• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers
March 24, 2025
What I'm Hearing...
Oscar de la Renta
Matthew Belloni Matthew Belloni
Welcome back to What I’m Hearing, and welcome to spring. We deserve it. Anyway, tonight I’ve got some brief thoughts on the Endeavor take-private and what Patrick Whitesell is up to next, plus a Snow White autopsy and a grim chart that says everything you need to know about the box office. Programming note: This week on The Town, Lucas Shaw and I looked at the most important ’25 movie for each studio, Sara Fischer explained all the ways Trump can further screw with Hollywood, and Julia Alexander suggested what Apple TV+ can do to keep its Severance fans. Subscribe here and here. Not a Puck subscriber yet? Just click here. Got a news tip or an idea for me? Just reply to this email or message me on Signal at 310-804-3198. Discussed in this issue: Patrick Whitesell, Brian Robbins, John Mulaney, Carl Rinsch, J.K. Rowling, Jeremy Zimmer, David Zaslav, Conan O’Brien, Bryan Lourd, Steph Jones, Peter Chernin, Mark Shapiro, Rachel Zegler, Harvey Weinstein, Egon Durban, Ari Emanuel, Richard Weitz, and… Triumph the Insult Comic Dog. But first…
 

Who Won the Week: Nobody (Second Week in a Row!)

Honorable mention: David Zaslav. Disney’s Snow White flopped so hard that the media mostly ignored The Alto Knights, the $50 million movie Zaz greenlit to impress his Hamptons buddies, which grossed just $3.2 million on 2,650 screens this weekend. More: Domestic box office is headed for a depressing Q1, which ends this weekend. Worse, if you adjust for inflation, the trajectory looks like this (courtesy of advisor Jon Rogers)…
Domestic q1 box office
Now to the latest in agency financial shenanigans…
 

