• 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

Aug 11, 2025

What I'm Hearing...
HBO Max
Matthew Belloni Matthew Belloni

Welcome back to What I’m Hearing, home in L.A. and really enjoying the shamelessness of Emmy campaigning this year. Noah Wyle, whose The Pitt is in a tight race for best drama series, just happened to throw out the first pitch at yesterday’s Dodgers game. (Not embarrassing!) The Severance people are running Apple’s Ted Lasso playbook: Leave no media outlet unspoken to. And Harper Steele, star of five-time nominee Will & Harper, is getting an “official proclamation” from the City of West Hollywood for her efforts to “uplift” transgender people. Excellent work, everyone.

🚨🚨 Speaking of awards stunts, TV Academy members should join my colleague Julia Alexander and the casting directors from the Apple TV+ nominees Shrinking, Severance, and The Studio on Thursday at the London in WeHo. RSVP here! Programming note: I’m back on CNBC Squawk Box tomorrow at 7:45 a.m. ET talking Paramount’s UFC deal. This week on The Town, Lucas Shaw, Ashley Carman, and I guessed which podcast might dethrone Joe Rogan; Indian superstar Aamir Khan explained why he put his hit movie on YouTube over Netflix, and Joe Pompliano broke down the NFL’s big ESPN investment. Subscribe here and here. Not a Puck member yet? Just click here. Got a news tip or an idea for me? Just reply to this email or message me on Signal at 310-804-3198. Discussed in this issue: David Ellison, David Zaslav, Zach Cregger, Brian Robbins, Joe Mann, Jimmy Fallon, Eric Schmidt, David Faber, Michael B. Jordan, Leo DiCaprio, Jesse Watters, James Gunn, Ryan Coogler, Jim Gianopulos, Van Lathan, Dana White, Bong Joon Ho, Dolly Parton, Ice Cube, Rupert Murdoch, Greg Gutfeld, Dean Cain, and…$25,000 in stolen Labubus. But first…
 

Who Won the Week: Ari Emanuel and Mark Shapiro

The leaders of UFC parent TKO thought they’d need to divvy up rights to generate $1 billion a year in broadcast deals. Instead, they got David Ellison and New Paramount to make a statement with a $7.7 billion hammer-drop for all matches for the next seven years.

Runner-up: Joe Mann. Of everyone involved in Weapons, which opened to $43.5 million domestic this weekend on a $40 million-ish production budget, I’m gonna go with filmmaker Zach Cregger’s CAA agent, who negotiated a deal that paid Cregger $10 million upfront (he ultimately deferred $2 million of that) and gave him 50 points on the backend to dole out to collaborators as desired. The $20 million that Mann got Sony to pay Cregger for his next film, a Resident Evil reboot, now looks cheap. (More on the Weapons weekend from Scott Mendelson below.) And a little more on today’s Paramount news…
 

Of Course Ellison Doubled Down on UFC

A lot of chatter today about David Ellison dropping $7.7 billion on seven years of domestic UFC rights for Paramount+. No way are the current financials of Paramount supporting this kind of move. To ultimately pencil out at that price—double the $550 million annual fee that Disney was paying for UFC—the subscriber and advertising gains would need to beat even the rosiest projections for the 13 “numbered” fights and 30 lesser “fight nights” per year.

The move will likely swing the newly profitable Paramount+ to losses, unless a big chunk of the costs are dumped on CBS, which will air certain matches. And without the incremental revenue from pay-per-view, which was key to the ESPN deal (though decreasingly) and is now being jettisoned by Paramount, this is a pure subs-and-ads play, hoping that year-round sports programming can bring over all those Monster Energy–drinking fans of people getting the crap kicked out of them and prevent churn on the service after NFL and golf. Okay, but… “overpaying” for UFC is exactly the kind of deal Ellison should be doing in the early days of New Paramount. A statement play, a declaration about the kind of company he wants Paramount to be, and an invitation to talent and other rights-holders to bring the biggest and best properties in the door. Ellison’s promise is that he can grow Paramount+ far beyond 77 million subscribers—no easy task, given the saturated market—and nothing moves the needle farther and faster than proven sports leagues. Especially the expensive ones. As my colleague John Ourand reported, Ellison made clear well before he knew the Paramount-Skydance merger would close that he was interested in UFC. I’m betting that not only would the previous Redstone regime have not bid—they likely wouldn’t have even been on the list to pitch. Here, Amazon, Netflix, and YouTube all wanted the numbered fights, and Amazon is said to have offered $800 million just for those. (It would have kept the matches as pay-per-views, per sources.) ESPN certainly wanted to keep the fight nights, possibly with a partner, and while Netflix bowed out of the bidding a few weeks ago, everyone from Warner Discovery to DAZN to Apple remained in the mix until almost the end. But nobody wanted all of it, at least not at the price Ellison was willing to pay. Maybe Ari Emanuel and Mark Shapiro, the leaders of UFC parent TKO, could have cobbled together comparable money from multiple bidders. But there’s a simplicity to working with one partner, especially if he’s willing to pay the new-guy tax that goes all the way back to Rupert Murdoch overpaying so the recently launched Fox could rip the NFL away from CBS.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

