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Nov 21, 2025

In The Room
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Dylan Byers Dylan Byers

Greetings from Los Angeles, and welcome back to In the Room. I’m heading up to San Francisco and then Sonoma for the week of Thanksgiving. If I’m slow to respond to calls or texts, it’s because I’m busy shucking oysters, brining a bird, or contemplating the structured elegance of a Ridge zinfandel.

🦃 Speaking of which, on today’s edition of The Grill Room, Alison Roman, the internet’s favorite culinary truth-teller, returned to talk T-day recipes and dish on her ongoing evolution as an independent creator in the chaotic attention economy. We also discussed her new book, the existential importance of keeping it authentic, and why she broke up with Substack. Follow The Grill Room on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you prefer to listen.

In tonight’s issue, news and notes on the latest intelligence surrounding the Warner Bros. Discovery sweepstakes as David Zaslav nears the “bittersweet” end of his foray into Hollywood moguldom.

Mentioned in this issue: Bari Weiss, Bret Baier, Anderson Cooper, Tony Dokoupil, Gayle King, Emma Tucker, Aja Whitaker-Moore, Nick Johnston, David Zaslav, and more…

Let’s get started…

  • Bari ambitious: Bari Weiss sat with The Wall Street Journal this week for an article that—with respect!—contains absolutely nothing new about her first days at CBS News, beyond the expectation that she will “detail a more specific strategy in the coming weeks for the newsroom.” As I’ve reported, Bari has courted bold-faced names like Bret Baier and Anderson Cooper to no avail, often betraying a little naiveté about the industry along the way. (Her latest target, Matt Gutman, is staying at ABC News, I’m told). Meanwhile, naming a new CBS Evening News anchor does indeed remain a priority. Last week, I noted that Tony Dokoupil seemed increasingly likely (albeit not certain) to get that chair. Maybe they’ll put it on Polymarket.

    On a broader level, Bari’s fits-and-starts approach to talent acquisition underscores the limits to the impending strategy rollout, whatever it may be. Bari seems more ambitious than the current crop of television newsroom leaders, more headstrong, and certainly more unorthodox in her methods, which is refreshing—to a point. But this is still a declining industry with limited areas for innovation, and so much of her efforts are ultimately just another rearrangement of the available deck chairs.

    Is Tony the best available evening anchor? Maybe! Might Bari save some money by letting go of Gayle King? Of course! Could a Free Press political philosophy be a refreshing antidote to the bland broadcast news fodder? Sure! But is any of this going to save CBS News? Ultimately, Bari may find it hard to be anything more than the most interesting player in a dreadfully difficult game.

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  • Emma’s chess moves: Speaking of the Journal, I broke the news earlier today that Emma Tucker is restructuring her masthead and has poached Axios editor-in-chief Aja Whitaker-Moore to serve as co-deputy editor-in-chief. I’m told that Axios’s Nick Johnston will reassume the editor-in-chief role, which he held prior to becoming publisher, a notably anachronistic title. Emma is also promoting current executive editor David Crow to serve as the other co-deputy editor-in-chief and has hired CNBC’s Dan Colarusso to lead its business, finance, and economics unit. To date, Emma has made the Journal far punchier and higher impact than the paper she inherited. Hopefully these moves will further advance that effort.
  • Tinseltown toasts Sherrod Brown: My colleague Leigh Ann Caldwell had an early look at the midterm fundraising race this week with word, which I helped confirm, that Brown is getting some support from the entertainment and media elite: “A dozen Hollywood bigwigs are throwing a fundraiser for Ohio Senate candidate Sherrod Brown, the former senator and blue-collar champion who is running against Republican Sen. Jon Husted in a race that will likely cost his campaign over $100 million. The soiree, hosted by Sony Pictures C.E.O. Tom Rothman and his wife, Jessica Harper, will take place December 9; the invite helpfully suggests a $10,000 contribution to Brown’s Ohio Grassroots Victory joint fundraising committee. Co-hosts include Ari Emanuel; producer Mark Gordon and wife Sally Whitehill; filmmakers Phil Lord and Chris Miller, producers of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse; and Motion Picture Association president Charles Rivkin. Husted’s team is probably already scripting a campaign ad attacking Brown, a resolute defender of the workers, over his cozy evening with Hollywood’s A-list.”

And now, the main event…

Zaz’s Hollywood Endings

Zaz’s Hollywood Endings

With the final bids for Warner Bros. Discovery under careful consideration, David Zaslav’s tenure as an ersatz Hollywood mogul may be coming to an end. Now, it’s all about the numbers, and which suitors have a glide path to regulatory approval. Just which sunset Zaz will ride into is anyone’s guess.

