Streaming Service · Paramount Skydance · Entertainment · Media
NASDAQ: PSKY (formerly PARA)
📅 Updated: March 6, 2026🢠HQ: New York City / Los Angeles👤 CEO: David Ellison (Paramount Skydance)📊 Sector: Communication Services
📺 Service Overview
Paramount+ is an American subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) streaming service owned by Paramount Skydance Corporation, the entity formed in August 2025 through the merger of Paramount Global, National Amusements, and Skydance Media. The service draws its content from an extensive portfolio of legacy media brands: CBS, Nickelodeon, MTV, Comedy Central, BET, Showtime, Smithsonian Channel, and Paramount Pictures.
Originally launched on October 28, 2014, as CBS All Access, the service was rebranded to Paramount+ on March 4, 2021, to reflect the broader content ambitions of what was then ViacomCBS. Paramount+ offers original series and films, live sports (including NFL, Champions League, and March Madness), live streaming of local CBS stations, and a deep back catalog spanning decades of television and film content.
As of March 2025, Paramount+ has approximately 79 million paid subscribers globally, making it one of the top ten most-subscribed streaming services worldwide. The service is available as a standalone platform in 15+ countries and through third-party distributors and the SkyShowtime joint venture across much of Europe. It operates in 8 languages and competes directly with Netflix, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, Max, Apple TV+, and Peacock.
79M
Paid Subscribers (Q1 2025)
2014
Year Launched (as CBS All Access)
15+
Countries (Direct)
8
Languages Supported
📜 History: CBS All Access to Paramount+
The CBS All Access Era (2014–2021)
CBS All Access was announced on October 16, 2014, as the first over-the-top (OTT) offering by an American broadcast television network. It launched twelve days later at $5.99/month with ads and $9.99/month without. Initially, the service was modest — a digital portal for live CBS streams and on-demand episodes of CBS shows. It supported only CBS.com and mobile apps before expanding to Roku (April 2015) and Chromecast (May 2015).
The service's first major inflection came in September 2017 with the premiere of Star Trek: Discovery, which drove the single largest day of new subscriber sign-ups in the service's history. By early 2018, CBS All Access had crossed 2 million subscribers, buoyed by Discovery, the Grammys, and NFL games. The service also expanded internationally — first to Canada (April 2018), then to Australia as "10 All Access" (December 2018), taking its name from CBS-owned Network 10.
The 2019 re-merger of CBS Corporation and Viacom proved transformative. Content from Nickelodeon, MTV, Comedy Central, BET, and other Viacom brands was added, and ViacomCBS outlined plans for a "house of brands" approach — a mid-tier streaming offering that would complement the free Pluto TV and premium Showtime OTT service. By mid-2020, the library had expanded to include 30,000+ TV episodes and 1,000+ films from Paramount's catalog.
The Paramount+ Rebrand (March 2021)
On March 4, 2021, CBS All Access was officially rebranded as Paramount+, taking its name from Paramount Pictures to signal broader ambitions. The rebrand accompanied a massive international expansion into Latin America, Europe, and additional Asian markets. The service adopted a tiered pricing model with "Essential" (ad-supported) and "Premium" (ad-free with live CBS) tiers, and significantly ramped up its original content slate.
Showtime Absorption (2023)
In a significant structural move, Paramount merged the standalone Showtime streaming service into Paramount+ in mid-2023, creating a combined "Paramount+ with Showtime" tier. This brought premium content like Yellowjackets, Billions, Dexter: New Blood, and the Showtime film library under the Paramount+ umbrella, effectively retiring Showtime as an independent streaming brand after decades of operation. The move aimed to simplify the product lineup and reduce subscriber churn.
Milestone
Date
Significance
CBS All Access launches
Oct 2014
First broadcast-network OTT service
Star Trek: Discovery premiere
Sep 2017
Biggest single-day subscriber surge
CBS-Viacom re-merger
Dec 2019
Content library expands massively
Rebrand to Paramount+
Mar 2021
Global expansion begins
Showtime merger into P+
Mid 2023
Premium tier consolidation
Skydance merger closes
Aug 2025
New ownership under David Ellison
🎬 Content Library & Originals
Paramount+ benefits from one of the deepest content libraries in streaming, drawing from nearly a century of Paramount Pictures film output and decades of television programming across CBS, Nickelodeon, MTV, Comedy Central, BET, and Showtime. The breadth of IP is staggering — from Star Trek and Mission: Impossible to SpongeBob SquarePants and South Park.