HBO Max
HBO Max

For your consideration: Sponsors include HBO Max, presenting HACKS. Nominated for 14 Emmys, including Outstanding Comedy Series. Starring Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder,

 the new season picks up with Deborah Vance’s late-night show finally in production, and Ava Daniels stepping in as head writer, to Deborah’s dismay. Their ever-complicated relationship is pushed to new limits as they clash over creative direction and get entangled in blackmail and betrayal. Don't miss the series Slate says has “NEVER BEEN BETTER.” Now streaming on HBO Max.

So no, I don’t believe the rumor that Ellison agreed to an outsize UFC fee as some kind of thank-you or quid pro quo to Emanuel, who also consults for Skydance and helped push the Paramount deal past the Trump folks. “That’s absurd,” Shapiro told me today. “Let the haters hate.”

Between UFC and the South Park renewal (both brokered in part by Ari), Ellison’s Paramount has now committed more than $9 billion to streaming content. And all signs point to additional splashy deals, both for film and television talent and whatever sports or live-event content hits the block, starting with international UFC deals as they come up. Where will that money come from? Efficiencies, Paramount says. Massive layoffs are looming. And if Ellison needs to raise more money—either from his father or others—he can just go back to his existing investors. Now, since the president and Dana White have said they want to host a UFC match on the White House lawn, we can hopefully look forward to Ellison participating in that awkward photo op.
 

Data of the Week...

14 percent Approximate increase in streaming subscription costs year over year, making this one of the highest year-over-year hikes in any category of consumer spending. [CPI]

35.6 percent Year-over-year increase in quarterly revenue at AMC Theatres, thanks to more and bigger box office hits this summer and the continued rise of premium large formats. No. 1 Ranking of Dolly Parton’s Dollywood on TripAdvisor’s new list of the best U.S. “Amusement & Water Parks,” beating Disneyland (No. 11) and Universal Studios Hollywood (No. 14) [TripAdvisor] $110 million Price paid by former Google C.E.O. Eric Schmidt for L.A.’s Spelling Manor, down from the $137 million list price and less than the $120 million that a Saudi national reportedly paid to buy it from Formula 1 heiress Petra Ecclestone in 2019. [WSJ] 0 percent Initial Rotten Tomatoes score for Ice Cube’s War of the Worlds. Regardless, an estimated 1.1 million U.S. households watched the film in its first five days on Prime Video. [Rotten Tomatoes and Samba TV] More: Take a bow, Amazon, for the year’s most idiotic product placement, including Cube stopping a scene to order a flash drive on Prime, right after a character refers to Prime Air as “the future of delivery.” Great stuff.
 

Quote of the Week

“Scott, it’s not 1995. No one gives a sam hill what Dean Cain thinks.” —Van Lathan, the CNN commentator and Ringer podcaster, responding on-air to Scott Jennings’s claim that Dean Cain joining ICE will help with recruitment. Lathan added: “Dean needs the $50,000—that’s what got him off the couch.”

Now here’s Scott with his take on the Warners hot streak…
So, Who Gets the Credit for Warner Bros.?

So, Who Gets the Credit for Warner Bros.?

David Zaslav’s once-flailing movie studio has notched its sixth straight $40 million-plus opening weekend, including two of the three top earners of the year. In simple terms, Warners’ hot streak comes from placing smart bets and making the most of them, but there’s always an asterisk in the new tangled Hollywood calculus.

Scott Mendelson Scott Mendelson

What a difference six months makes in Hollywood. In early March, my colleague Kim Masters headlined this space with Can Mike & Pam Survive at Warners?, which chronicled the incessant industry debate over whether Warner Bros. Discovery C.E.O. David Zaslav would replace Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy as co-heads of Warner Bros. Pictures. Her story came in the long wake of the disastrous Joker: Folie à Deux, which De Luca and Abdy had said was their “first greenlight” at Warners, as well as the failure of Bong Joon Ho’s Mickey 17, a $120 million R-rated sci-fi comedy greenlit by the prior regime.

