• 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
Dry Powder
William D. Cohan William D. Cohan
Welcome to Dry Powder. I’m Bill Cohan, here in the Northeast, where it seems to have rained every 20 minutes since April, and where Dry Powder’s prevailing person of interest, David Zaslav, remains a source of constant fascination. You have to admit it: Zaz has a way with debt. He gave birth to Warner Bros. Discovery on $55 billion of it, anointing himself a media macher in the process, and has been surprisingly adept at paying it down. Now, as he spins off his declining cable assets, he’s making a highly unusual tender offer, and using debt as a cudgel of sorts, coercing his bondholders to buy it back, or get stuck holding the bag. As I note below, if he can pull it off—and he seems to be pulling it off—it’s a maneuver we may see again and again. Meanwhile, amid warfare in the Middle East and that Liberation Day pause ending, Trump signaled some positive news for Dry Powder’s other favorite protagonist, Shari Redstone. “Ellison’s great,” Trump told reporters this afternoon. “He’ll do a great job with it.” Presumably, the president was referring to David Ellison, who has been trying to get his hands on Redstone’s Paramount for the better part of a year, with a final deal extension looming. Have the Trump-Redstone mediation talks advanced? Is the F.C.C. ready to give the merger a greenlight? As the president said regarding our potential bombing of Iran nuclear sites, “nobody knows what I am going to do.” 📝 P.S.: We’re always kicking the tires around here to figure out how to optimize your Puck experience. If you have a couple minutes, here’s a brief survey for our readers. Okay, let’s get started…
  • A billion-dollar Bitcoin buy: Microstrategy, Michael Saylor’s publicly traded Bitcoin repository that occasionally moonlights as an enterprise software company, continues its phenomenal ride in the stock market. (Saylor has now shortened the name of the company, Sean Parker–style, to just Strategy.) On June 16, Strategy announced that it had bought another 10,100 Bitcoin for an aggregate purchase price of $1.051 billion—or around $104,080 per Bitcoin, slightly less than where they’re trading these days. As of June 15, Strategy owned 592,100 Bitcoin, for which the company had paid nearly $42 billion at an average purchase price of $70,666 per coin. The market value of Saylor’s stash is nearly $62 billion, giving Strategy a Bitcoin gain of $20 billion.The market value of Strategy is even higher: $103 billion, while the company’s enterprise value, including debt and preferred stock, is $115 billion. The stock price is up 23 percent this year, and 145 percent over the past 12 months, far outpacing the equity markets, and companies such as Tesla (up 71 percent), Meta (up 40 percent), and Apple (down 9 percent).Along with BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF fund, investing in Strategy is probably the easiest way to speculate on the price of Bitcoin these days. But I can’t help but wonder if Saylor himself is increasingly becoming the market for Bitcoin. After all, the currency supply is permanently capped at 21 million Bitcoin. So with a committed buyer like Saylor always in the market buying, buying, buying—that activity continues to drive up the price. Saylor, who I’m convinced is some sort of genius, doesn’t see it this way, of course. He continues to argue that Bitcoin, which didn’t exist prior to 2008, remains a bargain. He has predicted the price of a single Bitcoin will reach $13 million by 2045, giving the Bitcoin asset class a total value of $280 trillion—which, if that happened, would make it the most valuable commodity on Earth. A big if.
  • Trump phones it in: On Monday, the 10th anniversary of Trump’s fateful descent down the escalator, Eric Trump was everywhere in right-wing media pushing Trump Mobile—the new family business cum marketing ploy to get people to fork over $47.45 a month (get it? Trump is both the 47th and 45th president) for wireless phone services. Trump Mobile is what’s known in the industry as an M.V.N.O., or mobile virtual network operator—i.e., a cellular service provider that leases access to the network infrastructure of, say, AT&T or Verizon. Naturally, Trump Mobile will be more expensive on a monthly basis than other M.V.N.O.s, such as Mint Mobile ($30 a month) and Boost Mobile ($25 a month). The $499 phone itself, dubbed the T1, is gold-colored, and will purportedly begin shipping later this summer. It features the American flag and the slogan “Make America Great Again.” Eric implied on Monday that the T1 will be made in the United States, keeping with his father’s Made in America push. But there was a rather glaring caveat. “Eventually all the phones can be built in the United States of America,” he told Fox Business supplicant Maria Bartiromo (emphasis mine). In other words, the phones may not be made here anytime soon. The consensus seems to be that while the phones will eventually be assembled in Alabama, Florida, and California, many of the components, no surprise, will be manufactured overseas, mainly in China. But that wasn’t stopping Eric. “We have to bring manufacturing back here,” he continued. “And so our ethos is, Built for Americans, by Americans. Do it cheaper, do it better.”Eric also boasted that the Trump Mobile call center will be in St. Louis, not Bangladesh. “I think we’re going to shake up the space in a very big way,” he told Maria. He then fully descended into buzzword-laden gobbledygook. “Obviously, real estate has always been our bread and butter, but when you take the technology world between, the social platforms, you know, the actual hard devices, which is really what Trump Mobile is, you know, and then kind of the true retail banking, CeFi, DeFi in a world of cryptocurrency—which is no question where the world is going—I really believe we’re going to have one of the great, kind of, tech platforms as part of the Trump Organization of any company in the world, and I couldn't be more proud of Trump Mobile.” The apple really doesn’t fall far from the tree.
And now, more on our friend Zaz…
Debt Becomes Him

