Current:Home > InvestWarner Bros. Discovery sues NBA for not accepting its matching offer -Elevate Money Guide
Warner Bros. Discovery sues NBA for not accepting its matching offer
View
Date:2025-04-27 16:00:38
Warner Bros. Discovery has sued the NBA after the league did not accept the company’s matching offer for one of the packages in its upcoming 11-year media rights deal.
The lawsuit was filed on Friday in New York state court in Manhattan.
WBD, the parent company of TNT Sports, is seeking a judgement that it matched Amazon Prime Video’s offer and an order seeking to delay the new media rights deal from taking effect beginning with the 2025-26 season.
The NBA signed its deals with Disney, NBCUniversal and Amazon Prime Video on Wednesday after saying it was not accepting Warner Bros. Discovery’s $1.8 billion per year offer. The deals will bring the league around $76 billion over 11 years.
“Given the NBA’s unjustified rejection of our matching of a third-party offer, we have taken legal action to enforce our rights,” TNT Sports said in a statement. “We strongly believe this is not just our contractual right, but also in the best interest of fans who want to keep watching our industry-leading NBA content with the choice and flexibility we offer them through our widely distributed WBD video-first distribution platforms – including TNT and Max.”
NBA spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement that “Warner Bros. Discovery’s claims are without merit and our lawyers will address them.”
WBD says in the lawsuit that “TBS properly matched the Amazon Offer by agreeing to telecast the games on both TNT and Max. The Amazon Offer provides for Cable Rights, including TNT Rights, because the offer is for games that TBS currently has the right to distribute on TNT via Non-Broadcast Television, which includes both cable and Internet distribution.”
WBD also claims under its contract it “has the right to ‘Match a Third Party Offer that provides for the exercise of (NBA games) via any form of combined audio and video distribution.’”
The lawsuit is another chapter in a deteriorating relationship between the league and Turner Sports that has gone on nearly 40 years. Turner has had an NBA package since 1984 and games have been on TNT since the network launched in 1988.
TNT’s iconic “Inside the NBA” show has won numerous Sports Emmy Awards and has been a model for studio shows.
However, the relationship started to become strained when Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav said during an RBC Investor Conference in November 2022 that Turner and WBD “don’t have to have the NBA.”
Warner Bros. Discovery and the league were unable to reach a deal during the exclusive negotiating period, which expired in April. Zaslav and TNT Sports Chairman/CEO Luis Silberwasser said throughout the process, though, that it intended to match one of the deals.
WBD had five days to match a part of those deals after the NBA’s Board of Governors approved the rights deals on July 17.
WBD received all of the contracts the next day and informed the league on Monday that it was matching Amazon Prime Videos offer.
The NBA announced on Wednesday that it was not considered a true match.
“Throughout these negotiations, our primary objective has been to maximize the reach and accessibility of our games for our fans,” the league said when it did not accept the WBD deal. “Our new arrangement with Amazon supports this goal by complementing the broadcast, cable and streaming packages that are already part of our new Disney and NBCUniversal arrangements. All three partners have also committed substantial resources to promote the league and enhance the fan experience.”
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba
veryGood! (5)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- James McBride wins $50,000 Kirkus Prize for fiction for “The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store”
- Air quality has been horrible this year — and it's not just because of wildfire smoke
- After a hard fight to clear militants, Israeli soldiers find a scene of destruction, slain children
- Trump's 'stop
- Sculpture commemorating historic 1967 Cleveland summit with Ali, Jim Brown, other athletes unveiled
- A Look Inside Hugh Jackman's Next Chapter After His Split From Wife Deborra-Lee Furness
- Taiwan is closely watching the Hamas-Israel war for lessons as it faces intimidation from China
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Effort to replace Ohio’s political-mapmaking system with a citizen-led panel can gather signatures
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Former USWNT stars Harris, Krieger divorcing after four years of marriage, per reports
- Why the world's water system is becoming 'increasingly erratic'
- A ‘Zionist in my heart': Biden’s devotion to Israel faces a new test
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- New York governor backs suspension of ‘right to shelter’ as migrant influx strains city
- Teen faces adult murder charge in slaying of Michigan election canvasser
- Judge in Trump's New York fraud trial explains why there's no jury
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
Idaho officials briefly order evacuation of town of about 10,000 people after gas line explodes
Blinken meets Hamas attack survivors, pledges US support on trip to Israel
25 years after Matthew Shepard’s death, LGBTQ+ activists say equal-rights progress is at risk
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
Beavers reintroduced to west London for first time in 400 years to improve biodiversity
Wisconsin GOP to vote on banning youth transgender surgery, barring transgender girls from sports
New York officer fatally shoots man in fencing mask who charged police with 2 swords, police say