TV Streaming Discussion: HBO MAX UPDATE: WTF is Going on? Merger with PARAMOUNT?!

blackbull1970

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Zaslav Says Warner Bros. Discovery Cutbacks, Including Shelving Movies, Took ‘Courage’

CEO also addresses Hollywood strikes at NYT DealBook Summit: They were 'bad for all of us'

By Todd Spangler
November 29, 2023


David-Zaslav-Warner-Bros-Discovery.jpg

Warner Bros/Discovery CEO David Zaslav

Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav weighed in on the twin SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes and defended the company’s budget cuts — including shelving completed films “Batgirl” and “Coyote vs. Acme” — as requiring “courage” to right-size its balance sheet.

Zaslav, speaking Wednesday at the New York Times’ DealBook Summit, reiterated to moderator Andrew Ross Sorkin that with respect to the strikes, he was focused on achieving a resolution as soon as possible.

“I think the idea of going on strike was bad for all of us,” he said. “My focus was on, we need to settle the strike, every day that we were on strike and people weren’t working was a bad day for us.”

Zaslav recently was quoted in a New York Times piece as saying the WGA was “right about almost everything.” Asked about that at the DealBook event, the CEO stuck by his previous comment and said he told SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher and the union’s chief negotiator, Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, that “I agree with a lot of what you are saying.”

Zaslav said WBD’s spending cuts, including mass layoffs and billions in content write-offs, were required to improve the media conglomerate’s financial health. For the full-year 2022, Warner Bros. Discovery took a $2.9 billion charge of content restructuring impairments and write-offs. “We decided that we had to have courage,” he said.

Elaborating on WBD’s decisions to write-off certain films and TV series, he said that hypothetically, if the company has already spent $100 million producing a film, “The question is, should we take certain of these movies and open them in the theater and spend another $30 [million] or $40 million to promote them?” The Warner Bros. Entertainment and HBO teams made a number of “hard” decisions, Zaslav continued, but that “when I look at the health of our company today, we needed to make those decisions. And it took real courage.”

Last year, among other content write-downs, Warner Bros. shelved the $90 million-budgeted DC adventure “Batgirl” and the kid-friendly “Scoob! Holiday Haunt.” It also canceled HBO Max original series “Minx” (whose Season 2 subsequently was picked up by Starz) and axed HBO’s “The Nevers.” Earlier this month, the studio said it was shelving “Coyote vs. Acme,” the completed $30 million Looney Tunes-inspired film — before allowing filmmakers to shop it to other distributors.

Meanwhile, Sorkin asked Zaslav about the company’s ouster of CNN execs Jeff Zucker, formerly president of the news network, and Chris Licht, who was fired after a little over a year as CEO. “Sometimes when you make a business decision, or sometimes when a business decision is made by your team, your friends can take it personally,” Zaslav said. He praised Licht as a “great guy, talented man” and “a good friend,” and added, “Chris is going to have a lot of great chapters, and hopefully some of those will be with Warner Bros.”

 

playahaitian

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Zaslav Says Warner Bros. Discovery Cutbacks, Including Shelving Movies, Took ‘Courage’

CEO also addresses Hollywood strikes at NYT DealBook Summit: They were 'bad for all of us'

By Todd Spangler
November 29, 2023


David-Zaslav-Warner-Bros-Discovery.jpg

Warner Bros/Discovery CEO David Zaslav

Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav weighed in on the twin SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes and defended the company’s budget cuts — including shelving completed films “Batgirl” and “Coyote vs. Acme” — as requiring “courage” to right-size its balance sheet.

Zaslav, speaking Wednesday at the New York Times’ DealBook Summit, reiterated to moderator Andrew Ross Sorkin that with respect to the strikes, he was focused on achieving a resolution as soon as possible.

“I think the idea of going on strike was bad for all of us,” he said. “My focus was on, we need to settle the strike, every day that we were on strike and people weren’t working was a bad day for us.”