Debt Becomes Him

David Zaslav leveraged his way to media moguldom, then diligently paid down $21 billion of debt in three years, and is now making an unusual debt tender offer as part of the process of spinning out WBD’s linear TV assets. Is the offer really too good to refuse, or is it a coercive maneuver that leaves bondholders with little choice?
William D. Cohan William D. Cohan
These days, everyone and their dog seems to have an opinion on the soon-to-be-concluding Warner Bros. Discovery experiment. Should the deal have been consummated in the first place? Was its $55 billion in debt the original sin? Will the recently announced split get everyone to the promised land? In the meantime, however, there is some clarity on the initial phase of the separation plan—the highly unusual tender offer for a big chunk of the company’s still-outstanding $37 billion of debt: It’s proving to be an unqualified success. As of last Friday, WBD’s bondholders had pretty much agreed to tender their bonds back to the company for a variety of premia, depending on the bond. As part of the successful consent solicitation, they’ve also agreed to allow the company to be split in two, and both new entities to issue as much secured debt as they want. As Fraser Woodford, the WBD executive vice president who has managed the process for the company, told me, “We made an offer that we thought was fair, that we thought was appropriate—and I think, ultimately, bondholders agreed.” The preliminary results, as of June 13, bear that out. As you recall, Zaz & Co. arranged for a $17.5 billion bridge loan from JPMorgan Chase, some $14.6 billion of which is being used to buy back a meaningful portion of WBD’s outstanding debt—much of which is long-dated and low interest, since it was issued during the Fed’s 13-year period of quantitative easing. Now that the Fed has raised rates, much of that debt is trading at a discount. The idea behind the somewhat coercive tender offer is to allow WBD to capture that discount by offering bondholders a premium to where the debt is trading, but at a price often well below par, or 100 cents on the dollar. According to Woodford, WBD hopes to capture around $3.4 billion of the discount before it closes the tender offer toward the end of the quarter. That’s an impressive bit of corporate finance jujitsu. WBD sliced its offer into six pieces, grouping various maturities, coupons, and types of bonds together, and making above-market offers for them, some with consent fees, some without. Over the past week, Woodford has spoken to many of WBD’s bondholders, both on the phone and in two in-person meetings with groups of 30 bondholders at Barclays on Seventh Avenue. During those conversations, Woodford no doubt made clear what could happen if bondholders didn’t accept—a path that would probably be materially worse for both bondholders and the company. But so far, a majority of bondholders in each tranche—and in most cases, a substantial majority—voted to tender their bonds to the company, and to consent to the changes in the provisions governing the bonds. On the low end, 58 percent of the holders of a $225 million issue of senior notes, due 2042 with a 4.95 percent coupon, tendered. (There was no consent fee offered to this group.) On the high end, nearly 99 percent of the holders of a $7 billion issue of senior notes, due 2052 with a 5.14 percent coupon, tendered—and split more than $10 million of consent fees.