Key Franchise Pillars
Star Trek: The franchise that built CBS All Access. Multiple series including Strange New Worlds, Discovery, Lower Decks, Prodigy, and Picard have been produced as Paramount+ originals, making it the definitive home for Trek content.
Yellowstone Universe: Taylor Sheridan's sprawling western franchise — Yellowstone, 1883, 1923, Lioness, Tulsa King, Landman — has been a massive audience driver, though the franchise is primarily associated with the Paramount Network cable channel.
Nickelodeon: Kids' content including Kamp Koral, PAW Patrol, iCarly revival, and the SpongeBob franchise provides family audience appeal.
Showtime Originals: Premium dramas and comedies including Yellowjackets, The Chi, Billions, and a deep library of legacy Showtime hits.
CBS Originals & Procedurals: Exclusive streaming access to CBS hits like NCIS, FBI, Survivor, Big Brother, and Evil.
Paramount Pictures Films: Theatrical releases from franchises including Mission: Impossible, Transformers, Sonic the Hedgehog, Top Gun, A Quiet Place, and Scream flow to Paramount+ after their theatrical windows.
Live Sports
A significant differentiator for Paramount+ is its live sports offering. The service streams NFL games (via CBS's broadcast deal), UEFA Champions League and Europa League soccer, March Madness (NCAA Tournament), PGA Tour events, and various CBS Sports programming. This sports content provides a subscriber floor that pure entertainment platforms cannot match — fans subscribe seasonally for sports access and then discover other content.
✅ Content Strength: Paramount+ has a genuinely unique content mix among streamers. No other platform combines broadcast procedurals, kids' animation, premium cable dramas, live sports, and a 100-year film library. The challenge isn't the library — it's marketing it effectively and investing enough in tentpole originals to compete with Netflix and Disney+.
Content Concerns
Despite the breadth, Paramount+ has faced criticism for inconsistent investment in high-profile originals. The service has canceled several shows prematurely and struggled to produce "water-cooler" moments at the scale of Netflix or HBO. Cost-cutting measures under the late Paramount Global era led to reduced content spending, and it remains to be seen whether the Skydance regime will reverse that trend. Additionally, licensing deals have seen some Paramount content appear on competitor platforms, diluting the exclusive value proposition.
📊 Subscribers & Growth
79M
Global Paid Subs (Q1 2025)
~2M
Subs at CBS All Access Peak (2018)
Top 10
Global SVOD Ranking
60%+
Growth Since 2021 Rebrand
Growth Trajectory
Paramount+ has experienced significant growth since the 2021 rebrand, scaling from roughly 30 million subscribers at launch to 79 million as of March 2025. The growth has been driven by international expansion, the Showtime bundle, live sports events (particularly NFL and Champions League), and the Taylor Sheridan content universe.
However, the growth rate has decelerated compared to the explosive 2021–2023 period. Paramount+ remains the fifth or sixth largest global SVOD service, trailing Netflix (~300M), Amazon Prime Video (~200M+), Disney+ (~150M), Max (~100M+), and competing closely with Apple TV+ and Peacock in the next tier.
Pricing Tiers
Tier
Price (US)
Features
Paramount+ Essential
$7.99/mo
Ad-supported, no live local CBS
Paramount+ with Showtime
$13.99/mo
Ad-free, live local CBS, Showtime content
Churn & Retention Challenges
A persistent challenge for Paramount+ has been subscriber churn. Industry analysis consistently ranks Paramount+ among the streamers with the highest churn rates. Many subscribers sign up for specific events (NFL season, a Yellowstone premiere) and cancel afterward. The service's relatively thin slate of must-watch originals — compared to Netflix's volume or HBO's prestige — makes it vulnerable to "subscribe-and-cancel" behavior. The Showtime merger was explicitly designed to address this by adding year-round premium content.
âš ï¸ CrowsEye Note: The 79M subscriber figure is respectable but masks high churn. Paramount+ needs to convert seasonal sports and event viewers into year-round subscribers. The Showtime integration helps, but the service still lacks a consistent cadence of flagship originals to anchor retention.