Zaslav recently was quoted in a New York Times piece as saying the WGA was “right about almost everything.” Asked about that at the DealBook event, the CEO stuck by his previous comment and said he told SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher and the union’s chief negotiator, Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, that “I agree with a lot of what you are saying.”

Zaslav said WBD’s spending cuts, including mass layoffs and billions in content write-offs, were required to improve the media conglomerate’s financial health. For the full-year 2022, Warner Bros. Discovery took a $2.9 billion charge of content restructuring impairments and write-offs. “We decided that we had to have courage,” he said.

Elaborating on WBD’s decisions to write-off certain films and TV series, he said that hypothetically, if the company has already spent $100 million producing a film, “The question is, should we take certain of these movies and open them in the theater and spend another $30 [million] or $40 million to promote them?” The Warner Bros. Entertainment and HBO teams made a number of “hard” decisions, Zaslav continued, but that “when I look at the health of our company today, we needed to make those decisions. And it took real courage.”

Last year, among other content write-downs, Warner Bros. shelved the $90 million-budgeted DC adventure “Batgirl” and the kid-friendly “Scoob! Holiday Haunt.” It also canceled HBO Max original series “Minx” (whose Season 2 subsequently was picked up by Starz) and axed HBO’s “The Nevers.” Earlier this month, the studio said it was shelving “Coyote vs. Acme,” the completed $30 million Looney Tunes-inspired film — before allowing filmmakers to shop it to other distributors.

Meanwhile, Sorkin asked Zaslav about the company’s ouster of CNN execs Jeff Zucker, formerly president of the news network, and Chris Licht, who was fired after a little over a year as CEO. “Sometimes when you make a business decision, or sometimes when a business decision is made by your team, your friends can take it personally,” Zaslav said. He praised Licht as a “great guy, talented man” and “a good friend,” and added, “Chris is going to have a lot of great chapters, and hopefully some of those will be with Warner Bros.”



russell-westbrook-pointing.gif


@ViCiouS who man is dis?
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
‘Barbie’ Gets Streaming Release Date on Max

Max announced that Greta Gerwig’s sparkly pink fantasy comedy will hit the streamer on Dec. 15, a few months after “Barbie’s” July 21 theatrical release date. There will also be an American Sign Language version available.

By Caroline Brew
December 4, 2023


MCDBARB_WB037.jpg
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
A24 Movies to Stream Exclusively on HBO and Max Under New Deal, Including ‘Priscilla’ and ‘Iron Claw’

U.S. pay-one TV output pact for U.S. between A24 and Warner Bros. Discovery comes after end of Showtime agreement

By Todd Spangler
December 6, 2023


Priscilla.jpg
 

playahaitian

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Certified Pussy Poster
A24 Movies to Stream Exclusively on HBO and Max Under New Deal, Including ‘Priscilla’ and ‘Iron Claw’

U.S. pay-one TV output pact for U.S. between A24 and Warner Bros. Discovery comes after end of Showtime agreement

By Todd Spangler
December 6, 2023


Priscilla.jpg

They got a whole channel on paramount!
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Warner Bros. Discovery shares fall on report about Paramount merger talks

The Axios report, which cites multiple sources, comes as speculation about Paramount's future heats up. Controlling shareholder Shari Redstone is reportedly eager to make a deal. Redstone controls Paramount through her company National Amusements.

Mike Calia
PUBLISHED WED, DEC 20 2023


Warner-Bros-Discovery-Paramount-Global.jpg
 

Complex

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BGOL Investor
A24 Movies to Stream Exclusively on HBO and Max Under New Deal, Including ‘Priscilla’ and ‘Iron Claw’

U.S. pay-one TV output pact for U.S. between A24 and Warner Bros. Discovery comes after end of Showtime agreement

By Todd Spangler
December 6, 2023


Priscilla.jpg

I fuck with A24

Good move
 

Helico-pterFunk

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BGOL Legend






 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
All 10 TOS And TNG Star Trek Movies Exit Paramount+ For Max And HBO (Again)

BY: TREKMOVIE.COM STAFF
January 2, 2024


Paramount+ has been the sole streaming home for all 13 Star Trek feature films, however, that changed at the beginning of 2024. If you want to stream one of the TOS or TNG movies, you will have to do it on Max in the USA.

