The deal would bulk up Netflix’s already considerable content production capabilities and secure premium assets like HBO and Warner Bros studios.
Streaming giant Netflix has made a mostly cash offer to buy TV and film group Warner Bros Discovery as the storied yet debt-laden Hollywood studio presses on with a sale that could remake the US media landscape, AFP reported, citing media reports.
His son David Ellison, a movie producer, is the Paramount CEO and had made three consecutive offers for the entertainment group before Warner Bros Discovery CEO David Zaslav launched the official sale process.
Netflix, the world’s largest streaming service with over 280 million subscribers globally, is working on a bridge loan totaling tens of billions of dollars to finance its potential acquisition, according to sources cited by Bloomberg.
The deal would bulk up Netflix’s already considerable content production capabilities and secure premium assets like HBO and Warner Bros studios.
It would also likely face close scrutiny by antitrust authorities in the United States and potentially in other major markets.
Top Hollywood players have voiced their preference to see Warner Bros not end up in the hands of Netflix, citing concerns that the streaming company largely seeks to limit theatrical releases of its film productions.
“Titanic” director James Cameron told podcast “The Town” recently that a takeover of Warner Bros by Netflix would be “a disaster.”
Requests for comment to Netflix and Warner Bros Discovery were not answered at the time of publication.





