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Apollo along with many of Private Equity Firms looking to buy Paramount owner National Amusments

These trade papers are so so desperate to prolong a fantasy deal that Shari Redstone herself already killed. She has repeatedly said she will not sell the company if it is broken up.
Some media analyst was on CNBC this morning talking about the media landscape and in particular the Warner/Paramount bidding wars.
I thought he brought up an excellent point that Redstone and the Board are likely to consider: Selling whole or parts of the company right now is not a good value, but doing a deal for exclusive content licensing might be. That way the company sits back and collects exclusive licensing fees on decades of content for the next five to ten years, then looks again at selling if the values are warranted. National Amusements/Paramount is less saddled with trying to placate Wall Street analysts with media kabuki theater tactics, because they have a (almost) guaranteed flow of income from a licensing partner. It takes the heat off of Redstone and the Board to sell or part the company out.
 

Here is another one on the proposed Sony and Apollo bidding on Paramount.

Sony and Apollo Global Management intend to sell of Paramount Global’s linear broadcast and television networks if its offer to acquire the company is approved, according to a report.
On Wednesday, the New York Times said Sony and Apollo would “auction off” the CBS broadcast network and co-owned cable channels like MTV, VH1, Nickelodeon, TV Land, CMT and BET if Paramount’s board and shareholders approve its $26 billion takeover offer.

The report said Sony and Apollo are likely to keep the famed Paramount Pictures studio and Paramount’s intellectual content, including shows like “Spongebob Squarepants,” “Paw Patrol,” “Star Trek” and “Mission: Impossible.” But it would sell off Paramount Plus with Showtime, the direct-to-consumer streaming service that relaunched from CBS All Access several years ago, the Times said, citing sources familiar with the matter.

Less clear is what Sony and Apollo would do with Paramount’s other streaming platforms, including its free, ad-supported streamer Pluto TV and its controlling stake in BET Media, which operates BET Plus. It also wasn’t clear what Sony and Apollo would do with Paramount’s international TV networks like Britain’s Channel 5 and Australia’s Network 10.
 
I wasn't the only one who lost money on Paramount:


Did BH owned WPLG from Graham in 2015, so this is nothing new in BH entering television. Scripps used BH just to buy Ion.
 
These trade papers are so so desperate to prolong a fantasy deal that Shari Redstone herself already killed. She has repeatedly said she will not sell the company if it is broken up.

What I recall is Shari saying she wasn’t interested in selling the company in pieces. She wanted to do one deal.

Looks now like Sony plans to sell all the linear broadcasting assets including CBS (which removes any FCC objection to Sony being a Japanese company) as well as the Paramount lot. The revenue from those probably keeps stockholders on board, leaving only the DOJ and whether they’ll sign off on taking five big studios down to four.

But this is still fluid. A lot could happen, including no deal.
 
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I wasn't the only one who lost money on Paramount:

How many misfires has Warren Buffett had as an investor? A handful, if that? He's entitled to at least a few oopsies.
 
Paramount Global announced layoffs of 800 people and corporate restructuring after the resignation of company CEO:



This sounds like a company with a leadership problem.
I mean, if David Ellison wants to incinerate his father's Oracle trust fund money like this, who am I to judge?
 
If Comcast goes to debt, they will probably sell universal to Sony to turn the big 4 to big 3 and then Amazon might buy WBD and Disney to turn it into the big 2 and they a Amazon-Sony Merger might turn the Big 2 into the Big 1 and they might buy plarium and air bud and spin master and if they merge with Tencent and everyone else, they might merge into the biggest evilest greediest mega-corporation called Discent and they might go for a hostile takeover of the world and possibly our omniverse (which has every multiverse with every universe imaginable) and breaking all the FCC Rules of Media ownership
 
If Comcast goes to debt, they will probably sell universal to Sony to turn the big 4 to big 3 and then Amazon might buy WBD and Disney to turn it into the big 2 and they a Amazon-Sony Merger might turn the Big 2 into the Big 1 and they might buy plarium and air bud and spin master and if they merge with Tencent and everyone else, they might merge into the biggest evilest greediest mega-corporation called Discent and they might go for a hostile takeover of the world and possibly our omniverse (which has every multiverse with every universe imaginable) and breaking all the FCC Rules of Media ownership
Good Lord, talk about a run-one sentence.
Comcast isn't going to sell Universal. It's easily one of the most profitable sides of their portfolio. Just the music and film licensing rights alone make much more over the long haul than NBC network or the linear TV group, period.
 
Paramount Global announced layoffs of 800 people and corporate restructuring after the resignation of company CEO:



This sounds like a company with a leadership problem.
They have a Sheri Redstone problem.
 
Good Lord, talk about a run-one sentence.
Comcast isn't going to sell Universal. It's easily one of the most profitable sides of their portfolio. Just the music and film licensing rights alone make much more over the long haul than NBC network or the linear TV group, period.
if it's in case a domino effect happens due to the subtraction of the big 5 to the big 1
 
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