Coercion

WBD could have created a structure without seeking any consents, which would have left all the debt with the declining Global Networks company. Also, as part of the tender, WBD offered a junior secured position to holders of unsecured bonds. The company didn’t have to do that, either. WBD could have not made the tender offer at all, of course, and instead just gone into the market and bought the bonds back at prices below what it’s offering in the tender. At one point last week, the D.C. law firm Akin Gump tried to organize the bondholders in order to negotiate better terms with WBD, but the effort fizzled. One bondholder joked—or at least I think it was a joke—that the bond offers were “coercive” because they were “so fair” that he didn’t have any choice but to accept. “This was the best outcome for everyone,” Woodford told me. “We paid for certainty.” There are some other interesting wrinkles. After the tender offer closes, the outstanding debt that did not tender, or that was not bought in, will likely trade down. If that happens, since the bridge loan is for about $3 billion more than what WBD will likely end up putting toward the tender offer, it will be able to use that money to buy back more of its debt at an even deeper discount. Time will tell, but it’s another interesting coda to this first phase of the split. WBD will next refinance the JPMorgan Chase bridge loan with new debt. While it’s true that the new debt will be issued at higher interest rates than the debt the company bought back, there will be less of it—probably around $30 billion, as opposed to $34 billion now. WBD also got approval from bondholders for an unusual “non-boycott” provision that prevents them from colluding to force the company to pay higher interest rates, or to secure better terms when it refinances the bridge loan. That won’t happen now, if it could ever have happened. (How do bond investors around the globe band together sufficiently to force an issuer to pay up?) When all is said and done—after the fees are paid to the investment bankers and the lawyers—I assume the tender offer will result in a cleaner balance sheet for WBD, and an income statement with less interest expense. WBD’s equity investors seemed to agree, with the stock up around 6 percent so far this week.

Carrots and Sticks

Still to be determined, of course, is how much of the $30 billion of remaining debt post-tender will be apportioned to each of the split companies, Global Networks and Streaming & Studios. As I’ve reported, I suspect that the bulk—around $25 billion—will stay with Global Networks, which is expected to have around $6 billion of adjusted EBITDA in 2026, more than enough to service that level of debt. The remaining debt will go with S&S, which the company projects will have around $3 billion to $4 billion of adjusted EBITDA in the coming years. WBD C.F.O. Gunnar Wiedenfels, who is slated to become the C.E.O. of Global Networks, has pretty much confirmed that allocation, without getting into specifics. “It’s too early to talk about a target capital structure,” Gunnar said last week on a conference call with Wall Street analysts, adding that “it’s safe to assume that the majority of the debt is going to live with Global Networks, and a smaller portion—but a not-insignificant portion—on Streaming & Studios.” This lack of clarity has left some analysts peeved. “We view this statement as both ridiculous and extremely problematic,” analysts at CreditSights wrote in a June 9 research report. “Without this information, it is impossible to accurately assess the credit profile, and by extension appropriate trading level, for WBD’s bonds.” I chatted recently with Joshua Kramer, a special situations analyst at CreditSights and one of the authors of two reports about WBD’s tender offer. He essentially told me that WBD made its bondholders an offer they couldn’t refuse. “This was an exit, consent, discount-capture, covenant-stripping deal, which we see in the distressed universe,” he said. “But done to an investment-grade company—that is not the way things normally work. There’s nothing that stops any company in the world from going out and doing a deal like this, except for—and I know you worked in the industry—the short memory of the debt market.” Joshua wasn’t sure who conceptualized the tender offer, whether it was someone at WBD, or someone at JPMorgan Chase or Evercore, its two financial advisors on the split. “But it’s a great structural win,” he said. He agreed that the WBD tender offer was “coercive” and added, “It’s the difference between a carrot-only exchange offer, and a carrot-and-a-stick exchange offer. To show up with this kind of stick in an investment-grade, crossover-type company is new.” Unwittingly or not, WBD may have created a whole new strategy for using a tender offer to capture the trading discount in bonds on the BBB cliff.

