The Option

Episode 73: Accenture Song Buys Whalar in Creator Economy's Biggest Deal

3 min · 9. kesä 2026
jakson Episode 73: Accenture Song Buys Whalar in Creator Economy's Biggest Deal kansikuva

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Accenture Song has agreed to acquire Whalar, the social and creator agency previously held by Whalar Group, in what the seller's co-founder is describing as the largest creator economy transaction ever recorded. The deal — terms undisclosed — drops one of the most significant signals yet that enterprise consulting firms are moving aggressively to own the infrastructure layer of the influencer marketing business, with direct consequences for traditional agencies and talent representation. Key Takeaways: * Whalar has managed over $600 million in creator campaigns — that's the asset base Accenture Song is acquiring. * The closest comparable deal, Publicis Groupe's acquisition of influencer agency Influential in 2024, was reported at $500 million; Accenture is claiming Whalar cleared that benchmark. * Accenture Song has now made three creator/engagement acquisitions in two years: Unlimited (2024), Superdigital (2025), and now Whalar (2026). * Whalar co-CEOs Emma Harman and Jo Cronk are staying in their roles post-acquisition — a deliberate retention signal for creator relationships. * Whalar's 170+ employees across the U.S., U.K., Ireland, Germany, and Spain move into Accenture Song; Whalar Group retains independent operations of Sixteenth, Foam, Moby Ventures, The Lighthouse, and The Business of Creativity. * Clients including the NFL, IKEA, and Uber are part of the book Accenture is absorbing. * Consulting firms' access to Fortune 500 CMO relationships gives them a structurally different pitch than standalone talent agencies — one that's difficult for traditional representation models to match. For agents, managers, and showrunners tracking where brand dollars flow, this deal is a map of where the creator economy is consolidating. Accenture Song now has the infrastructure, AI tooling, and enterprise access to compete directly with traditional holding companies for influencer marketing budgets — and traditional agencies are caught in the middle. Watch for WPP and IPG to accelerate their own creator M&A in response. Subscribe to The Option for daily updates on the business behind the business.

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jakson Episode 74: Tucker Carlson, Red Seat Ventures, and Tubi's Creator Bet kansikuva

Episode 74: Tucker Carlson, Red Seat Ventures, and Tubi's Creator Bet

Tucker Carlson appears to be parting ways with Red Seat Ventures — the multichannel network Lachlan Murdoch acquired through Tubi in 2025 as the cornerstone of Fox's push into the creator economy. The exit exposes the structural fragility of the MCN model when the marquee talent is also the talent least dependent on what the network provides, and raises real questions about whether the Red Seat acquisition can justify itself without its biggest name. Key Takeaways: * Red Seat Ventures was acquired by Lachlan Murdoch via Tubi in 2025 as a multichannel network (MCN) for independent digital-first creators. * Tucker Carlson, the portfolio's marquee name, is reportedly exiting or has effectively exited the Red Seat relationship. * Red Seat functions as a talent services company — ad sales, production support, platform relationships — not a traditional studio or network. * The MCN model's core tension: the highest-leverage talent is also the talent least dependent on back-office services the MCN provides. * Disney's Maker Studios acquisition ($500M in 2014) is the cautionary precedent — top creators departed and Disney wrote the acquisition down almost entirely. * Carlson's audience (tens of millions) means any successor business arrangement is structured from a high-leverage talent position, favorable to his representatives. * The commercial health of Red Seat's second and third-tier roster — not the flagship — is now the key variable for evaluating the Tubi creator strategy. For agents and producers working in the creator and podcast space, this is the clearest recent signal that MCN infrastructure deals are not lock-ins for top talent — and that the leverage hierarchy in the creator economy still tilts decisively toward anyone with an existing, self-sustaining audience. Watch for Tubi's public response (or silence) and any secondary creator departures from the Red Seat roster in the coming weeks. Subscribe to The Option for daily updates on the business behind the business.

9. kesä 20264 min
jakson Episode 73: Accenture Song Buys Whalar in Creator Economy's Biggest Deal kansikuva

Episode 73: Accenture Song Buys Whalar in Creator Economy's Biggest Deal

Accenture Song has agreed to acquire Whalar, the social and creator agency previously held by Whalar Group, in what the seller's co-founder is describing as the largest creator economy transaction ever recorded. The deal — terms undisclosed — drops one of the most significant signals yet that enterprise consulting firms are moving aggressively to own the infrastructure layer of the influencer marketing business, with direct consequences for traditional agencies and talent representation. Key Takeaways: * Whalar has managed over $600 million in creator campaigns — that's the asset base Accenture Song is acquiring. * The closest comparable deal, Publicis Groupe's acquisition of influencer agency Influential in 2024, was reported at $500 million; Accenture is claiming Whalar cleared that benchmark. * Accenture Song has now made three creator/engagement acquisitions in two years: Unlimited (2024), Superdigital (2025), and now Whalar (2026). * Whalar co-CEOs Emma Harman and Jo Cronk are staying in their roles post-acquisition — a deliberate retention signal for creator relationships. * Whalar's 170+ employees across the U.S., U.K., Ireland, Germany, and Spain move into Accenture Song; Whalar Group retains independent operations of Sixteenth, Foam, Moby Ventures, The Lighthouse, and The Business of Creativity. * Clients including the NFL, IKEA, and Uber are part of the book Accenture is absorbing. * Consulting firms' access to Fortune 500 CMO relationships gives them a structurally different pitch than standalone talent agencies — one that's difficult for traditional representation models to match. For agents, managers, and showrunners tracking where brand dollars flow, this deal is a map of where the creator economy is consolidating. Accenture Song now has the infrastructure, AI tooling, and enterprise access to compete directly with traditional holding companies for influencer marketing budgets — and traditional agencies are caught in the middle. Watch for WPP and IPG to accelerate their own creator M&A in response. Subscribe to The Option for daily updates on the business behind the business.

