• 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
what im hearing

Welcome back to What I’m Hearing...

 

This email is a Ukraine-free space, but I encourage Puck members to read my colleague (and Russia expert) Julia Ioffe’s dispatches on Putin and the unfolding invasion. She’s also been all over cable news this week and will be on the Stephen Colbert show tonight to discuss the situation.   

 

Now back to our regularly scheduled programming…

SPONSORED BY

onyx

Thursday Thoughts…

  • Can everyone please stop whining about the Oscars? Most of us have complained for years that the show needs a dramatic reinvention, so the Academy is taking the very reasonable step of pre-taping eight category acceptances while not eliminating them from the telecast, and you’d think producer Will Packer had dug up Jean Hersholt and slapped him in the face. This show is fading into irrelevance, and ABC is paying about $1 billion for 10 years of something that a regular person might actually want to watch. In fact, Packer needs to go further and use the saved time to put exclusive and undeniable content on the Oscars. Major trailer debuts, unique performances, beloved cast reunions, star after star after star—stuff that film fans can’t not watch. A Twitter poll won’t cut it.    

  • Add Tyler Perry to the list of top creators looking to cash in on the Hollywood investment craze. It’s early, I’m told, but Perry and agent Ari Emanuel are starting conversations about selling a piece of his Atlanta-based Tyler Perry Studios. Kevin Mayer and Tom Staggs’ Candle Media and others are expected to be among the suitors. 

  • Battle lines are being drawn in the L.A. mayoral race. Netflix’s Ted Sarandos and wife Nicole Avant hosted a small gathering this week for Rick Caruso, the billionaire developer of the Grove, and UTA’s Jay Sures followed with a major Caruso event last night. Disney’s Dana Walden and CAA’s Bryan Lourd (who went to college with Caruso) will co-host another event in March, as will Snap’s Evan Spiegel and wife Miranda Kerr. Karen Bass, the other candidate generating Hollywood support, has Jeffrey Katzenberg in her corner, as well as attorney Sam Fischer, WME’s Rick Rosen, Searchlight’s David Greenbaum and producer Stacey Snider. Katzenberg is said to have personally lobbied the Sarandoses to join Team Bass, but they declined.

  • An important update from Sunday: Simon Leviev, a.k.a. the Tinder Swindler, has found himself a publicist. Congrats to Gina Rodriguez, known for her work with Honey Boo Boo, Octomom, and Tan Mom.
disney

Disney Has a Weakness in the Streaming Wars

The costly implosion of the Disney+ ‘Beauty and the Beast’ prequel reveals the pressure on legacy studios to bring massive I.P.-driven shows to streaming. So why hasn’t Disney's branded TV division had more breakout hits?

matt belloni

MATT BELLONI

I met a big talent lawyer for a drink on Tuesday, and the first thing out of his mouth was, “Man, can you believe how much money people are making?” That’s a common refrain around Hollywood, and it’s a shift, in my experience, from the usual tone among representatives. Agents, managers, and especially lawyers like to bitch about cheap buyers, about who is totally screwing their clients, and about how hard it is for talented people to get a fair deal in this town. In some ways, being upset is kinda their job.  

 

But these days, it’s harder to complain. Sure, there are anxieties over things like the long-term viability of the streaming business, the vanishing profit participations, the wounded theatrical box office. Yet big picture, through a confluence of economic and societal forces, Hollywood finds itself with more deep-pocketed purchasers of premium content than at perhaps any time in its history. It may not feel this way to a struggling creative person, but it’s the buyers, not the sellers, who are under the most pressure today.  

 

Cheap money and the digital revolution have helped debt-fueled innovators like Netflix upend the studio oligopoly of film and TV distribution. The incumbents have finally responded with their own digital platforms that, like the upstarts, must constantly be fed expensive new content. There’s a war not just for supremacy but for survival, and two major tech players—Apple and Amazon—have decided, for some reason, that they should be combatants in this war, even though they really don’t need to be. Add in the investment in entertainment by private equity firms like Blackstone, Silver Lake, and Apollo; the fact that the linear TV business, while shrinking, is still far from dead yet; and those teetering movie theaters, which are so challenged by shifting consumer habits that they are demanding more expensive product to lure people off their couches, and you have a perfect storm of cash, desperation, and the messy transition from one era of entertainment to another. “People don’t realize that these are the good old days,” I said to the lawyer.    