Trek to the Max

As of January 1, 2024, the six TOS-era Star Trek movies (The Motion Picture, The Wrath of Khan, The Search for Spock, The Voyage Home, The Final Frontier, and The Undiscovered Country) and four TNG-era movies (Generations, First Contact, Insurrection, and Nemesis) are streaming exclusively on Max in the USA. This includes the new 4K Directors Edition of Star Trek: The Motion Picture. The Star Trek feature films have also started airing on HBO. This is a bit of history repeating itself. In November 2022 the same 10 movies jumped from Paramount+ for HBO Max (now just Max), returning in July of 2023. The three Kelvin-era movies (Star Trek 2009, Into Darkness, and Beyond) are still available on Paramount+.

It is unknown how long HBO and Max will have the exclusive license for the 10 Star Trek feature films this time. Paramount Global and Warner Bros. Discovery are in talks about a potential merger, however, the licensing deal for the Star Trek films is not related to those talks.

Licensing Star Trek

All 13 Star Trek feature films were first consolidated on Paramount+ exclusively in November 2021 and by July 2022 all 5 “classic” Star Trek TV shows were exclusive to Paramount+ as well in the USA. During the height of the streaming wars, most media companies were keeping their own content on their own streaming services. However, more recently there has been an industry trend back to licensing. In fact, Warner Bros. Discovery has been licensing much of its content to other streaming services, including Netflix.

This move back to more licensing has already been seen with Star Trek: Prodigy moving from Paramount+ to Netflix. We may see more exclusive and non-exclusive licensing deals for Star Trek TV shows. Perhaps Paramount would even consider producing a new original Star Trek show for another service. There is some precedent for this as Netflix paid much of the cost for the early seasons of Discovery for the international streaming rights. Amazon did the same for Picard and Lower Decks.

One thing is clear, Paramount+ will also have to update their latest “Home of Star Trek” promo (released during Comic-Con 2023) as it includes clips from the feature films.

maxtrek2024-head2.jpg
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
I was thinking of watching all the “Dirty Harry” films next week thinking they all would be on MAX.

I went on there tonight to save them and none of them are on MAX.

WB hasn’t even released them to other streaming services.

The films are only available on PPV or whatever illegal DL you can get.

Fuckin’ Ridiculous!!!:angry:
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
If WB got Tom, pretty certain the Paramount merger will happen soon.

Tom Cruise Signs Deal With Warner Bros. to Develop and Produce Original and Franchise Films

The ageless action star signed a new deal to develop and produce theatrical films with Warner Bros. Discovery. These movies will be a mix of original productions and franchise fare and will star Cruise, the company said in a release touting the deal. As part of what is being billed as a new “strategic partnership,” Cruise and his production company will have offices on the Warner Bros. Discovery lot in Burbank.

By Brent Lang
January 9, 2024


Tom-Cruise-1.jpg
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
If WB got Tom, pretty certain the Paramount merger will happen soon.

Tom Cruise Signs Deal With Warner Bros. to Develop and Produce Original and Franchise Films

The ageless action star signed a new deal to develop and produce theatrical films with Warner Bros. Discovery. These movies will be a mix of original productions and franchise fare and will star Cruise, the company said in a release touting the deal. As part of what is being billed as a new “strategic partnership,” Cruise and his production company will have offices on the Warner Bros. Discovery lot in Burbank.

By Brent Lang
January 9, 2024


Tom-Cruise-1.jpg

ohh-i-get-it.gif
 

Helico-pterFunk

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blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
DC Is Already Preparing For Its Heroes' Public Domain Era

By the mid- to late 2030s, Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman will have entered the public domain—but DC Comics is already preparing to keep a tight hold.