At the time, marketing chief Josh Goldstine and international distribution head Andrew Cripps had been shown the door. Pam and Mike were offering big budgets and creative freedom, and had even given up the Sinners I.P. to director Ryan Coogler 25 years after its release. Depending on who you asked, it was either aspirational or suicidal. But as Labor Day approaches, Pam and Mike are still standing and may have reason to gloat. The studio has become the first in Hollywood history to notch six straight $40 million-plus openers. Three of those six films are live-action originals. Last weekend, Zach Cregger’s Weapons topped the box office with $43.5 million domestically and $71 million worldwide on a $38 million budget. Sinners was both a big test for Pam and Mike’s vision and the cause for much industry handwringing related to Coogler’s unusual deal. But it earned $366 million worldwide and 5.8x its $48 million North American debut, becoming the top-earning live-action original in raw domestic gross since Christopher Nolan’s Inception 15 years ago. Admittedly, the Mike-n-Pam narrative—both their anticipated demise and now their resurgence—is a little more complicated. They didn’t greenlight Zaslav’s personal passion project, the double–De Niro–starring The Alto Knights, which flopped in March. And A Minecraft Movie, which grossed $955 million worldwide in the spring, was a long-gestating co-production with Legendary that took its final form just before Toby Emmerich exited the top studio job in June 2022. The Jared Hess–directed Minecraft earned $425 million in North America, more than any movie this year, on a $150 million budget. So the studio’s biggest hit was born and bred under the old regime, but Pam and Mike’s marketing and distribution teams helped launch what could be the first blockbuster-sized new-to-cinema live-action franchise since The Hunger Games. After Sinners and Minecraft, the pressure was off Superman, which delivered nonetheless. The first movie from director James Gunn and Peter Safran’s DC Studios did what Superman Returns and Man of Steel could not—earning $350 million-plus domestically and $600 million-plus globally. That is above the previous reboot’s $291 million domestic gross (sans inflation) but below Man of Steel’s $668 million worldwide gross, on a similar $225 million budget. However, reviews, real-world buzz, and interest in what might come next resemble Batman Begins and Iron Man far more than Man of Steel or Amazing Spider-Man.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

HBO Max
HBO Max

For your consideration: Sponsors include HBO Max, presenting THE LAST OF US. Nominated for 17 Emmys, including Outstanding Drama Series. In 2003, a parasitic fungal infection

ravaged the planet, turning people into violent creatures known as the Infected. Twenty years later, Joel, played by Pedro Pascal, is hired to smuggle 14-year-old Ellie, played by Bella Ramsey, to the rebel Fireflies. Season 2 picks up five years later, as Joel and Ellie’s past resurfaces, drawing them into conflict with each other, and a world even more dangerous than the one they left behind. Don’t miss the series The Hollywood Reporter calls “THRILLING & ADDICTIVE.” Now streaming on HBO Max.

That doesn’t mean that DC Studios will become a butts-in-seats brand. In 2025, even the Marvel Cinematic Universe has seen its drawing power subside. However, when you can push an R-rated, original vampire movie like Sinners to nearly $300 million domestic and turn a Minecraft comedy into a near–$1 billion grosser, who cares if DC Studios becomes the next MCU?

If WB can make new stuff into big-deal hits or rework older franchises into top-tier blockbusters, it won’t have to live or die by the performance of a few annual DC flicks. (Indeed, in a letter to shareholders last week, Zaslav promised 12-14 movies in theaters per year, including 1-2 from DC.) If Disney were currently minting new franchises, it wouldn’t be as concerned that the MCU isn’t returning to its mid-2010s glory days. WB’s streak now continues with Weapons, a shockingly well-received horror title that also skewed 72 percent under-35 in its opening weekend. It will likely last through Labor Day, after which The Conjuring: Last Rites will grab the baton and cruise to a potential $250 million–$300 million worldwide. Considering WB’s April-to-August track record, Paul Thomas Anderson’s $140 million One Battle After Another, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, doesn’t need to be a hit. Assuming it’s well-reviewed and scores some awards nominations, the loose adaptation of Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland can stand on its own as a prestige art project, and no one will lose much sleep if it plays closer to Killers of the Flower Moon ($159 million worldwide in 2023) than Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood ($395 million in 2019). In the midst of all this, a Warners playbook has emerged in the Abdy–De Luca era. They’ve placed big bets on projects they believed in, and made sure that the franchise and brand offerings had something of value for general audiences. Sinners offered two Michael B. Jordans fighting vampires in 1932 Mississippi, a genuinely unique theatrical experience. Minecraft, one of a number of fruitful collaborations with Legendary, offered the in-game material alongside Jack Black going full Jack Black while bouncing off a kid-friendly cast-to-type Jason Momoa. Final Destination: Bloodlines was just a Final Destination movie, but the promotion (and the film itself) hyped the franchise-specific gimmick— watching hot actors get Rube Goldberg-ed to death—and made it appealing even for audiences with no attachment to the prior films. Even Superman offered in-movie bonuses like a misbehaving superdog, topicality, and Edi Gathegi’s scene-stealing Mr. Terrific, which appealed to the Superman-indifferent. October’s Mortal Kombat II will offer a chance to test whether S.V.O.D. glory (the 2021 reboot earned just $85 million worldwide, but was the largest viewership weekend that year on HBO Max) can translate to a theatrically successful follow-up—assuming it can appeal both to fans of the source material and those merely showing up for some R-rated mortal kombatting. Even a moderate upswing from its predecessor will help kill any lingering doubts about Abdy and De Luca’s luck with Minecraft and Gunn-Safran’s meaningful hit.

