Only weeks after Netflix leadership downplayed the idea of buying entertainment giants, the company now appears to be circling Warner Bros Discovery — a move that could represent the biggest power shift in Hollywood since Disney acquired Fox. According to Reuters reporting, Netflix has hired Moelis & Co. and gained access to sensitive financial data, actively exploring whether to make an offer for the famed WB studio and its streaming assets.

Netflix Co-CEO Greg Peters in an interview with Bloomberg – YouTube, Bloomberg Live
This comes just weeks after Netflix executives publicly signaled they weren’t interested in owning traditional media properties, making the Netflix WB storyline one of the most surprising entertainment industry reversals in recent memory.
What We Know So Far About a Netflix WB Sale
Reuters reports that Netflix has:
- Retained Moelis & Co. — the same bank that helped Skydance pursue Paramount
- Received access to Warner Bros Discovery financial information
- Begun evaluating a formal bid
Per Reuters, this effort focuses specifically on Warner Bros’ studios and streaming assets — meaning HBO, Warner Bros Pictures, and HBO Max may be on the table, while legacy cable networks such as CNN and TNT likely are not.

A screenshot from CNN – YouTube, CNN
Warner Bros Discovery, according to the report, is weighing whether to split its assets or entertain full or partial sales after multiple unsolicited offers from Paramount-Skydance.
Netflix Said This Wouldn’t Happen — Until It Did
The timing is striking because just recently, Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos told investors they weren’t looking to acquire old-guard media properties.
In Netflix’s own quarterly investor communication, Sarandos stated: “We’ve been very clear in the past that we have no interest in owning legacy media networks. There is no change there.”

Noah Schnapp Plays Will Beyers in Stranger Things – Netflix
The other Netflix Co-CEO Greg Peters also dismissed the idea of buying WB a few weeks ago claiming “we’re builders, not buyers.”
And yet here we are — A Netflix WB sale suddenly isn’t hypothetical or ridiculous anymore.
It’s a reminder that public positioning and strategic reality don’t always align in corporate leadership messaging.
What a Netflix WB Deal Would Mean
If Netflix buys Warner Bros Discovery’s studio and streaming divisions, it inherits:
- Harry Potter
- DC characters
- HBO shows like The Sopranos and Game of Thrones
- One of the most prolific TV studios in the world
- A treasure chest of IP, archives, and global franchises
In one move, Netflix would instantly become:
- A direct rival to Disney in theatrical franchise strength (though whether Netflix would pursue a theatrical strategy is anyone’s guess)
- The largest Hollywood content machine by volume and cultural reach
- The only traditional streaming platform with both tech-first DNA and legacy cinematic IP power
And yes — Netflix would own Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and the Wizarding World.

Kenneth Branagh as Gilderoy Lockhart and Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002), Warner Bros. Pictures
If you heard a faint scream on the West Coast, it might’ve come from Disney headquarters.
Why Warner Bros Discovery Might Finally Break Apart
WBD has been under pressure from debt and a rapidly shifting streaming landscape. With Paramount-Skydance attempting to merge, and Comcast signaling interest in media assets, Warner Bros finds itself caught in a competitive feeding frenzy.

David Corenswet as Superman flying in James Gunn’s “Superman” – YouTube, DC
The Reuters piece notes that Comcast leadership also shrugged off regulatory worries, meaning multiple power players believe government barriers may not be the deal-breaker everyone long assumed.
In other words: all of Hollywood is officially up for grabs.
The Real Story: Streaming Is Consolidating, and Fast
For years, media analysts predicted that traditional studios and streaming giants would inevitably converge. First it was tech buying media (Amazon–MGM). Now it’s streaming absorbing legacy studios and traditional distributors.

Liam Hemsworth in the Witcher Season 4 Trailer – YouTube, Netflix
Netflix — a company once mocked as the outsider mailing DVDs — now stands on the verge of potentially acquiring WB, one of the most historic film studio in America.
Blockbuster could never…
Final Take
This is the clearest sign yet that Hollywood as we knew it is ending.
Everyone predicted consolidation; nobody predicted Netflix might eventually own WB — especially not after Netflix said it didn’t want to.

Wednesday Addams in the season 2 trailer for Wednesday – YouTube, Netflix
If this deal moves forward, the Netflix WB saga won’t just reshape the streaming battlefield — it may redefine the future of content, theatrical franchises, and global entertainment power.
Stay tuned. The Hollywood shake-up era continues.
Do you think Netflix will buy WB? Sound off in the comments and let us know!



netflix, warner bros., paramount, hbo max. Not a compelling name in that mess. Soulless sucky corporate monsters that should all be broken up. But soon, We will have, “Umbrella”!
That would end the Batman Arkham franchise for good if Woke Netflix took over. Entertainment is just screwed. On the bright side I’m continuing to save a ton of money, that’s for sure.