By James Whitbrook
January 18, 2024


b659b9d44f8c6b27d45c0a03acf50a1b.jpg
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
‘Sex And The City’ To Stream On Netflix Under Warner Bros. Discovery Deal

A deal for Sex and the City would be a major coup for Netflix. It is one of HBO’s most important library titles and has a modern spinoff series in the shape of And Just Like That… The latter is set to remain exclusive to Max.

Jake Kanter
January 24, 2024


Sex-and-the-City-HBO.jpg
 

blackbull1970

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The Regime
Official Trailer
Debuts March 3, 2024

A year within the palace of a modern European authoritarian regime as it unravels.

MV5BNTE3OWM1OGYtMjRhMy00OGExLTgyNmItNDg3Mzc1ZDUwNGFkXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTkxNjUyNQ@@._V1_FMjpg_UX1000_.jpg


 

Helico-pterFunk

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BGOL Legend
Zaslav Says Warner Bros. Discovery Cutbacks, Including Shelving Movies, Took ‘Courage’

CEO also addresses Hollywood strikes at NYT DealBook Summit: They were 'bad for all of us'

By Todd Spangler
November 29, 2023


David-Zaslav-Warner-Bros-Discovery.jpg

Warner Bros/Discovery CEO David Zaslav

Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav weighed in on the twin SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes and defended the company’s budget cuts — including shelving completed films “Batgirl” and “Coyote vs. Acme” — as requiring “courage” to right-size its balance sheet.

Zaslav, speaking Wednesday at the New York Times’ DealBook Summit, reiterated to moderator Andrew Ross Sorkin that with respect to the strikes, he was focused on achieving a resolution as soon as possible.

“I think the idea of going on strike was bad for all of us,” he said. “My focus was on, we need to settle the strike, every day that we were on strike and people weren’t working was a bad day for us.”

Zaslav recently was quoted in a New York Times piece as saying the WGA was “right about almost everything.” Asked about that at the DealBook event, the CEO stuck by his previous comment and said he told SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher and the union’s chief negotiator, Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, that “I agree with a lot of what you are saying.”

Zaslav said WBD’s spending cuts, including mass layoffs and billions in content write-offs, were required to improve the media conglomerate’s financial health. For the full-year 2022, Warner Bros. Discovery took a $2.9 billion charge of content restructuring impairments and write-offs. “We decided that we had to have courage,” he said.

Elaborating on WBD’s decisions to write-off certain films and TV series, he said that hypothetically, if the company has already spent $100 million producing a film, “The question is, should we take certain of these movies and open them in the theater and spend another $30 [million] or $40 million to promote them?” The Warner Bros. Entertainment and HBO teams made a number of “hard” decisions, Zaslav continued, but that “when I look at the health of our company today, we needed to make those decisions. And it took real courage.”

Last year, among other content write-downs, Warner Bros. shelved the $90 million-budgeted DC adventure “Batgirl” and the kid-friendly “Scoob! Holiday Haunt.” It also canceled HBO Max original series “Minx” (whose Season 2 subsequently was picked up by Starz) and axed HBO’s “The Nevers.” Earlier this month, the studio said it was shelving “Coyote vs. Acme,” the completed $30 million Looney Tunes-inspired film — before allowing filmmakers to shop it to other distributors.

Meanwhile, Sorkin asked Zaslav about the company’s ouster of CNN execs Jeff Zucker, formerly president of the news network, and Chris Licht, who was fired after a little over a year as CEO. “Sometimes when you make a business decision, or sometimes when a business decision is made by your team, your friends can take it personally,” Zaslav said. He praised Licht as a “great guy, talented man” and “a good friend,” and added, “Chris is going to have a lot of great chapters, and hopefully some of those will be with Warner Bros.”





 
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