Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery hopes to reach NBA deal

Firm is trying to retain rights to air games on TNT, other channels.

- By Stephen Battaglio

The shot clock is ticking down on Warner Bros. Discovery in its effort to land a new media rights deal for the NBA.

Warner Bros. Discovery Chief Executive David Zaslav said Thursday the company continues negotiatin­g with the league to retain its package of NBA contests, a marquee attraction for its TNT cable channel, but offered no clue on where the discussion­s would end up.

“We’re hopeful that we’ll be able to reach an agreement that makes sense for both sides,” Zaslav told Wall Street analysts on the company’s first-quarter earnings call. “We have had a lot of time to prepare for this negotiatio­n and we have strategies in place for various potential outcomes.”

Zaslav added that the company has the rights to match offers from other companies. But the executive took no questions about what could be a gamechangi­ng deal.

Comcast reportedly has a $2.5-billion offer in with the NBA for a package of games to air on its Peacock streaming service and its broadcast network NBC. Amazon’s Prime Video is said to have a deal for exclusive NBA games as well, adding to the streaming service’s growing portfolio of sports properties.

With Disney’s package for ESPN and ABC expected to remain in place, the focus has been on whether anything will be left on the table for Warner Bros. Discovery. There has been speculatio­n that the company could end up with fewer games under a new arrangemen­t that takes effect after the 2024-25 season.

Losing the package would bring long-term ramificati­ons for Warner Bros. Discovery’s carriage arrangemen­ts with cable and satellite operators, who pay fees to carry its channels. The company would have to negotiate its next round of deals for TNT and other channels without offering the NBA, at a time when such talks are increasing­ly contentiou­s.

Despite strong continued growth for its direct-toconsumer streaming business, the first-quarter earnings picture for Warner Bros. Discovery was mixed. The company missed Wall Street’s expectatio­ns on revenue, which declined yearto-year by 7% to $9.96 billion. Analysts expected $10.2 billion.

The company posted a net loss of 40 cents a share, compared with 24 cents a year ago.

The direct-to-consumer business added 2 million subscriber­s in the third quarter. Streaming ad revenue grew 70%.

Sales for its linear TV networks, which include TNT, CNN and Discovery, fell 8% to $5.13 billion. Soft demand for TV commercial­s pushed ad revenue down by 11%.

The company’s studio division saw a 13% year-to-year drop in revenue to $2.82 billion. Zaslav cited the delay in the movie pipeline because of last year’s work stoppages by writers and actors. The unit was also hurt by the poor box office performanc­e of “Suicide Squad.”

Zaslav said the company is dedicated to improving the studio’s performanc­e by taking advantage of its existing film franchises such as “Harry Potter.” He said the studio has begun script developmen­t on a new “Lord of the Rings” film, produced by Peter Jackson.

Warner Bros. Discovery announced Wednesday that it will offer consumers its Max streaming service in a bundle with Disney’s Hulu and Disney+.

 ?? Nathaniel S. Butler NBAE via Getty Images ?? LAKERS STAR LeBron James drives to the basket in February’s NBA All-Star Game on TNT.
Nathaniel S. Butler NBAE via Getty Images LAKERS STAR LeBron James drives to the basket in February’s NBA All-Star Game on TNT.

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