The big Paramount–WBD questions, answered
The state attorneys general have laid out their arguments. Paramount executives have pushed back hard. Now the states are asking for a temporary restraining order, a “TRO” for short, and a preliminary injunction to freeze Paramount in place. Here’s what it all means:
>> What’s the current status of the merger?
It’s in the proverbial end zone. Regulators all around the world have signed off on the deal or at least chosen not to stand in the way.
Paramount is waiting on a few final OKs, including from the European Commission, which set a July 22 deadline for a decision. That’s next Wednesday, so Paramount CEO David Ellison is basically ready to take over WBD.
The United Kingdom is also a wildcard. But this state lawsuit is the biggest impediment to the merger. That’s why the Los Angeles Times says this lawsuit is a “last-ditch effort to derail a deal that would transform Hollywood.”
>> What would a TRO do?
The order would “make sure that the proposed merger is halted during the pendency of the litigation,” California AG Rob Bonta told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins last night.
If a judge agrees and imposes a restraining order, Paramount would be blocked from completing the deal for the time being, though the company would appeal.
>> Why do the states say a TRO is necessary?
The filing says the states “have an interest in enforcing antitrust laws and their citizens face the risk of profound and irreversible injury in the absence of an injunction… In contrast, there is no cognizable harm to Paramount and Warner Bros. from pausing their merger while the court adjudicates this case.”
Paramount would certainly disagree. The company also said yesterday that delaying the deal would harm entertainment workers.
>> How soon will a judge weigh in?
Very soon. The filing says that time is of the essence since Paramount “may close the transaction as early as July 22.”
So a judge will analyze the arguments in the lawsuit and weigh whether to grant the TRO. State AG officials tell me to expect a decision within the next week.
>> What will a judge be considering?
To grant a TRO, a judge has to find that the plaintiffs have a “likelihood of success on the merits” and that the transaction would cause “irreparable harm.”
If a judge is unpersuaded by the lawsuit and unwilling to put a restraining order in place, Paramount will move forward with the merger and the states might withdraw the lawsuit.
>> Has a judge been assigned to the case?
Not yet. But legal journalist Eriq Gardner noted that the states have filed a motion to tie their case to an existing class-action lawsuit against the merger. Gardner said “it may indicate they like the judge” assigned to that case, Araceli Martinez-Olguin.
Per Bloomberg, Martinez-Olguin, “a former civil rights and immigration lawyer nominated by former President Joe Biden, joined the bench in 2023.”
>> Why do “scrambled eggs” keep being invoked?
Because it’s a convenient and delicious corporate metaphor. Once two companies merge, the eggs are scrambled, and every cook knows that’s hard to undo.
In its argument for a TRO last night, the states quoted a decade-old ruling out of Pennsylvania halting a hospital system merger that said it would be “extraordinarily difficult to unscramble the egg” later.
In this case, the states argued, once Paramount–WBD is “consummated,” “layoffs, content cancellations, and harms to competition would commence immediately.”
>> How long could a TRO delay the deal?
State AG officials tell me the merger would be paused through September at the earliest, and likely through the end of the year, while both sides prepare for trial.
Keep in mind that Paramount has vowed to complete the deal by the end of September, and a “ticking fee” would take effect starting in October.
When a similar coalition of states sued to stop Nexstar from taking over Tegna in March, a judge issued a TRO eight days later, pausing everything. There have been several developments since then, and the merger is still on hold, with a trial date set for July 2027.
But every case is different, and some analysts have speculated that state prosecutors may have a harder time proving antitrust harm in the Paramount–WBD case.
>> Do the states have a strong case?
Depends on who you ask. Today’s Wall Street Journal says “the states’ lawsuit offers coherent concerns about the deal’s impact on the film and cable TV marketplaces, but it doesn’t look like a slam dunk, according to antitrust experts.”
Antitrust suits revolve around how the market is defined and how the harm is determined. This one focuses on the market for wide-release films, a submarket of anticipated blockbusters, and the licensing of cable channels.
Abiel Garcia, an antitrust partner with Kesselman Brantly Stockinger, said, “My read is that the two film-distribution markets are stronger arguments than the licensing of basic cable channels, but all three have problematic HHI numbers, meaning under the complaint’s allegations, they are presumed to be anticompetitive combinations that will hurt competition.”
>> What is Paramount saying?
The company says the lawsuit “distorts settled antitrust law” and misrepresents the state of the media marketplace. It says giants like Netflix have hurt Hollywood — and the combined Paramount–WBD will be better able to compete against Netflix and other “dominant streaming and technology platforms who have harmed the market for theatrical exhibition and jobs.” Here’s the complete Paramount statement.
>> Is this all a prelude to some sort of settlement?
Possibly. These legal battles involve many twists and turns. Paramount already offered concessions to Bonta to avert a lawsuit, but Bonta and his counterparts clearly wanted more.
At his press conference yesterday, Bonta said, “I have often said I prefer, and am very open to, solving problems in the boardroom as opposed to the courtroom.”
Critics of the deal hope that the lawsuit will force Paramount to abandon its merger dreams altogether, though that seems hard to imagine, and would leave WBD in a weak position.
>> Is CNN a factor in this case?
In the political and PR battle, yes. In the legal battle, no. The lawsuit really focuses on alleged harm to the entertainment industry, not the news industry. But state AG officials are privately concerned about the prospect of Paramount owning CNN and combining it with CBS News.
Bonta cited the expected job losses, saying “this merger will mean fewer journalists informing the electorate” and “it’ll mean fewer documentarians” and filmmakers “shedding light on important stories that too often go untold.”