Dylan Byers Dylan Byers

On Wednesday evening, before flying back to New York to assess the new round of offers for Warner Bros. Discovery, David Zaslav hosted a party for the Hollywood A-list at the old Woodland estate, formerly the home of Robert Evans, that he purchased in those halcyon days during his WarnerMedia courtship. Back then, Zaz was preparing for his takeover of the town with private conclaves, tête à têtes, and various legacy media interview sessions. Those were the days, of course, before the synergies and the bad press, before balance sheets became insurmountable and “debt servicing” became the strategy. (Disclosure: As a result of our recent acquisition of Air Mail, Zaz has become a de minimis investor in Puck.)

In conversations there and elsewhere in recent days, Zaz has seemed humbled by the prospect of an impending sale, which is likely to bring an end to his brief dalliance with Hollywood moguldom. He has described it to associates as “bittersweet.” At the same time, he has projected a characteristic optimism about the options available to him in the current bidding war—and, of late, he has spoken bullishly about the interest from Netflix.

On Thursday, Zaz began reviewing the fourth formal offer from Skydance’s David Ellison for the entire company, for what I’m told is around $23.50 a share, as well as first-time offers from Comcast and Netflix for the Warner Bros. Studios and Streaming business. The universal expectation is that neither of these offers comes close to the $30-a-share high-water mark that Zaz and his mentor John Malone had suggested they could fetch in the market or through a split of the company.

Beyond that, there’s not much to go on. Executives at all three companies declined my entreaties, unsurprisingly, and their comms teams weren’t much more helpful. “I am closed for business on this matter,” Mel Zukerman, Ellison’s spirited chief communications officer, told me after the bids came in on Thursday afternoon. “Next topic!”

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Still, there is significant reason to believe that the dynamics have not fundamentally changed and that Skydance remains in pole position, Zaz’s optimism notwithstanding. Ellison’s $23.50-a-share offer already represents the highest M&A premium for a media deal in recent memory, and it contemplates the whole enchilada—saving God knows how much time, banker’s fees, and legal costs that would otherwise go toward a sale of one part of the company to Comcast or Netflix, followed by the spin of the cable assets into a separate public company. And, crucially, it faces the clearest path toward regulatory approval, as I explained last month. (And, no, Senator Elizabeth Warren’s facile protests on The Late Show aren’t going to change that).

Comcast’s Brian Roberts faces significant political pressure from Trump, of course, which may not be surmounted by a donation to the White House ballroom alone. But he has less financial leverage, too—less cash than the Ellisons and a stock that trades at a mere 5x multiple. Some analysts, like Rich Greenfield, have urged Roberts to be bold and seize this “once-in-a-generation opportunity,” but it’s hard to fathom an offer he could make that would prove more appealing to the White House and the WBD board, even if MS NOW has technically set off on its solo expedition.

The big unknown is Netflix, and whether Reed Hastings and Ted Sarandos are willing to reverse themselves on the theatrical question—a prerequisite for any deal—and confront the potential regulatory challenge. (As my partner Matt Belloni has noted, they’re certainly willing to extend some symbolic olive branches.) Netflix already has more than 300 million global subscribers, while Paramount+ and Peacock have just 80 million and 40 million, respectively. Reed and Ted, along with co-C.E.O. Greg Peters, have built Netflix into a $450 billion business while keeping it out of Trump’s crosshairs. Do they want to wade into that fight for Warners, especially given Reed’s longstanding support for Democratic causes? And do they want to do so by raising Ellison on an already high premium? CNBC’s Alex Sherman reported this week that Netflix is expected to be “disciplined” with its offer, which may not bode well for Zaz.

In any event, there’s a lot for Zaz and the WBD board to chew over during the Thanksgiving holiday. They are then likely to call for at least one more round of bids and then settle on a buyer before Christmas—unless, I suppose, the offers underwhelm and the board, which is filled with M&A jefes, makes the uncomfortable decision to pursue its spinoff plans, which sure seem secondary at this point. The truth, however, is that these potential acquirers are really sending signals to the market more than to Zaz. Sure, Netflix executives suggested that they were going to be disciplined. Did we expect the opposite? And the Ellisons, despite their inconceivable wealth, have been holding the line with their multiple bids—despite the reality that moving to the other side of $25 per share might materially alter the process.

During his short tenure in this town, Zaz always stuck out a bit for his New York energy. He had cut his teeth as a deal guy under Jack Welch and made his centimillions by cleverly combining subscale cable companies and cutting beneficial deals with distributors. His ability to navigate this current moment—inching bidders forward, making one side blink—is imbued with a slight tinge of irony. The qualities that made him stand out could ensure his legacy and Hollywood ending.

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