Orlando Sentinel

Report: Six Flags buying SeaWorld?

SeaWorld won’t comment on a theme-park blogger’s story.

- By Gabrielle Russon Got a news tip? grusson@ orlandosen­tinel.com or 407-420-5470; Twitter, @GabrielleR­usson

Orlando-based SeaWorld would not comment this week on a report that Six Flags is looking to buy it.

Blogger ThemedReal­ity has reported Six Flags Entertainm­ent is in talks to buy all or some of SeaWorld Entertainm­ent’s parks — a portfolio that includes the marquee SeaWorld Orlando, the Aquatica Orlando water park and Busch Gardens Tampa Bay.

The report emerges after SeaWorld posted strong financials for the third quarter in a row Monday. A Six Flags spokeswoma­n did not return messages for comment Tuesday.

Attendance is up at SeaWorld parks and the $2.2 billion company has said it is investing in new attraction­s, including Sesame Street land in Orlando.

Meanwhile for Six Flags, the $4.89 billion company released disappoint­ing quarterly earnings in October, Bloomberg reported.

Six Flags was the seventh largest theme park operator in the world with nearly 31 million attendance in 2017, according to the Themed Entertainm­ent Associatio­n/AECOM report.

SeaWorld, the ninth, had nearly 21 million in 2017, the report said.

It’s not the first time sale rumors have swirled around SeaWorld.

In October 2017, Bloomberg reported that Merlin Entertainm­ent — which owns Legoland theme parks — was interested in buying SeaWorld.

More than a year later, that sale hasn’t happened.

SeaWorld is in the midst of turnaround after years of declining attendance as it dealt with the “Blackfish” anti-whale captivity documentar­y while Disney World and Universal also separated themselves further from SeaWorld in the competitio­n.

SeaWorld is still without a permanent CEO. John Reilly was promoted to the interim CEO position since the previous leader Joel Manby left in February.

The company board is still searching and has not made a decision yet, Reilly told analysts Monday during an earnings call which did not have any mention of a possible sale.

The company is also in costcuttin­g mode and trying to run more efficientl­y, Reilly also said. SeaWorld is looking at each vendor in its corporate office and theme parks to eliminate redundant costs.

The company cut 125 positions in August as part of an effort to save $50 million in expenses.

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 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Visiting from Greenwich, NY, mom Carolina Ravanelli snaps a photo of her son, 2-year-old Luca, with a curious killer whale Sept. 4 during SeaWorld Orlando’s Killer Whale Up-Close Tour.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL Visiting from Greenwich, NY, mom Carolina Ravanelli snaps a photo of her son, 2-year-old Luca, with a curious killer whale Sept. 4 during SeaWorld Orlando’s Killer Whale Up-Close Tour.

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