
Private equity giant Apollo offers $11B for Paramount Pictures studio: report
NY Post
Private equity firm Apollo Global Management reportedly made an $11 billion offer to pry away Paramount Global’s Hollywood studio, Paramount Pictures, from the rest of media heiress Shari Redstone’s debt-saddled company.
The stunning offer comes as an independent committee of the company’s board of directors reviews a competing bid from Skydance Media for all of Paramount Global — which also owns CBS, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon and the Paramount+ streaming service, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
A rep from Paramount Global declined to comment.
Apollo, which has $512 billion of assets under management, did not immediately respond to requests seeking comment.
Apollo, led by Marc Rowan, also reached out to a special committee formed by Paramount about a possible takeover or asset purchases, Axios News had reported earlier in March.
Paramount Pictures, the studio behind such flicks as “Top Gun: Maverick,” “Mission Impossible 8,” and “A Quiet Place,” was also of interest to Netflix over the past few years, The Journal reported.

Imagine if Allied intelligence had located Adolf Hitler in late May 1944 and killed him before the Normandy invasion. Imagine that in the same hour, strikes eliminated Hitler’s designated successor, the head of the German Armed Forces High Command, the chief operational planner of the war effort, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, responsible for defending Western Europe, and the rest of Germany’s field marshals and senior commanders.












