bass event with his wife at their Hancock Park home. The host committee included WME’s Rick Rosen, Searchlight’s David Greenbaum, manager Brian Dobbins, and producers Stacey Snider, Jenno Topping, Marta Kaufman and Gail Berman. More Bass events are planned, I’m told. 

 

 

The Feedback

 

The Disney+ subscriber slowdown and stock dive dominated my emails, texts and DMs this week. Some examples:

 

“Folding Hulu and ESPN+ into Disney+ is really the only path for Disney to compete globally. One service, one price, one message. It’s so simple.”-A strategy executive 

 

“Dopesick on Disney+? Are you high? I know everyone wants Disney+ to compete directly with Netflix, but the Disney brand has lasted 100 years because it hasn’t been sullied chasing whatever the platform of the moment is.”-A media buyer 

 

“Sell Hulu to CBS?  Spin-off Hulu? Seems like taking the short term hit (billions?) of divesting Hulu is in the best interest of a clear, centralized, globally consistent long term strategy. In 5 years, won’t it still look funny that they have two streaming services?  If you are going to compete with Netflix, at least compete on the same playing field.”–A professor

 

Have a great week,

Matt

 

A correction: I misspelled Jim Gianopulos’ name last Sunday. Apologies to Jim G. 

 

Got a question, comment, complaint, or a holiday party invite? Email me at Matt@puck.news or call/text me at 310-804-3198.

 

FOUR STORIES WE'RE TALKING ABOUT

cocktail

Disney's New Reality

Disney’s fourth quarter underscores the risk for entertainment companies that have hitched their share price to ceaseless growth.

MATT BELLONI

money bag

The Critical Race Backlash

Backlashes against racial progress are as American as genetically-modified apple pie. But C.R.T. has unleashed a new torrent of grievances.

BARATUNDE THURSTON

martini

Who's Funding Bari Weiss?

Plus: Inside Tim Draper’s quixotic scheme to kill California’s unions and the Masters-Vance-Thiel campaign synergy.

TEDDY SCHLEIFER

 
card
 

The Jack Welch Conundrum

Twenty years after stepping down as the leader of GE, and being minted the C.E.O. of the century, Jack Welch’s baby is about to become three companies. What went wrong?

WILLIAM D. COHAN

 
swash divider
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

You received this message because you signed up to receive emails from Puck.

 

Was this email forwarded to you?

Sign up for Puck here.

 

Sent to {{customer.email}}

Unsubscribe

 

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC.
64 Bank Street
New York, NY 10014

 

For support, just reply to this e-mail.

For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Hollywood

MELANIA documentary
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
Can ‘Melania’ Open?
On top of the $40 million Amazon ponied up for Brett Ratner’s docu-hagiography, the studio is spending another $35 million to open it in 27 countries, including a splashy Kennedy Center premiere to be attended by top executives. But for all the expense, Melania is for an audience of one.
Ted Sarandos
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
Movie Theaters Want a Ted Sarandos Blood Oath
Regal’s Eduardo Acuna goes public with his pitch for Netflix to sign a 10-year binding pledge with the Trump D.O.J. (and other ideas), ensuring Sarandos won’t go back on his recent promise to give Warner Bros. movies a 45-day window. Offering Greta Gerwig’s ‘Narnia’ a wide release would help, too.
Ted Sarandos
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
How Netflix’s Sony Deal Explains Its Warners Pursuit
The streamer's new global agreement with the studio, valued at up to $8 billion, puts a public value on its slate. Now apply that math to its potential Warners takeover.


Kathleen Kennedy
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
Kathleen Kennedy’s Final Episode
As president of Lucasfilm, the producer oversaw five Star Wars films, a wave of TV shows…. and a galaxy’s worth of abandoned projects and jilted filmmakers. With her exit finally official, is the franchise better off now than it was 14 years ago?
Bob Iger
Julia Alexander • November 15, 2021
The Math Behind Combining Hulu and Disney+
The long-ordained integration of Disney’s two streaming services is being heralded inside Burbank as a transformational moment for both. But will the merged platform really be more than the sum of its parts?
Kevin Spacey
Eriq Gardner • November 15, 2021
Kevin Spacey’s $80M Legal House of Cards
The disgraced actor is soon expected to sit for a brutal cross-examination in the rare Hollywood insurance dispute that has actually made it to trial. A potentially huge payout hinges on whose version of House of Cards’s ending prevails.


