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Skydance boss David Ellison reveals leadership team ahead of Parmount merger

Skydance boss David Ellison reveals leadership team ahead of Parmount merger

New York Post12 hours ago
Skydance Media on Monday rolled out the new executive leadership team ahead of this week's long-stalled $8 billion merger with Paramount Global.
Skydance CEO David Ellison, the son of billionaire Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, will assume the helm of the new publicly traded company, to be called Paramount Skydance Corp., when it debuts Thursday.
The media giant — whose properties include CBS, MTV, the Paramount Pictures studio and the Paramount+ streaming service — will be structured into three primary business segments: Studios; Direct to-Consumer, and TV Media, the tech scion said.
4 Skydance CEO David Ellison has named is executive leadership team post merger.
Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Jeff Shell, the former CEO of NBCUinversal who was ousted by parent company Comcast in 2023 over allegations of inappropriate conduct with a CNBC reporter, will serve as president.
Shell had moved on to become sports and media chairman at RedBird Capital Partners, one of the major investors in the deal that bought out media heiress Shari Redstone's controlling stake in Paramount.
Current Paramount co-CEO George Cheeks — who was instrumental in settling Paramount's lawsuit with President Trump over the controversal '60 Minutes' edit of its Kamala Harris — will remain at the new company as the chair of the TV Media division.
Cindy Holland, a former Netflix exec who has been serving as a senior advisor to Ellison since October, will oversee the direct-to-consumer division, which includes Paramount+ and Pluto TV.
RedBird's Andy Gordon, a veteran of Goldman Sachs, will serve as chief operating officer, while Paramount's Andrew Warren will continue as interim chief financial officer.
Skydance chief creative officer Dana Goldberg and former Sony Motion Picture Group president Josh Greenstein will grab the reins as co-chairs of Paramount Pictures. Goldberg will also serve as chair of Paramount Television, while Greenstein will serve as vice chair of platforms.
4 Paramount co-CEO George Cheeks will remain at the company in the role of chair of the TV Media division.
Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Additionally, Skydance's general counsel Stephanie Kyoko McKinnon will join as Paramount's general counsel and acting chief legal officer, while Amazon Global Media and Entertainment's Jim Sterner will serve as chief people officer and Melissa Zukerman will serve as chief communications officer.
'I'm thrilled to introduce our new executive leadership team — backed by deep industry experience, proven track records, and a shared commitment to excellence, this world-class team is uniquely equipped to rise to the occasion and deliver on our bold vision for a new Paramount,' Ellison said in a statement.
4 Former NBCUniversal boss Jeff Shell will become Ellison's number two, helming the merged company as president.
REUTERS
'Each member was chosen to align with our goals and with the intention to drive transformation. Together, we will foster an environment where creative and technical talent collaborate seamlessly, marrying leading technologies with powerful storytelling and artistic vision to unlock Paramount's full potential and help shape the future of our industry.'
Under the two-step merger, Skydance will acquire Redstone's holding company National Amusements before merging with the independent Hollywood studio behind the recent hits 'Top Gun: Maverick' and 'Mission:Impossible — The Final Reckoning.'
4 Shari Redstone will walk away from the deal with $2.4 billion, as well as a $180 million severance, among other things.
Getty Images for Paramount+
The new deal provides $2.4 billion for Redstone, $4.5 billion to non-NAI Paramount shareholders and an additional $1.5 billion in new capital to help pay down debt and recapitalize the company's balance sheet, the company said.
Redstone, who will receive $180 million in severance and other benefits on top of her stock, will exit the board of directors once the deal is completed.
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‘Naked Gun' director Akiva Schaffer ‘threatened to quit' to save this ‘polarizing' scene
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‘Naked Gun' director Akiva Schaffer ‘threatened to quit' to save this ‘polarizing' scene

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Paramount Theatre cancels its Bold subscription series due to Aurora funding cut
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Paramount Theatre cancels its Bold subscription series due to Aurora funding cut

In an uncharacteristic retrenchment, the growth-oriented Paramount Theatre in Aurora has canceled one of its two theater subscription series for 2026, its board of directors announced on social media late Monday, citing an anticipated large reduction in city funding. The cancellation means that the previously announced Chicago-area premiere of 'Covenant' by York Walker, which was to be directed by Malkia Stampley, and a new staging of the cult musical 'Ride the Cyclone,' not seen here since its world premiere in 2015, are now off. The theater said it would refund the money of those who bought tickets for the stagings at the city's Copley Theatre. The current production of 'True West' by Paramount in the Copley, recently reviewed in the Tribune, will be allowed to complete its run at the end of the month. Aurora has seen political change in recent weeks. Former mayor Richard Irvin, who had staked much of the city's future on downtown Aurora becoming a long-term hub for arts and entertainment, was defeated by John Laesch, who is now in office and has said Aurora now faces a gap between revenue and expenses. As the Tribune has reported, Laesch already has canceled plans for the proposed construction of new 4,000-seat music venue to be known as the City of Lights Center, and has said at a public meeting both that the city faced a 'significant hole' between revenue and expenses and that the city's subsidy of the existing historic theater was 'too much.' The Aurora Civic Center Authority operates (and largely does business as) the Paramount Theatre and has an annual budget of about $31 million. The board of directors is appointed by the mayor. Its CEO Tim Rater said that he had anticipated a flat budget for the coming fiscal year but that the city now has signaled that it was going to significantly reduce the level of its annual support to the theater, which represents about 20% of the Paramount's budget. 'The city has indicated they have a shortfall in their budget and are not going to provide the full $7 million we were anticipating, so we have to look at various ways in which we can save money,' Rater said. 'We are sure we will not be the only community organization that will face these reductions.' Rater said the main subscription season of Broadway musicals at the theater, the Paramount's theater school and a sit-down production of 'Million Dollar Quartet' currently are unaffected.

'Libertarian' FCC Commissioner Was Believed to Be Uncomfortable with Paramount Deal: Exclusive
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'Libertarian' FCC Commissioner Was Believed to Be Uncomfortable with Paramount Deal: Exclusive

Nathan Simington By Josh Kosman Republican FCC Commissioner Nathan Simington was uncomfortable approving Skydance's controversial acquisition of CBS parent Paramount Global, and his resignation may have cleared the path for the merger, a DC FCC insider believed. The Federal Communications Commission on July 24 approved the Skydance-Paramount merger which is expected to get completed this week. Simington on June 6 resigned from the FCC just weeks before there was a vote on whether to approve the Ellison-controlled Skydance's $8 billion merger and the transfer of its 28 CBS-owned station broadcast licenses. Until last month Simington was a swing vote, though most were not aware of it. 'I think Simington was in a difficult position,' the source told CorpGov. 'He didn't care for the theatrics.' 'He was finding the whole thing awkward.' That included Trump's suit against Paramount that resulted in a $16 million settlement that was largely seen as necessary first before FCC approval. And the other concession Skydance made was to place a monitor at CBS to examine complaints of editorial bias for two years. The cancellation of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert was possibly another one, according to reports. Simington was frustrated with the FCC and its unusual handling of the Paramount merger and felt he was shut out of the process, a source who spoke recently with the former Republican Commissioner told CorpGov. 'He didn't like the way things were going.' Simington is 45 years old, his wife is a piano teacher, and the couple who have children also felt they could use the extra income he would get from working in the private sector, the source said Simington does not like conditions placed on mergers – perhaps including the cancellation of the Stephen Colbert show. After Simington resigned, the US Senate quickly approved Republican Olvia Trusty to replace him by a 53-to-45 margin. 'It is time for a change,' FCC Chair Brendan Carr said after the FCC voted two-to-one to approve the merger referring to the appointment of the CBS monitor. 'That is why I welcome Skydance's commitment to make significant changes at the once storied CBS broadcast network.' Simington does not like conditions put on mergers, the DC insider said. 'He is more libertarian than MAGA,' a former FCC commissioner said. So much so that Simington also doesn't like the FCC fining people. In fact, Simington in August 2024 voted against Carr saying it was unclear if the Commission could levy fines in a separate FCC case. One could argue that Paramount's $16 million payment to President Trump over the lightly edited Kamala Harris interview on 60 Minutes was if not a bribe, at least a fine. When the US Senate questioned Simington before confirming him as an FCC Commissioner on Nov. 10, 2020, he asserted his independence. 'I acknowledge and fully agree that it would be inappropriate for the FCC to help any party (whether the White House or otherwise) to retaliate against any other party for any reason whatsoever,' he told the US Senate. 'Our Founding Fathers protected this sacred right with the First Amendment to the Constitution. The freedom to express and debate ideas is the foundation for all of our rights as a free people. If I am fortunate enough to be confirmed, I will be an impartial and independent voice on the Commission and follow the law regardless of the political context,' Simington said. 'When we are talking about a CBS monitor it strikes me as influencing the media and we are heading down a road of kissing our democracy goodbye,' former Democratic FCC Chair Michael Copps told CorpGov. 'The FCC now is nothing but designed to do what the White House wants.' To be clear, Simington likely would have approved Skydance's acquisition of Paramount if there were no conditions attached, the insider said. 'If none of this happened, he would have been a reliable yes,' the source told CorpGov. Brendan Carr 'I cannot support this order approving this transaction in light of the payout and other troubling concessions Paramount made to settle a baseless lawsuit,' Democratic FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez in her dissent said. Carr said the FCC was not influenced by Trump's settlement. The mystery of Simington's resignation deepens when considering an odd April hire. Simington had wanted to leave the FCC for some time as Carr was doing everything essentially by himself without including him, a Democratic FCC source said, but he made a big hire just a few months before resigning. Simington added 31-year-old MAGA firebrand Gavin Max as his Chief of Staff and Senior Advisor. Max is a Trump loyalist who headed the New York Young Republicans Club. 'Total MAGA and no FCC related experience,' the Democratic source said. 'Once President Trump is back in office,' Wax in 2023 reportedly said, 'we won't be playing nice anymore. It will be a time for retribution.' Then, oddly, Simington started writing editorials with Wax espousing very Trumpian views. Simington had written op-eds before, including on November 24, 2024, for The Hill, but never with a co-writer, an FCC insider told CorpGov. 'A commissioner does not usually write an op-ed with his staff,' the source who spoke to Simington said. Simington was seen as more nerd than firebrand, the Democratic FCC source said. 'Trump has once again thrown down the gauntlet against the corporate media—this time by taking CBS to court,' a May 1 op-ed in the National Pulse from Simington and Wax said. 'His bold litigation has exposed what millions of Americans already know: the mainstream media is not a neutral institution, but a political weapon used to silence, smear, and control. But we must go beyond the courtroom to move from outrage to reform. It's time to hit fake news where it hurts most: financially.' Then there was a May 9 op-ed from both saying the FCC needed to reduce its staff and implement DOGE-like reforms. On July 22 Wax said on X, 'Big congratulations to President Trump on his massive victory against CBS, Paramount and 60 Minutes.' Simington did make efforts on his own to court the MAGA wing. In November, he said publicly that government funded discount broadband for low-income households should not be available to undocumented immigrants. Since resigning, he has also said Wax would be a good FCC Commissioner. There are now two open positions (a full FCC would have five voting members). Trump nominated Simington to the FCC in the closing days of his first term in November 2020 shortly after the Canadian became a US citizen and pushed hard for his confirmation. Olivia Trusty Late last year there was some belief Simington, who had worked at the Department of Commerce in Trump's first term, might be in line to be the FCC Chair. 'Simington was closer to Trump,' a media executive said. 'Carr didn't know Trump.' Still, Republican FCC Commissioner Carr long coveted the Chairmanship but did not know the President, sources told CorpGov. 'Carr booked a dinner ticket at Mar-A-Lago and waited in the hallway for Trump [shortly after the 2024 Presidential election].' 'He introduced himself to Trump and said he would make a great Chair.' 'I'd like the job. I'm your man!' The charismatic Carr, whose father Thomas was a white-collar defense attorney who once represented President Nixon, got the position. 'Sometimes, the guy who is not as close to you works twice as hard to prove they are the right person,' the media executive said. Now, Simington is a visiting fellow at the conservative-leaning Hudson Institute. Simington, the FCC, and Chair Carr did not return messages. Read more from Josh Kosman at Contact CorpGov Editor@ Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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