Prominent conservative voices like Katie Miller and Clay Travis argued yesterday that the state AGs are suing because of CNN. “This is a lawsuit to protect CNN for the liberals,” Miller tweeted.
>> What about Matt Belloni’s recent story suggesting that Bonta wants Paramount to divest CNN?
Bonta totally dismissed it at his press conference, saying, “I learned about that for the first time in that article” and “I don’t know where it came from.”
Later, Belloni taped a podcast with Bonta and asked if Paramount “agreed to sell CNN, would that be enough for you?” Bonta flatly said: “No.”
“I don’t think I’ve ever said that,” Bonta added. “I don’t think that that is anywhere near sufficient to address the anticompetitive harms that we’ve been talking about.”
>> Would Paramount really move business out of California over this?
Industry experts heaped skepticism on that possibility. Variety’s Todd Spangler wrote that “the logistics and repercussions of diverting Paramount–Warner Bros. film and TV productions out of California would be daunting.”
Last night, Bonta told Collins that the Semafor report “seemed like a last-ditch, desperate effoirt to try to blackmail the regulators, the states, from doing their job” and filing the suit.
“Their gambit did not work,” Bonta said, “because we’re going to fairly and firmly enforce antitrust law.”
Will the states win or lose? We should know, at least about the status of a TRO, pretty soon.
‘Key questions remain unanswered’ after another deadly ICE shooting
Another ICE shooting, this time in Biddeford, Maine, has shocked the nation’s conscience. The lack of information from authorities is really striking – even while keeping in mind that “some previous DHS claims about moving vehicles in shootings have fallen apart.”
So skepticism is definitely warranted. This new CNN review of videos and photos, led by Yahya Abou-Ghazala, has insight into the timeline of the shooting “as key questions remain unanswered…”
That’s the headline of NewsGuard’s latest Reality Check, describing how social media influencers and users are blaming Lindsey Graham’s death on “everything from COVID-19 vaccines to Russia and Israel.”
The Bulwark’s Will Sommer reports that some of the usual suspects, including Laura Loomer, have suggested the senator may have been murdered, and “these conspiracy theories are being given winks or even direct oxygen from the top levels of the government.”
>> Theories about Sen. Mitch McConnell have been promoted by some of his GOP colleagues, too, this new NBC story notes.
>> Here’s the really big picture context: A loss of trust in everyone and everything. “Americans’ confidence in U.S. institutions remains historically low,” Gallup finds in this annual report, out today.
He once again pushed back on truthful reporting about the war yesterday, telling the aforementioned Kaitlan Collins that “the fake news would rather see us lose the war than win the war, which is really treasonous, which is really treasonous in a certain way.”
Earlier in the day, Trump went on a similar rant on “Fox & Friends,” calling the NYT “sick” for its reporting on the war. “I actually think it’s treasonous,” he said. It’s not, no matter what he thinks.
>> Watch: CNN’s Jake Tapper took a sweeping look at Trump’s attacks on the First Amendment on “The Lead” yesterday, saying “Mr. First Amendment has turned out to be anything but.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth yesterday posted a video to X announcing that the Pentagon and the DOJ have “created a joint task force to identify and prosecute leakers.” But the video announcement is scant on any actual details. It’s unclear whether a task force has been created and started taking any action — or if this was just a PR effort amid Trump and Hegseth’s ongoing outrage over leaks, days after The New York Times was served with subpoenas.
When CNN’s national security reporting team asked Hegseth’s office for the task force’s name, who would serve on it, and if there were any details available about the scope or mission, the Pentagon referred them back to the video and said they had nothing more to provide…
A pair of new releases is already high up on the Amazon bestseller list thanks to preorder buzz: Brian Tyler Cohen’s “The Day After: How to Wield Power in a Post-Trump World” and Lauren Collins’ “They Stole a City: Wilmington’s White Supremacist Coup and the Families Who Live with Its Legacy.” The feature about Collins’ book on “CBS News Sunday Morning” definitely propelled sales.
The World Cup continues to set US viewership records even though the American team is no longer playing. “Saturday’s World Cup match between England and Norway,” which aired on Fox, “drew the largest TV audience ever for an English-language World Cup quarterfinal telecast in the U.S.,” The Athletic’s Dan Shanoff reports.
And the next evening’s Argentina–Switzerland match “drew just shy of 16 million viewers, making it the second most-watched English-language World Cup quarterfinal telecast in U.S. history.”
>> The semi-finals begin today at 3 p.m. ET with France vs. Spain.
>> “The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, has pledged an EU-wide social media ban for children after an expert group called for restrictions for those under 13.” (The Guardian)
>> “Australia’s online platforms are stumbling at the very first step in implementing age checks for users, rendering a world-first teen social media ban ineffective, a study by a team that advised the government’s rollout of the curbs found.” (Reuters)
>> Interesting: X “has made a ‘tweak’ to its algorithm to boost the visibility of posts to users’ ‘mutuals,’” which “may make X feel a little bit more like a community rather than a torrent of disparate voices shouting into the digital abyss,” Lucas Ropek reports. (TechCrunch)
>> OpenAI’s ad business “is on pace to fall short of the company’s own five-year revenue forecast by 90%,” Trishla Ostwal reports. (Adweek)
>> Anthropic says it is hiring a standards editor and the ideal candidate “has likely thrived in a similar role at a newsroom or magazine.” (X)
This edition of Reliable Sources was edited by Andrew Kirell and produced with Liam Reilly. Email us your feedback and tips here.