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jakson Episode 72: Reed Hastings Exits Netflix After 29 Years kansikuva

Episode 72: Reed Hastings Exits Netflix After 29 Years

Reed Hastings is officially out of Netflix. This week's annual shareholder vote confirmed Jay Hoag as the new board chairman, ending Hastings' 29-year run with the company he co-founded. For studio heads, agents, and anyone doing business with Netflix at scale, this is a governance shift worth understanding — the post-founder era at the world's dominant streaming platform is now formally underway. Key Takeaways: * Jay Hoag, a longtime Netflix investor and board member, was elected chairman at the June 2026 annual shareholder meeting. * Hastings' board term expired without renewal — he did not stand for re-election, closing a 29-year chapter. * Netflix is projected to hit $50 billion in revenue in 2026, with approximately 325 million global subscribers. * Hastings retains roughly 1% of Netflix stock, currently valued at over $2 billion. * Hastings has directed hundreds of millions of dollars toward Powder Mountain resort in Utah and political philanthropy since stepping back in 2023, including a $2 million donation to Newsom's Proposition 50. * Co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters now run the company without any founder presence on the board for the first time in Netflix's history. * Netflix's prior unsuccessful bid for Warner Bros. Discovery — before WBD moved toward a Paramount takeover — signals an M&A appetite that Sarandos and Peters now own outright. The Sarandos-Peters co-CEO structure was always Hastings' design. With the architect fully off the board, the institutional conservatism a founder provides is no longer structurally present. For anyone negotiating with Netflix — on talent deals, output agreements, or potential acquisitions — the risk profile of who's sitting across the table has quietly shifted. Watch how Netflix moves on M&A in the next twelve months. That's where the post-Hastings posture will become readable. Subscribe to The Option for daily updates on the business behind the business.

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jakson Episode 71: Ackman Exits Universal Music After Rejected Bid kansikuva

Episode 71: Ackman Exits Universal Music After Rejected Bid

Bill Ackman's Pershing Square has exited its entire €1.42 billion ($1.65 billion) stake in Universal Music Group — just days after UMG's board rejected his takeover bid. The speed of the exit, the scale of the position, and what UMG's rejection signals about governance and deal leverage at the world's largest recorded music company are all consequential for anyone doing business with or around UMG. Key Takeaways: * Ackman's full exit totaled €1.42 billion (~$1.65 billion), liquidated within days of the takeover rejection — not weeks. * UMG is Amsterdam-listed following its spin from Vivendi, making it more accessible to activist and financial buyers than it was under Vivendi's structure. * The board's rejection of a $1.65B committed position signals that UMG leadership is not seeking a financial partner to reshape the business from the outside. * Ackman's rapid exit likely reflects a Pershing Square thesis built on control, not passive minority ownership — a meaningful tell about the original intent. * For talent reps and label executives: a company that just defended its independence at this scale is unlikely to soften deal posture in the near term. * The cleared float creates a watch-item — whether institutional passive holders or a new named strategic/activist backfill the position over the next 2-3 quarters. * Sovereign wealth funds and tech platforms with content ambitions operate on different logic than Pershing; Ackman's exit doesn't close consolidation interest, it potentially invites a different class of bidder. UMG's swift rejection and Ackman's equally swift exit redraws the landscape around the most powerful company in recorded music. The next meaningful signal is who — if anyone — moves into that vacated shareholder position, and at what size. That's the thread to watch heading into Q3 2026. Subscribe to The Option for daily updates on the business behind the business.

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jakson Episode 70: Peacock's First Profit, Six Years In kansikuva

Episode 70: Peacock's First Profit, Six Years In

Six years after launch, Peacock is turning a profit. NBCUniversal Media Chairman Matt Strauss confirmed at the Evercore Global TMT Conference that the streamer will reach profitability in Q2 2026 — a harder claim than Comcast's CFO made just weeks ago. For studio heads, agents, and producers tracking where the streaming power map is shifting, this is a structurally significant moment: the last major streamer to bleed is finally in the black, and the strategy Comcast chose to get there has real implications for how they behave as a buyer, a partner, and a competitor going forward. Key Takeaways: * Matt Strauss confirmed Peacock will be profitable in Q2 2026 (April–June), going further than CFO Jason Armstrong's April guidance of merely "approaching profitability." * Peacock launched in spring 2020 with a break-even target of 2023 — profitability is arriving roughly 3 years late, after COVID disruption and delayed distribution deals with Roku and Amazon. * Peacock sits at 46 million subscribers and remains U.S.-only; Strauss explicitly framed domestic-only as a strategic choice, citing highest domestic ARPU, ad rates, and video share. * 25% of NBA viewers on Peacock engaged with vertical video during games; 20% of vertical video viewers during the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics in February went on to watch long-form content — a measurable retention signal. * Disney+, Paramount+, and Max all turned profitable before Peacock; Netflix has been cash-flow positive for several years — Peacock was the last major streamer to cross the threshold. * Comcast's Q2 earnings report, expected in late July, will be the first chance to put hard numbers on Peacock's profitability rather than forward guidance. * NBCU is integrating Peacock viewer data with Comcast subscriber data to optimize relationships with customers who use both — a bundling and retention play with direct revenue implications. The Q2 earnings report is the next hard checkpoint. If Peacock's margin is meaningful — not just technically positive — it reframes Comcast's negotiating position across distribution, sports rights, and any M&A conversations. For talent and their reps, a profitable Peacock is a more aggressive commissioning buyer. For everyone else, it's a reminder that the domestic-only bet, widely criticized, may have been the right one. Subscribe to The Option for daily updates on the business behind the business.

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