Caveats & Disclaimers

When it’s on its A game, WB remains Hollywood’s best studio at turning less-conventional titles (Magic Mike, American Sniper, It, Barbie, etcetera) into overindexing blockbusters. And blockbusters take time to gestate, which is why there may be a temptation to attribute Abdy and De Luca’s success to prior eras. But that’s standard Tinseltown business. Mark Canton got fired from Sony in late 1996 only to watch his 1997 summer slate—My Best Friend’s Wedding, Men in Black, and Air Force One—rank among the year’s biggest earners. Ditto Paramount’s Brian Robbins, who benefited from films like Top Gun: Maverick, The Lost City, and Sonic the Hedgehog 2 that Jim Gianopulos put into play for release in 2022.

The same is true for Warners. If the current co-heads of the studio shared blame for Mickey 17, which was greenlit before their time, they should also share credit for Minecraft. Meanwhile, many of WB’s big franchises, like Dune, the Monsterverse, and Minecraft, are Legendary co-productions. But as long as both sides stay chummy, with those franchises remaining WB-distributed even if Legendary buys Lionsgate, that’s also business as usual. Amid all this success, WB eliminated 10 percent of its workforce last month, and WBD’s recent earnings were dragged down by the ongoing struggles in linear television. So it’s not clear how much anyone at the company should be celebrating. Still, the biggest issue facing the movie portion of the studio is that its success this year will just create challenging comparisons when 2026 rolls around. But that’s not the worst problem to have, especially in this business.
 

My Reading List…

For David Ellison fetishists, here’s his full interview with CNBC’s David Faber. Faber seems to think Ellison has already made a deal with the NFL to avoid the change-of-control opt-out in the CBS contract. [CNBC]

As I predicted, Fox’s NFL games (plus the World Series and your granddad’s “news” shows with Sean Hannity and Jesse Watters) will be available with the ESPN stand-alone streamer. You’ll just need to pay $40 instead of $30. [CNBC] Bill Cohan sees stock price challenges at New Paramount and Warner Discovery into next year. [Puck] Turns out Disney Adults aren’t just serial killers in training, they’re also an important theme park demo to which Disney is increasingly catering. [Bloomberg] Jimmy Fallon, who lost the late-night ratings crown after his Trump hair-tousling incident, now seems to want it back via the calculated move of welcoming Fox News’s Greg Gutfeld. [Vulture] A Slate writer attended the Kill Tony comedy show in Austin and hilarity did not ensue. [Slate] Someone stole $25,000 worth of Labubus. [The Cut]
 

The Feedback…

Thursday’s breakdown of David Ellison’s first day at Paramount drew a thoughtful voicemail from a longtime CBS News veteran. I condensed it here…

“I just wanted to say thank you for highlighting the importance of the new owners making the rounds here yesterday and at least pretending to care about the quality of the news we produce. For a lot of us, being used as a political volleyball has drained our morale and made us question why we do what we do. I’m serious about that. What is the ultimate goal when your leadership will sell you out [to the president] to get a deal done? … Now we are hearing a lot about ‘down-the-middle’ news. That’s what they want. But that is too simplistic. People who work in broadcast news know that few of the good stories have two easy sides. It’s always more complicated than that, so we will only know the motivations of these new owners when their assumptions are tested.” —A CBS News producer
 

Have a great week, Matt

Julia Alexander and Maya Tribbitt contributed research for today’s issue. Got a question, comment, complaint, or someone who loves you like J.D. Vance loves boy bands? Email me at Matt@puck.news or call/text me at 310-804-3198.
The Varsity

A professional-grade rundown on the business of sports from John Ourand, the industry’s preeminent journalist, covering the leagues, players, agencies, media deals, and the egos fueling it all.

Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news.

You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with {{customer.email}}. To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10006

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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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 • August 12, 2025
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