• Loading stock data...
Friday, April 18, 2025

WBD Secures Comcast Deal, Readies for Future Without NBA Rights

The outlook this past summer was grim for the TNT Sports parent company. A flurry of content and distribution deals have remade its look and future prospects.

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Warner Bros. Discovery’s ongoing preparation for an existence without domestic NBA media rights continues to gather steam, representing one of the unlikelier stories in the media industry. 

The TNT Sports parent this week completed a large-scale distribution agreement with Comcast, the second-largest U.S. cable company, that will cover not only domestic distribution but also the U.K. and Ireland. Following a somewhat similar deal WBD struck in September with Charter Communications, the No. 1 carrier, Comcast will continue to carry key WBD networks such as TNT, TBS, CNN, Discovery, Food Network, HGTV, and TLC.

The Comcast pact marks the latest in a steady flow of new business for WBD under CEO David Zaslav since the NBA announced in late July its plan to move forward without TNT Sports holding national rights with the league, starting with the 2025–2026 season. 

In the last four months, WBD has also moved heavily into college football and basketball, picking up partial game rights to the Big 12, Big East, and Mountain West conferences as well as the College Football Playoff, in turn helping protect the company’s critical carriage fees. The run of activity additionally includes the resolution of WBD’s lawsuit against the NBA, with the company acquiring a broad set of league content and highlight rights, including live rights in several international territories, and a “reimagined and enhanced” partnership for NBA Digital.

That settlement further involved a three-way agreement with ESPN, paving the way for TNT Sports’ Inside the NBA to move to the Disney-owned network.

“These broad and multiyear agreements underscore the value and appeal of our linear portfolio,” said Bruce Campbell, WBD chief revenue and strategy officer, of the Comcast agreement, which included a resolution of an outstanding legal dispute there, too. 

Stock Run-Up

Investors have clearly taken notice of WBD’s ongoing reconstruction. After hitting a 52-week low in early August, days after the NBA media deals were announced, WBD shares have grown more than 60%, and by more than 15% just in the last month. 

There’s still a big hill to climb, though, as the stock is still less than half the level it was at when the current company was created following a 2022 merger with Discovery, Inc. There’s also an investor lawsuit against the company that is seeking class-action status. But it’s becoming increasingly clear there indeed can be life for WBD without its long-held NBA live rights deal in the U.S., and has given some vindication to Zaslav’s much-scrutinized 2022 comment that WBD didn’t “have to have the NBA.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

UFL Dealing With Challenges Three Weeks Into Second Season

The spring football league is in its second season.
RFK

Commanders Plan $3B Return to RFK Stadium Site—With Some Opponents

A potential deal calls for a new stadium costing more than $3 billion.

WNBPA Matches NBA’s 3-Point Contest Prize. Will Caitlin Clark Join?

The 2025 WNBA All-Star weekend will be in Indianapolis.

Featured Today

exclusive

Inside Nico Iamaleava’s Ugly Breakup With Tennessee

Iamaleava’s representatives claim to FOS he didn’t push for more NIL money.
Jul 29, 2024; Villeneuve-d'Ascq, France; France center Dominique Malonga (14) and guard Marine Johannes (23) celebrate after defeating Canada during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Stade Pierre-Mauroy
April 13, 2025

‘Has to Change’: The WNBA’s International Player Problem

As more global stars arrive, the “prioritization” rule is causing tension.
Yamine Lamal Barcelona
April 12, 2025

Lamine Yamal: The Pressure and Price of Barcelona’s Young Prodigy

Lamine Yamal is a teenage superstar. Can Barcelona afford him?
The pin flag on the second green flaps in the wind during the second round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club.
April 7, 2025

Inside The Masters: Traditions, Restrictions, and Gnomes

How the most exclusive major employs its own strict rules and operations.
Netflix

Netflix Rises While Markets Slide—Thanks in Part to Live Sports

The streaming giant beats financial expectations as its sports presence grows.
April 15, 2025

WNBA Draft Draws 1.25M Viewers, Second-Best Behind 2.45M Last Year

Paige Bueckers was the No. 1 pick in the WNBA draft.
Lee Corso
April 17, 2025

Lee Corso Will Retire From ESPN at 90

The broadcaster is hanging up his headgear in August.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

This week, Two-time Super Bowl Champion and CBS NFL analyst Logan Ryan joins us to talk the business of sports on our third installment of Portfolio Players.
April 15, 2025

NBA Regular-Season Ratings Dip 2%, In Line With the NFL

The NFL also saw a 2% viewership decline last season.
April 14, 2025

Masters Final Round Draws 12.7M Viewers, Golf’s Best Since 2018

The final round was the most-watched golf event in seven years.
April 14, 2025

NBA Play-In Tourney Gets Warriors Boost Before Move to Streaming

The Play-In Tournament will stream on Amazon Prime Video starting next season.
April 14, 2025

NHL Playoffs Face Ratings Risks With Canadian Focus, Original Six Absence

The field includes no U.S. Original Six teams and a heavy Canadian presence.