The Biggest Media Deals Of Q2 2026

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Exterior shot of Comcast NBCUniversal office with Peacock logo.

A view of a Comcast NBCUniversal office on June 29, 2026, in Los Angeles, California.

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If the first quarter of 2026 belonged, at least from a media business perspective, to Paramount’s blockbuster pursuit of Warner Bros. Discovery, the just-ended second quarter showed how many different directions the industry is now moving in at once.

Activity around the Paramount-WBD merger certainly spilled over into the three-month period between April and June, which also saw moves from other big players like Fox’s acquisition of Roku and Comcast’s decision to dismantle its media empire. Traditional publishing, meanwhile, went through another round of consolidation, as Vox Media, Penske Media and Axel Springer all announced major deals of their own.

Paramount Skydance clears hurdles in WBD merger

As far as Paramount’s $110.9 billion acquisition of WBD goes, it cleared several significant hurdles during Q2, including winning shareholder approval in April and U.S. antitrust clearance in June.

The deal also picked up a string of international approvals, keeping the merger on track as Paramount moves closer to combining two of Hollywood's most important studios and content libraries.

Still to come: A final decision one way or the other as to what will happen with CNN, which is currently owned by WBD. Keeping it under the umbrella of the newly merged company would, among other things, give control of the news network to a media conglomerate led by a Trump-friendly CEO.

Fox acquires Roku

Then there was Fox Corp.’s $22 billion acquisition of Roku, a deal that gives Fox a leading connected TV platform, a large digital advertising business and a direct relationship with millions of streaming viewers.

Roku’s operating system powers many of the smart TVs sold in the U.S., while its advertising business and presence on TV homescreens have made it an increasingly important gateway to streaming. The acquisition pairs Roku's platform with Fox's portfolio of sports, news and entertainment brands.

Comcast unveils NBCUniversal spinoff

All that said, not every major media deal during the quarter involved an acquisition. Comcast, for example, announced plans to split into two companies—separating its media portfolio that includes NBCUniversal and Sky from its broadband and technology businesses and thus unwinding the media empire it spent decades assembling.

The move underscores how dramatically the industry has changed. Instead of keeping slower-growing TV networks tied to faster-growing businesses, companies like Comcast are increasingly giving those assets room to stand on their own—and potentially become more attractive merger partners down the road.

A24 and Lionsgate accelerate Hollywood AI dealmaking

Also during the quarter, Google took a $75 million stake in A24 in what was described as a research partnership between Google DeepMind and A24 Labs, the studio's technology division.

Rather than using AI to generate movies, the companies say this deal is about production workflows like storyboarding and visual effects—not the content creation that’s turning many artists against AI.

Likewise, Lionsgate pursued a similar AI course by taking an equity stake in the video-generation startup Runway. They’re launching a joint program to develop and produce new intellectual property, beginning with a short-form series that draws on Lionsgate's existing IP and Runway's generative video models.

Digital publishing shakeup

Online publishing was also at the center of plenty of dealmaking.

James Murdoch during Q2 acquired New York magazine and Vox Media's podcast network in a deal worth more than $300 million, while Penske Media agreed to take over many of Vox Media's remaining digital brands like The Verge.

Axel Springer, meanwhile, completed its acquisition of Telegraph Media Group, bringing one of Britain's best-known newspaper brands under the same ownership as Politico and Business Insider. Also during the quarter, Byron Allen announced a deal to invest $120 million in BuzzFeed, under the terms of which Allen becomes chairman and CEO, while BuzzFeed founder Jonah Peretti is shifting his focus toward leading a new BuzzFeed AI effort.

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