John Landgraf
Kim Masters • November 15, 2021
Can John Landgraf’s Slow TV Model Survive?
The oracle of Peak TV is at an inflection point as Disney+ absorbs Hulu and the chase for prestige gives way to the tonnage model.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Hollywood

Dana Walden
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
20 Surefire, 100 Percent Probable Hollywood Predictions for 2026 (Part Two)
StrikeWatch ’26, a bizarre Michael Jackson record, and the future of Disney’s Dana Walden (if she’s C.E.O. or not) in the second act of the town’s favorite prognostication of the year ahead.
a minecraft movie
Scott Mendelson • November 15, 2021
It Was One Box Office Battle After Another in 2025
With Hollywood’s annual output back to resembling its pre-pandemic levels, some clear trends emerged: Kids showed up, horror hit more often than it didn’t, and the superhero slump is real. How might it all apply to 2026 and beyond?
Ted Sarandos
Eriq Gardner • November 15, 2021
Netflix’s Game of Antitrust Chicken
If the streaming giant wins Warner Bros., the feds will almost certainly present their next hurdle. And the Trump Justice Department might ask some questions that Netflix would like to avoid.


Sydney Sweeney
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
20 Surefire, 100 Percent Probable Hollywood Predictions for 2026 (Part One)
The town’s favorite year-ahead forecast returns, with input from some of my best sources—plus a few celebrity Puck friends. The future of ‘Star Wars,’ Instagram Reels, ‘Rush Hour 4,’ and Sydney Sweeney foretold in the first of two parts…
Bryan Lourd caa
Eriq Gardner • November 15, 2021
The CAA-Range Finale, Zaz’s $500M Beef & Trump’s Media Damages Calculator
A look ahead at the most consequential media lawsuits and legal crises that will come to their conclusion in 2026.
Pam Abdy, Mike De Luca
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
Hollywood’s Heroes of the Year Are… The Warner Bros. Duo
In 2025, Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy went from dead executives walking to a six-month stretch of blockbusters and Oscar contenders that silenced the town and offered a middle finger to their boss, David Zaslav. In an era when I.P. has taken over Hollywood, and their studio has been sold to Netflix (or Paramount?), they decided to go out swinging…


sam altman
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
Hollywood’s Villain of the Year Is… Sam Altman
A year before the OpenAI C.E.O. gets the ‘Social Network’ movie treatment, the slop-ification of entertainment took a major leap in 2025 thanks to a copyright infringement hub called Sora 2 and Altman’s brazen courtship of Disney.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Hollywood

Oscars
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
The Oscars-YouTube Brand Problem
The streamer’s bold bid to host the Academy Awards offers maximum reach for a show that was becoming minimally niche, but mixing prestige and base populism has its potentially problematic downsides.
Ted Sarandos
Kim Masters • November 15, 2021
Does Anyone Believe Ted Sarandos on Theaters?
As the streamer’s winning bid to secure WBD faces regulatory scrutiny and a hostile offer from Paramount, Ted Sarandos insists that Netflix is committed to a standard theatrical window for Warner Bros. movies. Is it enough to earn Hollywood’s loyalty?
bob iger
Eriq Gardner • November 15, 2021
Disney’s Sora Wager & Hollywood’s Next A.I. Legal Battles
A field guide to the A.I. cases and deals that will shape 2026, including Disney’s recent peace treaty, the Elon-Altman feud, the next round of labor negotiations, the whole ScarJo voice issue, and many more…


david zaslav
Matthew Belloni & William D. Cohan • November 15, 2021
Who Wants Warner Bros. More?
Battle lines have been drawn over David Zaslav’s Warner Bros. Discovery, and both Netflix and Paramount think they have the winning formula. Will the Ellisons get to $34 a share? Can Netflix counter? Is Larry really “backstopping” all the equity? Or is the game already rigged?
Alan Horn and Rob Reiner
Kim Masters • November 15, 2021
Alan Horn Remembers Rob Reiner
The longtime exec paid tribute to Reiner, his onetime partner in Castle Rock Entertainment, and explained why the director dedicated their first movie together to his father.
Ted Sarandos, Greg Peters
Julia Alexander • November 15, 2021
Why Netflix Needs Warner Bros.
Prior to its $83 billion deal to acquire the studio and HBO Max, the streamer had never spent more than $700 million on an acquisition. But Netflix saw an opportunity to own, not license, a significant chunk of its content—and, perhaps more importantly, to block David Ellison from taking it away.


wicked cynthia erivo
Matthew Belloni • November 15, 2021
Can Media Coverage Buy an Oscar?
Every year, awards contenders and pretenders have been mounting unbridled and financially unchecked press campaigns in the hopes of boosting their chances. A new data analysis reveals that they maybe shouldn’t have bothered.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover