Writers Warn of Cataclysmic Fallout from Warner Bros. Merger

The Writers Guild of America (WGA) has issued a stern warning regarding reports of a possible Warner Bros. merger, calling the proposed consolidation a “disaster” for writers, audiences, and the entertainment ecosystem at large. The statement follows Warner Bros.’ indication that it is evaluating multiple acquisition offers with Paramount Global, recently acquired by David Ellison’s Skydance Media, emerging as a likely suitor.
In a joint statement released by WGA East and WGA West, the unions condemned the recurring pattern of corporate mergers in the entertainment industry. “Merger after merger in the media industry has harmed workers, diminished competition and free speech, and wasted hundreds of billions of dollars better invested in organic growth,” the statement read. The Guilds warned that a potential Warner Bros. Paramount deal, or any merger with another major content producer, would further limit the number of buyers for creative work intensifying the economic squeeze on writers while narrowing the diversity of available programming.
The WGA vowed to collaborate with regulators to block the merger, reaffirming its commitment to preventing further concentration of media power. The unions pointed to a troubling history of consolidation that has repeatedly undermined creators’ livelihoods and restricted storytelling variety.
Their opposition to major mergers stretches back decades. The WGA notably fought the Dish–DirecTV merger in 2002 and opposed the Comcast–NBCUniversal merger in 2011, citing fears that Comcast could prioritize its own content across its distribution networks. Later, in 2016, the Guild raised alarms about AT&T’s acquisition of Time Warner, warning that such integration could further distort media access and reinforce monopolistic behavior.
When the AT&T–Time Warner merger was approved in 2018, the WGA decried it as a move that prioritized investor returns over creative diversity. Their stance proved prescient when Warner Bros. Discovery was formed in 2022, a deal the union described as a “clear disaster” for both content creators and consumers. In its aftermath, thousands of industry professionals faced layoffs, and Warner Bros. Discovery faced sharp criticism for shelving completed projects and reducing streaming content libraries.
The WGA’s continued resistance extended to the Disney–Fox merger in 2017 and the Amazon–MGM merger in 2021. The Guild has long argued that such consolidations funnel creative control into the hands of a few dominant studios, endangering artistic risk-taking and independent storytelling.
In 2023, the WGA warned that Disney, Netflix, and Amazon were becoming the industry’s “new gatekeepers” entities capable of determining which projects are made, how they are distributed, and at what price. The unions have since intensified their calls for stronger antitrust enforcement, particularly as tech-driven streaming giants increasingly dictate Hollywood’s business model.
If realized, a Warner Bros.–Paramount merger would consolidate two of the largest legacy studios under a single corporate umbrella — a move critics say could drastically reshape the entertainment landscape, narrowing opportunities for both established and emerging writers. The WGA insists that the fight against such mergers is about more than economics. it is a defense of creative freedom, cultural diversity, and the right of workers to thrive in an industry no longer beholden to a few conglomerates.
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