On Epic Week For Paramount Global, Company Reaches Extension Of Charter Carriage Deadline

Paramount Global, which is in the midst of corporate upheaval on a number of fronts, got a slight reprieve in one key area, extending carriage negotiations with Charter Communications.

In just the past 48 hours, the media company has seen the exit of CEO Bob Bakish, the closely watched release of first-quarter earnings and a revised acquisition offer from Skydance Media.

The expiration of the current agreement between the companies was set to arrive at midnight Tuesday. The extension of talks was confirmed to Deadline by sources familiar with the negotiations. It was unclear if there would be a firm revised deadline put in place, but talks are ongoing. No on-screen crawl or ominous email warning to customers has been deployed, signaling that the parties are aiming to reach a settlement without fireworks – at least as of now.

RELATED: Bob Bakish Exit: Shock Ripples Through CBS’ WHCD Party As Paramount CEO Set To Depart – “Who Knows What’s Next?”

Paramount and Charter declined to comment when contacted by Deadline.

A lot is at stake for both companies. Charter, which operates the Spectrum pay-TV and broadband brand, recently leapfrogged Comcast to become the No. 1 pay-TV operator in the U.S. Wall Street analysts as well as participants in an expected M&A transaction are paying close attention to the Charter talks and the company’s transitory ownership has made an outage on Charter unthinkable.

RELATED: John Malone Stepping Down As Director Emeritus At Charter

The Stamford, CT-based Charter didn’t hesitate in August to take advantage of its scale. It wound up gaining the upper hand in a widely tracked dispute with Disney, which unfolded at a key time as U.S. Open tennis and college football was airing on ESPN and local ABC stations. The 10-day blackout that resulted left millions of customers in the dark and by the end of the showdown, the deal reached by the parties established a new template for pay-TV providers. Charter dropped major networks like Freeform and others from its linear systems, instead offering to integrate and promote streaming services to its customers. On September 11, just hours before Monday Night Football, a resolution was announced.

Charter CEO Chris Winfrey and his management colleagues have indicated that they do not plan on easing off as they embark on distribution talks with other companies. Their mantra is not to let programmers charge customers twice for the same programming. That objective could leave many of Paramount’s general entertainment networks in a tricky position given how many of their titles stream on Paramount+ (whose lowest tier is one of the least expensive on the streaming market) in addition to airing on linear.

RELATED: Charter CEO Chris Winfrey Sees $89 Million Compensation Package In 2023

One element that could play in Paramount’s favor in the near term is the timing of the end of the current deal. While there’s never an optimal time for carriage drama, the next several weeks will not bring anything comparable to the Disney corridor when its networks went dark. NFL football, maybe the brightest jewel in Paramount’s crown, is four months away from kickoff.

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