Another Day, Another CNN Takedown
President Donald Trump is back on his favorite hobby horse, and this time he's got a corporate restructuring angle to work with. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Trump suggested that CNN should be sold off as part of Warner Bros. Discovery's (WBD) ongoing deal machinations, and he didn't hold back on the reasoning.
"I think the people that have run CNN for the last long period of time are a disgrace. I think it's imperative that CNN be sold because you certainly wouldn't want to just leave those people with some money, good money so that they can spend even more money spreading poison because it's lies. It's a disgrace," Trump told reporters.
If you've been following Trump's relationship with CNN over the years, this won't exactly qualify as breaking news. The President has spent considerable energy branding the network as "fake news" and accusing it of systematically biased coverage. But the timing here matters because there's actually a major deal in play that could reshape CNN's future.
Warner Bros. Discovery didn't immediately respond to requests for comment on Trump's remarks.
The Media Wars Keep Getting Pricier
Trump's combative relationship with media organizations extends well beyond rhetorical jabs. The financial stakes have gotten quite real. Back in July, Paramount Global agreed to pay $16 million to settle Trump's lawsuit over a "60 Minutes" interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris.
And that's just one example. In September, Trump filed a $15 billion defamation lawsuit against The New York Times (NYT), following a $10 billion suit he'd filed in July against the Wall Street Journal and its parent company, News Corp (NWSA) (NWS), over allegedly false reporting linking him to Jeffrey Epstein.
The President's approach to tough coverage sometimes veers into the personal. He once mocked a New York Times correspondent as "third rate" and "ugly" over a report examining signs of aging in his public schedule.
What's Actually Happening With the Warner Bros Deal
Trump's Wednesday comments come amid news that Netflix (NFLX) has proposed acquiring Warner Bros. assets, including HBO. Here's the interesting part: the deal excludes CNN and other cable networks like TNT and TBS, which are expected to be spun off into a separate entity before the merger closes.
So CNN is already slated to become its own thing, separate from the Warner Bros entertainment empire. Trump's demand that it be sold isn't exactly at odds with the current plan, though his reasoning about who should control it certainly adds a political dimension.
The deal has attracted competing interest. Paramount Skydance (PSKY) CEO David Ellison has reportedly been pushing Warner Bros. to reject Netflix's offer in favor of a $108 billion all-cash hostile bid from Paramount. That's being positioned as superior to Netflix's $82.7 billion cash-and-stock proposal.
And Trump isn't just commenting from the sidelines. He's made clear that he intends to play a direct role in the federal review of the Netflix-Warner Bros. Discovery merger, citing concerns that the combined company's market share could create competitive problems.
So we've got a media mega-merger with competing bids, a President with strong opinions about one of the assets being shuffled around, and the promise of political involvement in the regulatory review process. Should be a smooth, drama-free approval process, right?




