The US Department of Justice has approved the $111bn merger of Warner Bros and Paramount, a consolidation that will reshape the global entertainment landscape. The decision, announced late on Friday, removes the last major regulatory hurdle for the deal, which was first proposed six months ago.
The merger creates a media conglomerate with combined revenues of over $90bn, controlling a film and television catalogue that includes franchises such as Harry Potter, DC Comics, Star Trek, and Mission: Impossible. The new entity will also own streaming services HBO Max and Paramount+, as well as major cable channels including CNN, MTV, and Nickelodeon.
Whitehall and UK studio executives are bracing for the implications. British production hubs, particularly in London and Hertfordshire, have long benefited from Warner Bros and Paramount’s independent investments. The merger is expected to lead to a rationalisation of studio space and production budgets, with industry sources warning of potential job losses and a shift toward centralised decision-making in Los Angeles.
“This is a seismic moment for the creative industries,” said a senior executive at a UK production company who spoke on condition of anonymity. “The combined company will have enormous bargaining power over talent, distributors, and governments. For the UK, it means competing against a single, dominant player rather than two distinct ones.”
The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority had indicated it would not block the deal, citing the global nature of the market. However, the government is expected to seek legally binding commitments to protect British production and jobs. A spokesperson for the Department for Culture, Media and Sport said, “We are monitoring the situation closely and will engage with the new company to ensure the UK remains a world leader in film and television production.”
The approval followed an extensive review by the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division, which concluded that the merger would not substantially lessen competition in the US market. The decision marks a significant departure from the Biden administration’s aggressive antitrust stance, particularly in media where previous mergers like AT&T and Time Warner faced prolonged legal challenges.
Analysts have pointed to the rise of streaming services from tech giants such as Netflix, Amazon, and Apple as a key factor. “The media landscape has been transformed by digital disruption,” said Robert McFarlane, a media analyst at the London School of Economics. “Regulators have recognised that traditional definitions of market share no longer apply. The real competition is for global subscribers, and Warner-Paramount will be a formidable player, but not a monopoly.”
The combined company is expected to be headquartered in New York, with major operational divisions in Los Angeles. It will be led by David Zaslav, current CEO of Warner Bros Discovery, who will take the helm of the merged entity. In a joint statement, the companies said the merger would unlock “significant operational efficiencies” and enable “greater investment in content and technological innovation.”
For the UK, the deal comes at a delicate time. The country has become a magnet for Hollywood production, with tax incentives and world-class studio facilities attracting major projects. In 2024, Warner Bros opened its largest UK studio at Leavesden, while Paramount expanded its presence at Pinewood Studios. The merger raises questions about future investment levels and the fate of existing commitments.
Union leaders have already expressed concern. “This merger is a threat to the livelihoods of thousands of British workers,” said Sarah Jones, general secretary of the broadcasting and entertainment union Bectu. “We will be pressing for concrete guarantees that production stays here and that fair working conditions are upheld.”
The deal is expected to close within 60 days, subject to approval from European and Asian regulators, which is deemed likely given the US green light. For the UK, the immediate task is ensuring that the arrival of a transatlantic media giant strengthens rather than undermines a sector that contributes more than £80bn to the economy annually.