🤠Skydance Merger & New Paramount
The Deal
On July 7, 2024, Skydance Media and Paramount Global announced a definitive merger agreement valued at $8 billion, creating Paramount Skydance Corporation with a combined enterprise value of approximately $28 billion. The deal involved a three-way merger between Skydance, National Amusements (the Redstone family's controlling entity), and Paramount Global.
The path to the deal was tortuous. Paramount Global had been struggling with declining cable viewership, mounting debt, and streaming losses. Throughout 2023–2024, multiple suitors circled: Warner Bros. Discovery, Sony Pictures, Apollo Global Management, Edgar Bronfman Jr., and Allen Media Group all explored acquisitions. Skydance initially agreed to terms in early June 2024, then talks collapsed by June 11, before being revived and finalized on July 2.
Regulatory Gauntlet & Trump Factor
The merger's regulatory path was heavily influenced by the political environment. The SEC and European Commission approved the transaction by February 2025, but FCC approval proved more fraught. President Trump had an ongoing (widely considered baseless) lawsuit against CBS, alleging that CBS News's reporting constituted election interference. In an extraordinary move, Paramount paid $16 million to settle the CBS-Trump lawsuit in July 2025 to ensure the FCC — headed by a Trump appointee — would not block the merger. The FCC approved the deal on July 24, 2025, and it closed on August 7, 2025.
🔥 Controversy: The $16M settlement was widely criticized. Stephen Colbert called it a "big fat bribe" on The Late Show, after which Paramount chose not to renew Colbert's show. Post-merger, David Ellison made conservative-friendly changes to CBS News, including hiring political commentator Bari Weiss as editor-in-chief. Trump publicly praised both decisions. This sequence of events has fueled concerns about editorial independence at CBS under new ownership.
New Leadership
David Ellison, Skydance's CEO and the son of Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, became chairman and CEO of Paramount Skydance. Jeff Shell (former NBCUniversal CEO) was named president. Shari Redstone, whose family controlled Paramount through National Amusements for decades, exited the picture. The new leadership team has signaled a focus on content quality over volume, strategic cost discipline, and leveraging Skydance's film production capabilities (known for Top Gun: Maverick, Mission: Impossible, and Transformers).
Warner Bros. Discovery Acquisition (2026)
In a blockbuster development, Paramount Skydance announced in early 2026 a proposed $110 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery. If completed, this would create the largest entertainment conglomerate in history, combining Paramount's assets with HBO, Warner Bros. Pictures, CNN, TNT, and the DC Universe. The deal is pending regulatory approval and represents David Ellison's audacious vision for competing with Disney, Netflix, and Big Tech in the streaming wars. The potential combination of Paramount+ with Max would create a streaming giant with over 150 million combined subscribers.
💰 Financial Snapshot
$28.9B
2025 Revenue (Paramount Skydance)
$934M
2025 Operating Income
-$621M
2025 Net Income
17,600
Employees (2025)
The Legacy of Losses
Paramount Global's final years as an independent company were financially painful. In fiscal 2024, the company reported revenue of $29.2 billion but an operating loss of $5.3 billion and a net loss of $6.2 billion. The streaming division was a significant contributor to these losses, as Paramount+ burned cash in pursuit of subscriber growth while competing against better-capitalized rivals.
Under Paramount Skydance, the picture has improved modestly. The combined entity reported $28.9 billion in revenue for 2025 (slightly lower due to divestitures and restructuring) with $934 million in operating income — a dramatic swing from the prior year's $5.3B loss. However, net income remained negative at -$621 million, reflecting ongoing restructuring costs, merger-related expenses, and continued streaming investment.
Streaming Economics
Paramount+'s path to profitability has been slower than Disney+ or Netflix's ad-tier ramp. The service has been gaining ARPU (average revenue per user) through price increases and ad-tier adoption, but content costs remain high and subscriber acquisition in saturated markets is expensive. The pending WBD merger, if completed, would theoretically improve streaming economics through combined content libraries and reduced overhead.
Metric
2024 (Paramount Global)
2025 (Paramount Skydance)
Change
Total Revenue
$29.2B
$28.9B
-1%
Operating Income
-$5.3B
$934M
Turnaround
Net Income
-$6.2B
-$621M
Improving
Total Assets
$46.2B
$43.3B
-6%
Employees
18,600
17,600
-5%
📊 Key Insight: The swing from -$5.3B to +$934M in operating income is dramatic, but much of the 2024 loss was driven by massive impairment charges and write-downs. The underlying business is improving but remains fragile. Paramount Skydance still carries significant debt, and the proposed $110B WBD acquisition would add enormous leverage.