 

This will all end at some point, or at least scale back dramatically. And perhaps soon, given Wall Street’s recent interest in business fundamentals, and leaders like incoming Warner Bros. Discovery C.E.O. David Zaslav saying things like, “Our goal is to compete with the leading streaming services, not to win the spending war.” As the new digital oligopoly establishes itself, the also-rans will either be consolidated or fall away. 

 

That’s the scary future, and the lawyer and I agreed that no one really knows what the impact on creative people will be when that happens. But until then, it’s the Roaring ‘20s, where Disney will spend $33 billion this year, according to Wells Fargo analysts, where Paramount Global (née ViacomCBS) is still pretending it can compete with Disney, and where the talent community seems to have decided that taking huge sums of money up front is preferable to fighting to save the back-end compensation system that defined the linear era. As a result, the total amount spent on content worldwide this year will hit a record $230 billion, according to Ampere. That’s including sports rights, of course, but ten years ago, the spend was about half that.  

 

It’s now totally normal when Apple—a hardware company—snatches a $200 million Brad Pitt film package from rival bidders, or throws a $40 million check at George Clooney. Given the market, NBC Universal was forced to commit $400 million—without a single script—to three films based on The Exorcist, which came out 50 years ago. When Netflix stole the two Knives Out sequels from Lionsgate with nearly half a billion dollars, it meant that Daniel Craig will likely make more money from his work in a small-budget mystery series than from playing James Bond. The pressure is on the platforms to compete, and compete now, and, in the aggregate, at least, the talent community is reaping the benefit.

ADVERTISEMENT

onyx

I thought of that pressure when I saw that Disney recently pulled the plug on its big-budget TV prequel to Beauty and the Beast, which had already been delayed several times and was supposed to shoot this summer in order to air on Disney+ in 2023. There was a time, not that long ago actually, when it would be major news that a studio poured almost three years and tens of millions of dollars into a TV project that never shot a day of film. We’d all debate what went wrong and speculate about the fallout for the talent and executives involved. But in this overheated market, where similar $150 million projects are routinely greenlit and rushed to streaming to juice those quarterly subscriber numbers, the Beast implosion kinda came and went—just an expensive vase that fell off a packed conveyor belt. Breakage.

 

I’m not too interested in who’s at fault here. Some projects work, some don’t. After talking with all sides, it seems that Disney was just disappointed with the second and third scripts from Josh Gad, Eddy Kitsis and Adam Horowitz, and the original music from Alan Menken. It happens, though the talent seems to think the executives didn’t have a good handle on the project, and they didn’t love being told by relatively inexperienced execs that the project wasn’t ready. (Everyone declined to comment.) 

 

Sets were being built in London, the cast had been secured, and Disney’s film group had already pushed Gad’s start date on the Honey, I Shrunk the Kids sequel to accommodate Beauty. So Peter Rice, who oversees the Disney Branded Television unit charged with exploiting its I.P., and Dana Walden, whose purview includes the ABC Signature studio, were forced to either swallow a chunk of money now or risk wasting a lot more on a potentially inferior product that would generate negative headlines because of the Beauty legacy. Making that call is their job, even if the creators were super upset (lots of screaming matches behind the scenes on this one, I’m told, especially since this trio’s other Disney+ TV project, based on the Muppets, was also scrapped in 2019). At least Gad and co-star Luke Evans are pay-or-play, according to sources, meaning they are owed for six guaranteed episodes, a rarity in TV.

 

What is interesting about this situation, however, is how it evidences the pressure on Disney and other legacy studios to bring massive shows to streaming—to do it now, to do it smoothly, and to leverage their I.P. to distinguish themselves from Netflix. The Disney brand and library provides a huge advantage with consumers, but it also brings big expectations and unique creative risks for shows like Beauty and the Beast, just like HBO Max is dealing with on the Game of Thrones spinoff, House of the Dragon, and Amazon has with its The Lord of the Rings show. Great expectations in a pressure-cooker, high-volume environment can expose weaknesses.  