Ari Finally Set Patrick Free

Ari Emanuel and Patrick Whitesell made a combined $274 million in cash today. How’s your Monday? That’s the latest incredible windfall for the Endeavor leaders—not quite as incredible if you’re a typical WME agent, but at least they’re able to cash in equity at $27.50 a share. The Endeavor stock was at $17 a couple years ago, so there are fewer disgruntled sharks today, which is heartwarming for everyone. It’s all part of Endeavor’s $25 billion go-private transaction, engineered by majority owner Silver Lake, which will rebrand the talent agency/other stuff company as WME Group. And, given that Emanuel and Whitesell had previously taken hundreds of millions of dollars out of this company, the money isn’t even the biggest headline of the day. More interesting, at least to those of us who have watched the agency business balloon into a private equity-fueled urinal-spying contest led by Emanuel and CAA’s Bryan Lourd, is the exit of both Ari and Patrick from the day-to-day jobs of overseeing a talent agency. It’s been quite a ride. Emanuel has been kicked upstairs to “executive chairman” of WME Group while he continues as C.E.O. and executive chair of TKO, which houses UFC, WWE, Professional Bull Riders, and other lucrative sports assets. Dwayne Johnson, Pete Berg, Tyler Perry, and others need not worry: Ari will keep screaming on behalf of his talent clients, too, and WME Group’s parent, now privately owned by Silver Lake, will maintain its 60 percent stake in TKO. So it’s all still basically The Ari Show, with the usual enabling from Silver Lake’s Egon Durban. Not the big, happy, publicly traded entertainment and sports behemoth that Ari once dreamed of, but certainly not a bad place to be.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
Oscar de la Renta
Oscar de la
Renta
Oscar de la Renta Signature Handbags Discover More
Whitesell, on the other hand, will have no title at either WME or TKO, nor will he stay on the board of WME. Instead he’s launching a new, still unnamed company with $250 million of Silver Lake’s money and keeping an ownership stake in WME that he’s rolling over from Endeavor. Plus, he’ll still advise his big clients, like Ryan Reynolds, Ben Affleck, and Matt Damon, though I’m told Patrick will take no salary. (I know, start a GoFundMe...) He’s more like a consigliere now, I guess (though I’m sure that’s not how CAA and UTA will characterize his status), with Christian Muirhead and Richard Weitz running the WME agency, reporting to Mark Shapiro, who will be president of both WME and TKO. Got that? As usual with Endeavor stuff, it’s all financial and executive jujitsu—with Ari and Patrick making the lion’s share of money. (Usual disclosure: WME represents Puck but not me personally.) And now, after years of personally and professionally drifting away from Ari, Patrick is finally out. (You can stop sending me emails reporting they “don’t speak” and “hate each other.” I’m good.) In a brief chat today, Whitesell acknowledged but downplayed that rift, and told me his new business will function less like Endeavor and more like investor Peter Chernin’s post-Fox endeavors. He’ll leverage his relationships not to take over companies or try to smash them together or operate them personally, but to identify a portfolio of businesses in entertainment and sports, especially, that could benefit from minority investments. He’s already lined up a couple bets that he’s finalizing, I’m told. Whitesell is also personally taking on WME’s football representation business, which has about 100 clients (200 with coaches) and about 40 or 50 employees. That’s totally separate from the Silver Lake–backed investment vehicle, because Durban is buying a piece of the NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders, and the league doesn’t want a team owner to maintain a stake in a company that represents players—even if that company is three times removed from Durban himself. Beyond that, Whitesell is recruiting Jason Lublin, the Endeavor C.F.O., to join the new company, though there’s no deal yet. Others could follow. A somewhat remarkable (if long-discussed) turn of events, considering Emanuel and Whitesell have been partners since Ari recruited Patrick from CAA back in 2001. Together, they basically swiped the William Morris Agency out from under Jim Wiatt and spent most of the 2010s leveraging Silver Lake’s money into a multi-limbed sea monster of a corporate entity. The market may have ultimately rejected that monster, but Ari and Patrick’s accountants haven’t complained. Today’s filing revealed Emanuel converted part of his ownership stake to mint $174 million in cash, and Whitesell took out a cool $100 million—though Ari and Patrick will roll over a combined $555 million of their equity into the private entity. Remember, this is on top of the hundreds of millions of dollars they made when Endeavor went public four years ago (though a lot of that was in options). And all this is separate from their salaries from Endeavor and TKO, which in 2023 totalled $89 million for Emanuel alone. Ari, out of the goodness of his heart, waived a $25 million “transaction” bonus. What’s $25 million, at this point? The colossal windfall for a duo that climbed the Hollywood ladder from the bottom certainly defies logic, and rivals have been fanning any possible flames of outrage over the profiteering. But if this is indeed a kiss-off from Ari to Patrick, it’s the kind that leaves very few hard feelings.
 

Quote of the Week

“Thank you all for coming, and shame on you for being here.” —Triumph the Insult Comic Dog (Robert Smigel), appearing at Conan O’Brien’s star-studded yet awkward Mark Twain Prize ceremony on Saturday at the recently Trumpified Kennedy Center. Runner-up: “I have a couple movies left in me.” —Harvey Weinstein, in a prison interview with Page Six. Second runner-up: “Three guesses. Sorry, but that was irresistible.” —J.K. Rowling, when asked on Twitter/X “What actor/actress instantly ruins a movie for you?” likely referencing Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, and Rupert Grint, her Harry Potter stars and vocal critics of her anti-trans views.
 

My Reading List…

Thoughts and prayers to embattled publicist and erratic screamer Steph Jones, who was formally accused of leaking her former employee’s texts in a new lawsuit from Justin Baldoni and Jen Abel. [People] 47 Ronin director Carl Rinsch took $11 million from Netflix to make a show and instead spent about $2.4 million on five Rolls-Royces and a Ferrari, $652,000 on watches and clothes, $638,000 on two mattresses (?!), and $3.8 million on furniture and antiques, among other allegations in the indictment. Somehow, this is less offensive than what the Russo brothers did. [Business Insider] Sesame Workshop generated $271 million in revenue and more than $20 million in profit in 2022, according to financial forms that were leaked as Sesame Street struggles to chart a post-HBO future. [NY Times] Paramount co-C.E.O. Brian Robbins, who’s been living in Montecito as the Skydance-Redstone drama plays out, has a deal to sell his Beverly Hills property for $20.8 million. [Real Deal] You hit up the OpenAI “Sora Selects” film festival last week in L.A.? No? You’d rather die a violent death? [LA Times] Kathryn VanArendonk nicely explains why Mulaney’s Netflix talk show is both discordant and very watchable. [Vulture] The first and last time my name will be in a headline with Olivia Wilde. [IndieWire] Now here’s Scott with a take on the ‘Snow White’ collapse…
‘Snow White’s Predictably Sleepy & Dopey Flop