âš”ï¸ Competitive Landscape
Paramount+ operates in one of the most fiercely competitive markets in media history. The streaming wars have produced a landscape where well-capitalized tech giants compete alongside legacy media companies, all chasing the same finite pool of consumer entertainment time and dollars.
Service
Subscribers
Key Advantage
Threat Level
Netflix
~300M
Content volume, global reach, profitability
CRITICAL
Amazon Prime Video
~200M+
Bundled with Prime, unlimited budget
HIGH
Disney+
~150M
Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, parks synergy
HIGH
Max (HBO)
~100M+
Premium prestige content (HBO brand)
HIGH
Apple TV+
~50M (est.)
Quality over quantity, Apple ecosystem
MEDIUM
Peacock (NBCU)
~36M
NBC/Universal library, sports (Olympics)
MEDIUM
Paramount+'s Competitive Position
Paramount+ sits in a challenging middle tier — too small to match Netflix's scale or Big Tech's spending power, but too large to be a niche player. Its key differentiators are live sports (particularly NFL and Champions League), the Yellowstone franchise, the Star Trek universe, and the depth of its kids' content. The Showtime integration added prestige programming muscle, but the service still lacks the "must-have" status that Netflix or even Disney+ commands.
The proposed WBD merger would dramatically reshape this competitive picture. A combined Paramount+/Max would have 150M+ subscribers, HBO's prestige content, CNN's news operation, DC's superhero IP, and a combined film library rivaling any competitor. Whether regulators will allow such concentration remains the key question.
⚡ Strategic Reality: Without the WBD merger, Paramount+ faces a difficult path as a standalone service. It's the smallest of the legacy-media streamers with the weakest balance sheet. The merger thesis isn't optional — it's existential. David Ellison clearly recognizes this, which is why the $110B WBD bid came so quickly after the Skydance deal closed.
âš ï¸ Controversies & Legal Issues
The $16M Trump Settlement
The most significant controversy surrounding the new Paramount is the $16 million payment to settle President Trump's lawsuit against CBS ahead of the FCC merger approval. Trump had sued CBS alleging that its news coverage — particularly a 60 Minutes interview with Vice President Kamala Harris — constituted election interference. Legal experts widely dismissed the suit as baseless, but with the FCC headed by a Trump loyalist, Paramount chose to pay rather than risk the merger being blocked. This was broadly perceived as capitulation to political pressure, raising profound questions about editorial independence at one of America's most important news organizations.
Colbert Cancellation
After Stephen Colbert called the Trump settlement a "big fat bribe" on air, Paramount chose not to renew The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. The cancellation — one of the most high-profile in late-night television history — sent shockwaves through the industry. Trump publicly praised the decision, further reinforcing the perception that editorial decisions at CBS were being influenced by political considerations. The move cost Paramount a significant cultural asset and advertising revenue stream.
CBS News Editorial Concerns
Post-merger, David Ellison installed conservative commentator Bari Weiss as editor-in-chief of CBS News. While Weiss is a respected journalist in certain circles, the appointment was seen by critics as a continuation of the politically motivated changes that began with the Trump settlement. The editorial direction of CBS News — one of the foundational institutions of American journalism — remains a flashpoint for media watchdogs and the public.
Content Cancellations & Creator Frustration
Paramount+ has faced significant backlash from creators and fans over abrupt show cancellations. During the cost-cutting era of 2023–2024, several original series were canceled despite strong critical reception, and some completed shows were removed from the platform entirely as tax write-offs — a practice that drew industry-wide condemnation. This has damaged Paramount+'s reputation as a home for creative talent and made top showrunners wary of bringing projects to the platform.
Layoffs & Restructuring
The Skydance merger was accompanied by significant workforce reductions. Paramount cut approximately 1,000 employees (about 5% of the workforce) in restructuring waves through 2024–2025. Additional cuts followed as the new leadership streamlined operations. The layoffs, while financially necessary, generated negative press and damaged internal morale, particularly at CBS News and Paramount Television Studios.
🔠CrowsEye Assessment: The Trump settlement and Colbert cancellation represent a reputational wound that will take years to heal. For a company whose most valuable asset is CBS — a news organization built on credibility — the perception of political capitulation is deeply damaging. The Bari Weiss appointment ensures this controversy will remain in the headlines.