 

Think about it: Thanks to Kevin Feige at Marvel Studios and Kathy Kennedy, Jon Favreau and Dave Filoni at Lucasfilm, Disney has done a good job establishing what tentpole Marvel and Star Wars shows look and feel like on Disney+. But Disney Branded TV, despite having access to 90 years of the world’s most recognized characters, hasn’t really created the template for a live-action Disney+ success. There have been some moderate family hits, like the Mighty Ducks show, and adaptations are in the works of Percy Jackson and Spiderwick Chronicles, among others. The unit’s current leader, Ayo Davis, was just promoted in September, taking over from Gary Marsh, and insiders say to expect bigger and better output from her team.

 

But with Disney+ desperate to grow subs, there’s been zero breakouts so far from Davis’ unit, and nothing with the scale or potential impact of what Beauty and the Beast was supposed to be—the kind of show that convinces people to subscribe or prevents churn. Why is that?  

ADVERTISEMENT

onyx

Disney has been busy over the past few years absorbing Fox and reorganizing itself for streaming under new C.E.O. Bob Chapek, and insiders say the various re-orgs and divvying of responsibilities have made the development process more challenging, especially on the TV side. For instance, the decisions on financial approvals and where shows will appear were separated from the development executives and centralized under Kareem Daniel’s distribution team. It manifests in some of the creative decisions, but this is a broader issue than just those moves.

 

Disney is known among dealmakers to be cheaper than its rivals, and it generally treats talent much worse on projects based on its own I.P. than it does on so-called “originals.” As I first wrote last summer, nearly all Disney TV deals for originals have shifted from the backend profit definitions that dominated the linear TV landscape (and made hit showrunners extremely rich) to the streaming-era’s “Series Bonus Exhibit,” a made-up concept that creates a pool of S.B.E. points that translate into cash payments. The goal for Disney is to come closer to Netflix’s fixed compensation system and move away from the sliding profit participation that results in huge payouts and potential litigation.

 

But it also dissuades a certain class of creator from wanting to work with Disney, say several reps, especially on an I.P.-driven project. Disney’s Walden will shell out to win a project she wants for Hulu, for instance, and that outlet has had recent hits with adult-oriented shows like Only Murders in the Building and Nine Perfect Strangers. But if a writer, producer, or actor is hired to work on an adaptation of a Disney property, there’s often no backend, no buyout, no bonuses. It’s a fee-for-service situation, which, don’t get me wrong, isn’t insignificant for top talent. But Disney usually doesn’t share in the upside, and many of its rivals either do, or they “buy out” that upside. “They’re just not competitive,” one lawyer griped when I asked about Disney.   

 

Sure, there are exceptions. Favreau originally signed on to do just one season of The Mandalorian, so when it became Disney+’s signature series, he extracted an insane deal to continue, with all kinds of bonuses and incentives for writing or directing individual episodes. But I’m betting even Favreau doesn’t get a cut of the show’s merchandise revenue, meaning Disney likely doesn’t share the windfall from my kid’s many Baby Yoda T-shirts and PJs with the guy who, along with Filoni, actually created the character. (Favreau’s rep declined to comment.)  

 

Disney insists it does pay market value, and that it has no trouble recruiting top talents for I.P.-driven shows. And after all, it would argue, it should pay less to creators when the property itself is the star. Maybe, but if Disney really wants to supercharge the output from, say, its Branded TV unit—which, in this market, it kinda needs to do, and do it now—it might be worth shelling out to pair more top-level creators with the studio’s trove of characters and stories.  

 

After all, it’s a seller’s market these days. As my lawyer friend noted, there’s just so much money to be made. The pressure is on Disney to grow, and it needs not just the best I.P. but the best talent to do that.    

I’m back on Sunday,

Matt

 

Got a question, comment, complaint, or want to fight me over the Oscars changes? Email me at Matt@puck.news or call/text me at 310-804-3198.

 
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

 

Interested in exploring our newsletter offerings?
Manage your preferences.

 

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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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 • February 25, 2022
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