Snow White’s Predictably Sleepy & Dopey Flop

Forget the movie’s controversies about Gaza, little people, and its leading lady. What doomed the vastly underperforming Snow White is that Disney simply overestimated the value of a live-action remake of a historic, but not exactly beloved, film.
Scott Mendelson Scott Mendelson
Snow White was not remotely the fairest of them all, but not for the reasons many of us expected. Most assumed that the reboot would be doomed by bad press, or the Fox News–led backlash against a so-called “woke” version of the classic fairy tale, or even a star in Rachel Zegler who wasn’t willing to mute her criticism of Israel or of Prince Charming’s “stalker”-like moves in the 1937 classic. But per EntIntelligence, the film slightly overindexed in red counties compared to the average family/animated title. It wasn’t that audiences had political qualms about the star, or the supposed lack of sisterly camaraderie between Zegler and co-star Gal Gadot, or even beef about Disney’s decision to cast seven CGI dwarfs (internally at Disney, they were referred to as the “miners”). The problem was that no one cared about a $270 million live-action remake of Disney’s Depression-era Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
Oscar de la Renta
Oscar de la
Renta
Oscar de la Renta Signature Handbags Discover More
Disney’s decision to make a big-budget, live-action Snow White arguably made some sense, both commercially and culturally, at one point. Over the past 15 years, the studio has found success with Cinderella ($545 million in 2015), The Jungle Book ($966 million in 2016), and Sleeping Beauty ($760 million for Angelina Jolie’s Maleficent in 2014). And even though the Snow White fairy tales have already gotten plenty of live-action adaptations—including Mirror Mirror and Snow White and the Huntsman, both in 2012—it was still likely worth it for Disney to roll the dice. But that doesn’t mean the judgment wasn’t clouded by the weight of Disney’s heritage. The original was known for being Disney’s first animated movie, rather than for its popular appeal. Millennial parents didn’t grow up with the VHS of the movie in heavy rotation the way they did with, say, The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, and Beauty and the Beast. And their parents would likely favor Pinocchio, Fantasia, or Bambi over Snow White. It’s therefore not a big surprise that... Continue reading online...
 

The Feedback

Lots of opinions on Apple TV+ and the ouster of UTA’s Jeremy Zimmer in response to my Monday and Thursday columns. Some examples… “The Medialink/UTA debacle illustrates what happens when dealmakers at the top, like Zimmer, are hermetically sealed from interacting with anyone actually doing the work. Everyone across the business knew what Medialink really was in 2017. It’s insane to have gone through with that deal four years later.” —An executive “You’re being very nice to Jeremy. He ‘lost the troops’ a long time ago. When I was at UTA, we knew he was a liability in every client meeting. (A Michael Scott situation.) Plus, he treated people badly and took millions of dollars out of the company without having clients or meaningful relationships. It had to end at some point.” —An agent “Why do you care if Apple TV+ loses $1 billion or $10 billion or $100 billion? Scaring them out of town with negativity does nobody any good.” —A producer “With that [brand] name and all those other services, Apple TV+ should have the lowest churn rate. As someone who subscribes and quits several times a year, here’s my reason: There’s not very much to watch.” —A non-industry reader [Ed. note: That’s probably why Apple is hiring a head of retention for Apple TV+.] “You can use the shiny object originals to get people in the door and then a deep catalog to keep feeding them. Apple Music and news and books and podcasts are all about aggregation, so they’re not allergic to it. Spend a few hundred million of those dollars to license!!”  —Another executive
 

