Writers Guild sues to block Paramount-Warner Bros deal

July 15, 2026 13:58 | News

The Writers Guild of America is suing to block Paramount’s $US110 billion ($A157 billion) acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery, saying ‌the deal will jeopardise writers’ livelihoods and threaten the health of US entertainment.

The case is another blow to Paramount’s bid to become a ‌bigger rival to Netflix and Disney, a day after California and 11 other states sued to block the deal. Paramount, which argued the combination would increase opportunities for writers,must now deal with a double dose of legal work.

The Writers Guild said in its lawsuit filed in San Francisco federal court that the deal would reduce the number of buyers in Hollywood for films and TV shows, harming its members.

Warner Bros approve Paramount merger
Paramount is on track to become a ‌bigger rival to Netflix and Disney. (EPA PHOTO)

“With ‌fewer competitors, the ‌merged Paramount-Warner Bros entity ⁠would have both the incentive and the ability to lower costs by suppressing writers’ wages ​and reducing output. Writers will be paid less and have fewer employment opportunities,” the WGA complaint on Tuesday said.

The union, made up of the Writers Guild of America West and Writers Guild of America East, has 18,000 members across the entertainment industry.

Paramount responded that it had “deep respect for the WGA and its members” and that its plans would increase work for writers who have suffered as Hollywood cut back on production ⁠of TV shows and movies.

“A combined Paramount-WBD will have the scale and ‌resources to reverse the ​current trends in our industry and expand opportunities for writers, not shrink them,” a Paramount spokesperson said.

That would lead to “more development ​slates, more series and ‌film greenlights, and our continued strong commitment to working with the guild’s writers across our brands.”

Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison has ​promised to release 30 movies per year and to keep them in exclusively for theatres for 45 days.

The Writers Guild said that by combining two of five major Hollywood studios, the merger would unlawfully concentrate demand for writers of top-grossing films ​and ​episodic television series, and decrease the bargaining power of ​writers who enter exclusive deals with studios.

Paramount has released classic films ‌such as Titanic, The Godfather and Top Gun.

Warner Bros is the studio behind the Harry Potter franchise, the Batman films and Goodfellas.

The Writers Guild pointed to a case brought by the US Department of Justice that successfully blocked Penguin Random House’s bid to buy rival Simon & Schuster, on grounds that it would hinder competition in the market for top-selling books and lower advances paid to authors.

That case hinged on the argument ​that the combined company would control close to half the market for publishing, an effective monopsony that would leave hundreds of ​individual authors with fewer options and less ⁠leverage.

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