TIMELINE-A history of Warner Bros - from old Hollywood to streaming era
Netflix, Inc. NFLX | 98.66 | +3.25% |
Comcast Corporation Class A CMCSA | 27.93 | -0.43% |
Paramount Skydance Corporation Class B PSKY | 9.52 | +2.92% |
Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc. Series A WBD | 27.32 | -0.62% |
Oracle Corporation ORCL | 146.38 | +0.79% |
Changes dateline, updates with latest information
Feb 24 (Reuters) - Warner Bros Discovery WBD.O is considering a sweetened bid from Paramount Skydance PSKY.O, it said on Tuesday, without disclosing the value of the deal as the CBS owner looks to outbid Netflix in a heated Hollywood takeover battle.
The latest offer followed a week of talks between Warner Bros and Paramount to address concerns that prompted the HBO parent to reject previous Paramount bids in favor of Netflix's NFLX.O $27.75 per share, or $82.7 billion, deal for its studio and streaming assets.
Here is a timeline from the founding of Time Inc and Warner Bros to the company's latest breakup and potential sale.
Date |
Event |
1923 |
Warner Bros was founded by brothers Harry, Albert, Sam and Jack Warner as a film studio in Hollywood. It revolutionized cinema with the introduction of synchronized sound in films. |
1969 |
Kinney National Company, a conglomerate that later transitioned into media, buys Warner Bros-Seven Arts and later spins off its non-media businesses. |
1972 |
HBO is founded by Charles Dolan with backing from Time. It was the first U.S. subscription-based cable network, offering uncut, commercial-free movies and live sports, pioneering premium cable television. |
1990 |
Time Inc merges with Warner Communications in a $14 billion deal, hailed as a "marriage of content and distribution", creating Time Warner, then the largest media company in the world. |
1996 |
Time Warner merges with Turner Broadcasting, gaining Cartoon Network, CNN, TNT and a vast film library of classic films. |
2000 |
Time Warner merges with AOL, forming AOL Time Warner, the largest merger in history at the time, aiming to marry traditional and digital media. |
2002 |
AOL Time Warner merger begins to unravel as AOL's value collapses with the launch of an SEC investigation, prompted by allegations of accounting irregularities and inflated revenue reports at AOL. |
2003 |
CEO Steve Case resigns from AOL Time Warner. |
2004 |
Time Warner sells Warner Music to a private equity group led by Edgar Bronfman Jr. for $2.6 billion. |
2009 |
Time Warner fully spins off Time Warner Cable, which had already been partially separated in 2007, ending its role in cable distribution. |
2009 |
Time Warner spins off AOL. |
2013 |
Time Warner spins off Time, its magazine division, which includes Time, People, Fortune and Sports Illustrated, marking its formal exit from publishing. |
2016 |
AT&T announces acquisition of Time Warner for $85 billion. |
2018 |
AT&T completes its acquisition of Time Warner after regulator approval, renaming it WarnerMedia. |
2021 |
AT&T announces it will spin off WarnerMedia and merge it with Discovery Inc to create a new standalone media company. |
2022 |
WarnerMedia and Discovery complete their merger in a $43 billion deal. |
June 9, 2025 |
Warner Bros Discovery announces it will separate into two companies — one focusing on streaming and studios businesses, while the second will house its cable TV assets. |
October 21, 2025 |
Warner Bros Discovery's board rejects a Paramount Skydance offer of nearly $60 billion, or $24 per share, a source familiar with the matter exclusively tells Reuters. The company says it is weighing a potential sale amid interest from several suitors. |
November 18, 2025 |
Warner Bros Discovery's board wants Paramount Skydance to sweeten its bid to $30 per share, valuing the company at $74.34 billion, Axios reports. |
November 21, 2025 |
Warner Bros Discovery receives preliminary buyout bids from Paramount Skydance, Comcast and Netflix — who were asked to improve their offers. |
December 1, 2025 |
Warner Bros Discovery receives a second round of bids, including a mostly cash offer from Netflix. |
December 4, 2025 |
Paramount Skydance accuses Warner Bros Discovery of running an unfair sale process that favors Netflix over other bidders, CNBC reports, citing a letter sent by the newly merged media company. |
December 5, 2025 |
Netflix is in exclusive talks to buy Warner Bros Discovery's film and television studios along with its streaming assets after offering $28 per share, a source says. |
December 5, 2025 |
Netflix agrees to buy Warner Bros Discovery's film and TV studios and streaming division for $72 billion, or $27.75 per share. |
December 9, 2025 |
Paramount Skydance makes a hostile bid for Warner Bros Discovery in a deal valued at $108.4 billion or $30 per share. |
December 17, 2025 |
Warner Bros Discovery's board rejects Paramount Skydance's hostile $108.4 billion bid, saying it failed to provide adequate financing assurances. |
December 23, 2025 |
Paramount Skydance amends its offer to buy Warner Bros Discovery to include a $40.4 billion personal guarantee from Larry Ellison. |
January 7, 2026 |
Warner Bros Discovery rejects Paramount Skydance's amended hostile bid despite Larry Ellison's guarantee. |
January 12, 2026 |
Paramount Skydance files lawsuit to force Warner Bros Discovery to disclose details of its deal with Netflix and plans to nominate directors to Warner Bros Discovery's board. |
January 20, 2026 |
Netflix amends its bid to an all‑cash offer for Warner Bros Discovery's studio and streaming units and secures unanimous approval from the Warner Bros board without increasing the $82.7 billion purchase price. |
January 22, 2026 |
Paramount Skydance extends its hostile tender offer for Warner Bros Discovery to February 20, seeking more time to win investors. |
February 3, 2026 |
U.S. senators grill Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos at a hearing over how the company's acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery would affect competition in the entertainment industry. |
February 5, 2026 |
U.S. President Donald Trump says he will stay out of the bidding war for Warner Bros Discovery, a reversal from his comments late last year. |
February 10, 2026 |
Paramount Skydance revises its $30-per-share all-cash offer for Warner Bros, adding a 25-cent-per-share fee for every quarter the transaction does not close beyond December 31, 2026. Paramount also says it will fund the $2.8 billion termination fee Warner Bros owes Netflix if the deal falls through. |
February 17, 2026 |
Warner Bros rejects Paramount's revised bid and gives the Hollywood Studio seven days to see if it can come up with a better deal to buy the owner of HBO Max and the "Harry Potter" franchise. |
February 24, 2026 |
Warner Bros Discovery says it is considering a sweetened bid from Paramount Skydance without disclosing the value of the deal. |