Finally…

Hollywood officially hates moms, with zero female-targeted movies opening for Mother's Day in early May, according to the early tracking chart from The Quorum…
Qorum eight-week film tracking
Have a great week, Matt Corrections: New James Bond producer Amy Pascal didn’t produce Barbie, as I said on Thursday. (I think I was confusing it with Greta Gerwig’s Little Women, which Pascal did produce.) Also, Christian Muirhead’s former title at Endeavor was C.C.O., not C.O.O. Apologies to both. Got a question, comment, complaint, or a secret war plan to inadvertently disclose? Email me at Matt@puck.news or call/text me at 310-804-3198.
D.C. Post-Recess Chaos

D.C. Post-Recess Chaos

LEIGH ANN CALDWELL
Cerutti’s
New Charge

Cerutti’s New Charge

MARION MANEKER
Lessin’s
Learned

Lessin’s Learned

DYLAN BYERS
Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news. You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with . To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.
 
Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10006

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Hollywood

Obsession
Scott Mendelson • March 25, 2025
Letters from the HollyTube Revolution
The breakout weekends for ‘Backrooms’ and ‘Obsession’ tell us something real about the origin of Hollywood’s next generation of talent—and something more complicated about its future.
Blake Lively court
Eriq Gardner • March 25, 2025
The Blake Lively–Justin Baldoni Suit Could Be Headed for a Do-Over
While Lively elected to settle with her ‘It Ends With Us’ director, her search for attorneys fees and damages has vexed the judge overseeing the case. Will the solution be a new suit in a new venue?
Brendan Carr
Eriq Gardner • March 25, 2025
Disney Is Ready to Clobber Brendan Carr
The F.C.C. chairman is forcing a showdown with Disney over its D.E.I. policies—seemingly a thin pretext for punishing ABC News. But Carr, usually a savvy operator, has an unusually weak hand. And Disney’s lawyers have figured out exactly how to exploit it.


Backrooms movie
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
The 27-Year-Old Assistant Who Found ‘Backrooms’
Shawn Levy’s production company assigned a young staffer to monitor YouTube for potential talent. Four years later, Kane Parsons’ fantasy thriller opened to $118 million worldwide and has everyone in town talking about a possible sea change.
dreams of violets
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
The Hollywood A.I. Appeasement Vibe Shift
As the industry—even the creative class—shifts to cautiously accept A.I., a Cate Blanchett–founded nonprofit is pushing to adopt a framework of consent for performers. Meanwhile, the business is groping around for new ratings standards in an effort to separate out the slop. Both battles are just beginning.
Mohammed bin Salman
Kim Masters • March 25, 2025
Hollywood’s Saudi Tax Rebate Problem
Saudi Arabia has been offering generous rebates to lure productions to the Gulf. But even before the region experienced war and instability and spending slowed, some producers had been left holding an empty bag.


David Ellison
Eriq Gardner • March 25, 2025
The Ellison Trust-Busting Is Getting Political
Paramount’s planned takeover of Warner Bros. has triggered an all-out legal arms race between white-shoe law firms and an increasingly aggressive coalition of state A.G.s. Among the first battle lines: whether the Ellisons secured favorable regulatory treatment in exchange for favorable coverage.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Hollywood

toy story 5
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
Hollywood’s Gen Z Gap Is Real… and It’s Growing
In a complementary study to my annual survey of L.A. teens, it turns out that young people across America have pretty specific—and not all that shocking or unfair—gripes with the movie business.
Johnny Hallyday photographers
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
What I’ve Heard: Five Years of Hollywood Disruption
A half decade of M&A opportunists, Peak TV casualties, industry contraction, devastating strikes, and approximately 1,500 David Zaslav mentions later, show business still can’t figure out if it’s reinventing itself or fading away. So I asked 100 industry sources what they think is going on.
Mandalorian and Grogu
Scott Mendelson • March 25, 2025
Summer Box Office Blackjack: What the Biggest Movies Need to Beat the House
From Grogu to Spidey, here’s what each of this summer’s top 10 tentpoles actually needs to earn—and why success means something different for everyone.