Zaz’s New Deal

Finally, we’ve also gotten some clarity on the new contracts for Zaz and Gunnar, who will become sister C.E.O.s. For Zaz, the WBD board had to decide whether to factor in the recent nonbinding shareholder vote in which a majority voted against his $52 million 2024 pay package, presumably out of pique over the 60 percent decline in the WBD stock since it was first listed in April 2022. I don’t think most people have taken the time to study Zaz’s compensation package, which has been heavily weighted toward paying down debt and increasing the stock price. His annual cash compensation of $3 million is obviously well below the $52 million headline number that gets all the attention. His new deal is also heavily weighted toward getting the stock price moving, as it should be. Zaz’s employment with S&S now runs to December 2030, according to a Monday filing with the S.E.C., with his annual cash compensation remaining at $3 million. However, his annual cash bonus target has been reduced from $22 million to $6 million, but could be as much as $12 million, depending on the company’s performance. The new contract reduces his annual equity incentive from $23.5 million to $15.5 million in the first year after the S&S spin, and then to $7.5 million in future years. If he remains at the company for five years, he’ll also receive stock options for some 24 million WBD shares, with a strike price of $10.16, which obviously could be quite valuable if the stock appreciates post-spin. (The option grant is already in the money, with the WBD stock trading at around $10.40, even if it can’t yet be exercised.) Zaz’s new contract also includes a monthly car allowance of $1,400, and “personal” use of the corporate jet for up to 125 hours a year, to be paid for by S&S. (“Personal” use being, for instance, Zaz’s wife joining him on business trips.) As for Gunnar, his new contract runs until December 2031 (but only if and when he becomes C.E.O. of Global Networks) and will pay him $2.5 million in cash annually, with a maximum annual cash bonus of $17.5 million. He’ll be eligible for another $16 million in annual stock grants, which will vest over time, and conditionally, plus a one-time $15 million equity award post-close. Now that the debt deal is pretty much wrapped up, and both Zaz and Gunnar have cut their new contracts, all that’s left to contemplate is whether the stock of these two companies will finally levitate, and whether Wall Street’s M&A bankers will be able to cook up some deals for each of Zaz’s S&S and Gunnar’s Global Networks. It’s the gift that keeps on giving.
Impolitic with John Heilemann
Join Puck’s chief political columnist, John Heilemann, as he roams the corridors of power and influence in America on this twice-weekly interview show, taking you beyond the headlines with the people who shape our culture: icons and up-and-comers, incumbents and insurgents, moguls and machers in the overlapping worlds of politics, entertainment, tech, business, sports, media, and beyond. The conversations are rich and revealing, unrehearsed and unexpected… and reliably impolitic. A Puck-Audacy joint, new episodes drop every Wednesday and Friday.
The Best & The Brightest
Puck’s daily political newsletter from Washington on what’s really happening in this town, from the White House to the Pentagon to Capitol Hill, K Street, and the campaign trail.
Stories
A.I. on Trial

A.I. on Trial

ERIQ GARDNER
Art Basel Deal Flow

Art Basel Deal Flow

MARION MANEKER
Homeland Insecurities

Homeland Insecurities

JOHN HEILEMANN
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 Wall Street

Lesley Stahl
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Lesley’s Choice
In a candid chat, the longtime 60 Minutes star correspondent explained her fraught decision to stay on after perhaps the most bizarre week in the show’s history. “It’s just been obviously the hardest chapter of my career,” she said. “This was by far the worst experience I’ve been involved in, or even witnessed.”
Jeff Immelt
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
The Emancipation of Jeff Immelt
The disgraced-ish former GE executive has been on a journey of personal discovery to reinvent his legacy and perhaps make amends—even when the facts don’t fit his new narrative. But not everyone who worked with him is ready to forgive or forget.
Howard Marks
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
The A.I. Bubble Truthers Cry Wolf
As several of the leading A.I. companies prepare to go public and see their valuations soar above the $1 trillion mark, a number of Wall Street contrarians are trying to remind everyone that we’ve seen this movie before.


Larry Ellison, David Ellison
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Inside ParaBros’ $49B Debt Blockbuster
The $111 billion Paramount Skydance–Warner Bros. merger deal is cruising toward the finish line, and it looks like nothing will stop it. Even if the California A.G. is trying.
Scott Goodwin
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Goodwin Hunting
Long before Wall Street rushed for the exits, Diameter Capital co-founder Scott Goodwin warned that A.I. would “ruthlessly eliminate” software companies. Now, amid a market correction, he’s buying the panic.
Marc Busain
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Spilling the Tea
Once a predictable cashflow business, Lipton has become a test case for how private equity leverage is holding up these days amid a less forgiving economic environment. The company’s new management team is confident they can turn things around.