âš ï¸ Sentiment data is estimated based on aggregated community discussions and is not scientifically sampled. It reflects online conversation trends, not a representative survey.
r/ParamountPlus
The dedicated subreddit reflects a community that is more frustrated than enthusiastic. Common complaints include: app quality and streaming bugs, content gaps compared to competitors, confusing tier structures, and frequent show cancellations. Positive sentiment clusters around specific content — Star Trek fans, Yellowstone viewers, and parents who value the Nick content library tend to defend the service. A frequent refrain: "I subscribe for one show and cancel when it's done."
r/Streaming & r/Television
In broader entertainment communities, Paramount+ is often discussed as the "weakest" of the major streamers. The service is frequently recommended only with the caveat of subscribing for specific shows. The Yellowstone franchise gets praise, but many users note that it primarily airs on the Paramount Network cable channel, not Paramount+. Star Trek fans are passionate but represent a niche audience. The consensus view: "Great library, mediocre platform, uncertain future."
r/Investing & r/WallStreetBets
Financial Reddit was deeply skeptical of Paramount Global during its final years as a public company under the PARA ticker. The stock's decline from ~$100 (2021) to under $10 (2024) left retail investors burned. The Skydance merger was viewed as a lifeline but one that heavily favored Skydance/Ellison over existing shareholders. The new PSKY ticker has generated cautious interest, particularly around the WBD merger speculation, but trust remains low.
News Media & Industry
Industry trade publications have covered Paramount's transformation with a mix of fascination and concern. The Trump settlement and CBS News changes have drawn sharp criticism from journalism organizations. The WBD merger proposal has been met with both excitement (scale benefits) and alarm (media concentration). David Ellison is viewed as ambitious and well-capitalized but largely unproven as a media conglomerate CEO.
🔠CrowsEye Assessment: Sentiment toward Paramount+ skews negative, driven by a combination of product issues, content cancellations, and the politically charged controversies surrounding the merger. The service has passionate niche audiences (Trekkies, Yellowstone fans, parents) but lacks the broad cultural cachet of Netflix, Disney+, or HBO. The WBD merger speculation has injected some optimism but also uncertainty.
🔮 2026 Outlook & Risk Matrix
Key Catalysts (Upside)
Catalyst
Timeline
Impact
WBD merger approval & close
2026–2027
TRANSFORMATIVE
Continued operating income improvement
Throughout 2026
HIGH
NFL / Champions League driving subs
Seasonal
MEDIUM
New Yellowstone spinoffs / Taylor Sheridan content
Paramount+ enters 2026 in a state of radical transformation. Under new ownership via the Skydance merger and with a proposed $110B acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery on the table, the service's trajectory could range from becoming part of the largest entertainment company in history to struggling as a mid-tier streamer with a weakening balance sheet.
The fundamentals tell a mixed story: 79 million subscribers is solid but growth has slowed; the content library is deep but original investment has been inconsistent; live sports provide a floor but can't sustain year-round engagement alone; and the parent company's finances are improving but still show net losses. The political controversies surrounding the Trump settlement, Colbert cancellation, and CBS News changes have added a reputational dimension that goes beyond typical business risk.
David Ellison's bet is clear: scale or die. The standalone Paramount+ cannot compete long-term against Netflix's content machine, Disney's IP moat, Amazon's infinite wallet, or Apple's ecosystem lock-in. The WBD merger is the Hail Mary — and if it works, it would create a genuine Netflix competitor with HBO, Paramount+, CNN, CBS, DC, and Warner Bros. all under one roof. If it doesn't, Paramount+ faces a grinding battle for relevance in an increasingly winner-take-most market.
🦅 CrowsEye Verdict: Paramount+ is a high-variance bet wrapped in a legacy media transformation story. The WBD merger is the fulcrum — everything depends on whether it clears regulatory hurdles. Without it, Paramount+ is a decent service with deep content but no clear path to scale dominance. With it, the combined entity could genuinely challenge the streaming giants. For now, this is a story of potential, not proof. SPECULATIVE — MERGER-DEPENDENT
CrowsEye Assessment
CrowsEye Score
The CrowsEye Score is a proprietary composite rating assessing overall strength across four strategic pillars. Each pillar is scored 0–100 and averaged for the overall score.