Duncan Crabtree-Ireland
Eriq Gardner • March 25, 2025
SAG-AFTRA’s Surprise A.I. Détente
News and notes on the union’s peace treaty with digital “actress” Tilly Norwood. Plus: The bizarre lawsuit over Tung Tung Tung Sahur, which may be the first major test of whether trademark law can do what copyright won’t—protect an A.I.-generated creation.
shadow and bone
Julia Alexander • March 25, 2025
Streaming TV’s Romantasy Problem
Hollywood keeps trying to mine the red-hot genre for adaptations with built-in female fandoms. So why haven’t Amazon or Netflix cracked the code?
David Zaslav
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
The Hollywood C.E.O. Gluttony Index
Executive compensation in media has exploded in the past 30 years, even in a period of steady decline for the industry and a generally stagnant stock market. An eye-opening new study ranks the boom’s victors and their jaw-dropping spoils.


ted sarandos
Kim Masters • March 25, 2025
Netflix Goes to the Movies & Baldoni’s Second-Act Chances
News and notes from around town: Will the famously theater-shy streamer go all-in on distribution? And now that the Blake Lively war is almost over, what are Justin Baldoni’s Hollywood prospects?
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Hollywood

Justin Baldoni blake lively lawsuit
Eriq Gardner • March 25, 2025
Yes, the Blake-Baldoni Case Does Have a Winner
Lively’s lawyers say the ‘It Ends With Us’ settlement is just the preface to another battle to recover attorneys’ fees, treble damages, and potentially punitive awards, too. But will a Manhattan judge really apply an untested California law to a conflict on a New Jersey film set?
Josh D'Amaro
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
Disney’s Josh D’Amaro Manifesto Translator
In his first earnings call as C.E.O., D’Amaro dropped a 3,000-word mission statement preaching A.I., a “One Disney” strategy, and a super-app to end all super-apps. But perhaps what’s most telling is what he glossed over: coming layoffs, the rising costs of sports, and the price for each attempted spin of the Disney flywheel.
gavin newsom
Eriq Gardner • March 25, 2025
Trump Defamation Theories & Newsom’s Weak Case
California’s governor is fighting to highlight the president’s legal inanities with a ridiculous Fox lawsuit of his own. Meanwhile, the lawyer battling Melania offers a bold legal theory: If the president can’t be held liable for what he says in office, he shouldn’t be able to sue anyone else.


Greta Gerwig
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
Why Netflix Caved for Greta Gerwig’s ‘Narnia’
Securing a wide release and 45-day window for 'The Magician's Nephew,' the 'Barbie' director broke the streamer's will on its previously nonnegotiable day-and-date strategy. So why now?
Mandalorian and Grogu movie
Scott Mendelson • March 25, 2025
Can ‘Grogu’ Rescue ‘Star Wars’ From Itself?
After years of creative chaos, executive indecision, and a streaming glut that cannibalized the franchise’s theatrical appeal, Lucasfilm is returning to theaters with something very different. Will ‘Grogu’ be a ‘Solo’-sized disaster? Or has Disney just lowered the bar for success?
Nia Long
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
‘Michael’ Star’s Pay Dispute & Who Will Direct Part Two?
News and notes on the chatter that ‘Michael’ producer Graham King is stepping in to direct the sequel, and Nia Long’s quiet fight with Lionsgate over her compensation for the movie.


Spider-Man: Brand New Day
Matthew Belloni • March 25, 2025
Hollywood’s Report Card, According to High School Kids, Pt. 3
My annual sit-down with a candid group of teen moviegoers, who share their brutally unfiltered thoughts on the stars and stories that do (and don’t) get them into theaters—from ‘Spider-Man’ (“always gonna hit”) to Spielberg (“He’s no Nolan”) to Sydney Sweeney (“like… no”).


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover