Paramount snaps back at California in furious statement amid WBD war — before turning its anger on Netflix



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Paramount has vowed to fight California’s lawsuit seeking to block its proposed $110-billion merger with Warner Bros. Discovery, arguing the deal would actually boost competition.

“The lawsuit filed by the state attorneys general, in the most generous light, reflects a fundamentally flawed application of the antitrust laws and is wrong on both the facts and the law.”

“We will vigorously defend the transaction and demonstrate that this challenge is inconsistent with sound competition policy and the competitive realities of the media marketplace,” a spokesman said.

Earlier today California Attorney General Rob Banta led a coalition of 12 Democratic attorneys to file a lawsuit seeking to block the $110-billion merger of Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery.
WBD, headed by CEO David Ellison, argued the merger would actually boost competition. Getty Images for CinemaCon

The company argued delaying the merger would hurt entertainment workers who have already endured years of disruption as streaming and technology companies have reshaped the industry, costing California thousands of jobs.

Paramount maintained the combined company would be better equipped to compete against dominant streaming platforms such as Netflix by investing more heavily in premium programming, theatrical releases and creative talent. (Netflix was initially gunning to acquire WBD.)

They also accused the attorneys general of protecting the industry’s largest streaming rivals rather than consumers, saying the lawsuit would ultimately benefit major technology companies while preventing a stronger competitor from emerging.

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Paramount maintained the combined company would be better equipped to compete against streaming platforms like Netflix, which originally sought to acquire WBD. AFP via Getty Images

“We will continue to fight against any attempt to derail a deal that strengthens competition, expands opportunity, and positions the combined company to compete in an increasingly competitive global media landscape,” the spokesperson said.

Regulators in 24 jurisdictions have already cleared or allowed the transaction to proceed after reviewing its competitive impacts, according to Paramount.

Paramount’s response came just minutes after California and 11 other states sued to block the company’s merger with Warner Bros. Discovery, greenlit by the President Donald Trump’s administration.

Warner Bros. Discovery referred The California Post to Paramount and declined to comment separately.


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