Paramount’s Hostile WBD Bid Sparks Hollywood Showdown: Inside the Biggest Corporate Battle of the Streaming Era
Hollywood is witnessing one of the most aggressive and dramatic takeovers in modern entertainment history. Paramount, led by CEO David Ellison and backed by powerful financial partners, has launched a hostile bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD)—just days after Netflix was declared the winning bidder for WBD’s studio and HBO Max assets.
This stunning reversal has set off a corporate battle involving Wall Street, Silicon Valley, Middle Eastern sovereign funds, and even the U.S. White House. It is a high-stakes collision of money, power, and media influence, with the future of Warner Bros., CNN, DC Comics, HBO, and global streaming leadership hanging in the balance.
The takeover attempt has shaken investor confidence, raised antitrust concerns, and ignited political controversy due to Jared Kushner’s investment involvement. At the same time, WBD shareholders find themselves in the middle of a bidding war worth more than $100 billion.
This article breaks down everything you need to know: the bids, the players, the stakes, and what comes next.
How Paramount Went Hostile — And Why

Paramount Skydance’s interest in acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery began months ago when Ellison said he wanted to “finish what we started.” The company had already submitted multiple bids privately, but WBD’s board rejected them, ultimately choosing Netflix as the preferred buyer.
Netflix had won the bidding war with a $72 billion bid for:
- Warner Bros. film studio
- HBO Max streaming platform
- All WB media assets except traditional cable channels
Paramount, believing its offer was better, escalated the fight into open warfare.
Paramount’s Hostile Offer: $30 Per Share (All Cash)
- Total value: $108.4 billion
- Entire company: Includes Warner Bros., HBO, CNN, TNT, Discovery
- Structure: All-cash, faster path to completion
- Claim: $17.6 billion more cash than Netflix’s offer
David Ellison argues shareholders deserve the chance to choose the richer deal.
“Cash is king. Our offer gives shareholders far more real value,”
— David Ellison, CEO of Paramount Skydance
Why Netflix’s Offer Still Has the Upper Hand
Even though Paramount’s bid is richer, Netflix believes investors will favor its structure.
Netflix’s Offer Fundamentals
- Value: $27.75 per share ($72 billion)
- Cash + Stock combo
- Cable assets excluded
- Spinoff of CNN and linear networks expected to generate future gains
The WBD board chose Netflix because:
- A legacy cable-streaming split could unlock more long-term shareholder value
- Regulatory approval for Netflix + WBD streaming is difficult, but possible
- The integration is simpler and more modern
Still, Netflix expected a counter-bid.
“We knew Paramount would counter. We remain confident our deal will close.”
— Ted Sarandos, Netflix co-CEO
Shareholders React: A Brewing Wall Street War
Wall Street instantly signaled a bidding war:
- WBD stock jumped 5%
- Paramount stock rose 7%
- Netflix stock dropped 3%
Investors interpret this as:
- Higher bids are possible
- WBD may reverse its Netflix preference
- Paramount may force an expensive settlement
If WBD pulls out of the Netflix deal now, it must pay a $2.8 billion breakup fee.
The Political Shockwave: Jared Kushner’s Surprising Role
One of the most surprising revelations is that the hostile bid includes equity financing from Jared Kushner’s private equity firm, Affinity Partners.
Affinity’s involvement:
- Adds political tension
- Raises questions about foreign investment oversight
- Links the Trump administration to the fate of Warner Bros. Discovery
The Ellison filing shows that Kushner’s firm is among several Middle East–backed funds participating, including:
- Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF)
- Abu Dhabi’s L’imad Holding
- Qatar Investment Authority
These investors agreed to forgo governance rights to avoid CFIUS review—avoiding national security objections.
But the political overtones remain unavoidable.
“If Paramount succeeds, part of WBD would be owned by the Trump family.”
— New York Times reporting
President Trump has already stated he will be “involved” in the Netflix review process—something highly unusual for a president.
What’s at Stake: Control of Hollywood’s Crown Jewel
Warner Bros. Discovery is not just another media company. It owns:
Streaming & TV
- HBO Max
- Discovery+
- CNN
- TNT
- HGTV
- Food Network
Film Studios
- Warner Bros.
- New Line Cinema
- DC Studios
Top Franchises
- Harry Potter
- Batman
- DC Universe
- Game of Thrones
- Looney Tunes
- Godzilla / MonsterVerse
Why Everyone Wants It
- Massive global library
- Strong theatrical brands
- Streaming power through HBO
- CNN as a political influence instrument
Owning WBD means owning a major piece of global culture.
Why Paramount Thinks It Can Win
David Ellison is betting big on two arguments:
A. Regulatory Advantage
Paramount says Netflix’s deal creates a dangerous streaming monopoly:
- Netflix #1
- HBO Max #3
Regulators may block it under antitrust rules.
Paramount promises:
- To keep WBD whole
- To maintain competition in Hollywood
- To protect CNN independence
B. Strong Cash Position
Paramount’s deal is:
- All cash
- Faster to close
- Backed by major private equity
- Supported by the Ellison family fortune
Ellison claims Netflix can’t match this liquidity.
C. Shareholder Appeal
Shareholders may prefer:
- Higher immediate payout
- Simpler structure
- Better long-term synergy
But the WBD board disagrees—so Ellison has gone directly to shareholders.
What Happens Next? The Road to a Possible Corporate Coup
Scenario 1: Shareholders Revolt, Paramount Wins
If enough investors believe Paramount’s offer is truly superior:
- A vote may force WBD to reverse course
- Netflix could withdraw
- Paramount takes control of all assets
- CNN becomes a political flashpoint
This is the nightmare scenario for antitrust regulators.
Scenario 2: Netflix Increases Its Offer
Netflix has hinted at this.
If it raises by even $3–5 per share:
- The breakup fee is covered
- Shareholders lean toward Netflix
- Paramount may withdraw
Scenario 3: A Third Bidder Appears
Comcast, Apple, and Amazon are rumored to be watching.
Any of them joining would explode the value of WBD further.
Scenario 4: The Deal Collapses Entirely
Government intervention is possible.
- CFIUS could reject foreign-financed bids
- Antitrust courts could block Netflix
- WBD may remain independent
This could send WBD stock plummeting.
What This Means for Hollywood and Media Consumers
The streaming wars will be reshaped
- Netflix + WBD = global dominance
- Paramount + WBD = Old Hollywood consolidation
- If neither wins = continued fragmentation
The future of cable TV hangs in the balance
CNN, TNT, and Discovery may be spun off.
Thousands of jobs may be affected
Every merger comes with layoffs.
Political influence will be scrutinized
Especially if Kushner-backed funds own part of CNN’s parent company.
Final Analysis: The Largest Battle in Entertainment History
This is more than a takeover. It is a war for:
- Creative control
- Cultural influence
- Political power
- Global streaming supremacy
- Hollywood’s identity
David Ellison’s move is bold and historic. Netflix’s response is calculated and strategic. WBD’s shareholders now hold the future of Hollywood in their hands.
The next 30 days will define the entertainment industry for the next 30 years.