Paul Atkins
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
All the Light We Cannot S.E.C.
Trump’s S.E.C. is pushing to eradicate Wall Street’s quarterly reporting requirement—an idiotic proposal that his administration believes will “make I.P.O.s great again.” Let’s count all the ways this could backfire…


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 Wall Street

Elon Musk
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Is Elon Already a Trillionaire?
If the inevitable and possibly imminent SpaceX I.P.O. debuts anywhere near its rumored valuation, investors will effectively ratify Musk as a sovereign financial ecosystem unto himself.
Wes Edens
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
East of Edens
Wes Edens, the billionaire entrepreneur and NBA owner, is attempting to restructure New Fortress Energy in London, where the courts are much friendlier to equity holders—the hot new trend for American companies, and a potential win for Edens, who is otherwise having a pretty bad week.
Ryan Cohen
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
GameStop of Thrones
Meme stock king Ryan Cohen is the laughingstock of Wall Street after launching an absurd bid to buy eBay for $56 billion—largely with cash and equity that GameStop doesn’t have. The market isn’t taking the proposal seriously, but the math itself is actually pretty interesting…


Sam Bankman Fried
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
S.B.F. Is Out of Options
This week, a thoroughly annoyed Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected, with prejudice, Sam Bankman-Fried’s long-shot bid for a new trial. That leaves his fate in the hands of the Second Circuit—which will almost certainly rule against him—or worse… in the hands of Donald Trump.
Orlando Bravo
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Heavy Medallia
The highly levered software company is becoming a morality tale for this inflection point in the private-credit journey. How will Thoma Bravo, Blackstone, Apollo, KKR, and Antares Capital interpret this moment?
Sam Bankman-Fried
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
S.B.F. Alternate Histories & Ellison “Ticking Fee” Fears
Even as he withdrew his latest plea, Sam Bankman-Fried has been pushing another argument in the court of public opinion: that if FTX hadn’t been forced into bankruptcy, his biggest investments would be worth some $114 billion by now. Plus, notes on Zaslav’s golden parachute—and how a state antitrust intervention could sweeten the deal.


Brightline Train
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
The Great Train Bankruptcy
A rare, privately owned U.S. rail line between Miami and Orlando is proving popular with riders, but a $6 billion debt pile is pushing Brightline and its hedge fund owners toward a likely restructuring reckoning.
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 Wall Street

Jamie Dimon
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
The Wall Street Iran Bounce
The economy is slowing and the Middle East is on fire, but the Big Five banks are printing record profits and stock markets keep hitting new highs. Is this the last song before the music stops, or were the bears wrong all along?
Bill Ackman
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Ackman Family Values
Amid his double-I.P.O. roadshow and latest attempt to buy Universal Music Group, Bill Ackman has gone public with a bizarre personal drama at Table, his family office—with the lofty goal of teaching other billionaires that it’s better to fight their legal battles on X than settle in the shadows.
Leon Black
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Leon Black From the Ashes, Part III
The erstwhile Apollo executive has more to say about his entanglements with Epstein, Ron Wyden, and his latest foe, The New York Times.


David Ellison
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
The Curious Case of Warner’s Eleventh-Hour Bidder
Just as Paramount was finalizing its offer to steal WBD from Netflix, a mysterious Singaporean company suddenly offered to top both bids with $32.50 per share. Was the whole thing a fraud?
Donald Trump
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
Wall Street’s Iran “Bear Trap”
Markets are pricing in a wide range of Iran war scenarios, from a quick bounceback to a prolonged global recession. Even professional contrarians warn that investors may be sucked into a bear trap if Trump abruptly changes course. But as the Mooch observes, hubris is one hell of a drug.
Sam Bankman-Fried
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
The Walls Are Closing in on Sam Bankman-Fried
The FTX founder’s appeals for a new trial have fallen on deaf ears, and his mother’s intervention appears to have backfired. Now, with the Justice Department going nuclear and Republicans lining up to ensure Trump doesn’t issue a pardon, S.B.F. may be running out of chances to escape his fate.


Marc Rowan
William D. Cohan • June 19, 2025
What Happens if a $40 Trillion Bubble Bursts?
There’s been a simmering anxiety since the fall that trouble is brewing in the private-credit market, and high-profile redemption requests have only added to the panic. There may be cockroaches in the system, but Wall Street superstars Marc Rowan and Jon Gray insist it’s all just a bunch of bad actors on the periphery.


  • 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