The Option
Ari Emanuel and Mark Shapiro are buying personal minority stakes (each under 10%) in the Las Vegas Raiders, valued at $9.9 billion in this round of investment. The deals are expected to close by the end of May. For agents, showrunners, and studio executives, this move sharpens a fundamental question: when the two most powerful men in talent representation are also NFL owners — alongside Silver Lake's Egon Durban, who controls both TKO and WME Group — where exactly does representation end and principal interest begin? Also today: Paramount is targeting July 15 to close its $110 billion merger with Warner Bros. Discovery, ahead of the official Q3 deadline, and Bari Weiss's CBS News overhaul is heading into a summer that could be reshaped entirely by that deal's outcome. Key Takeaways: * Emanuel and Shapiro's Raiders stakes are personal investments — explicitly not connected to TKO, WME Group, or MARI — and are each under 10%, expected to close by end of May. * The Raiders' valuation in this investment round is $9.9 billion, per CNBC; other buyers include Egon Durban (targeting 22%), Michael Meldman (targeting 12.9%), Tom Brady (5%), Michael Dell, and Joseph Baratta of Blackstone. * Silver Lake's Egon Durban controls both TKO and WME Group, meaning the firm with the largest footprint across sports entertainment and talent representation is now also the largest outside investor in the Raiders. * Paramount is internally targeting July 15 to close the $110 billion Paramount–Warner Bros. Discovery merger, ahead of the official September 30 Q3 deadline; UK regulatory review is just beginning, and a state AG coalition led by California's Rob Bonta is actively weighing legal action. * If the Paramount–WBD deal doesn't close by September 30, WBD shareholders receive a $0.25 per share ticking fee per quarter; a regulatory failure triggers a $7 billion termination fee from Paramount. * Paramount Skydance shares are down 24.9% year to date and 36% over the past six months as of Tuesday's close at $9.90. * Bari Weiss is expected to execute major changes at 60 Minutes and CBS Mornings this summer, but her role in a combined CBS News/CNN org chart remains unresolved — CNN executives have no visibility into Ellison's plans, and Paramount issued a rare on-the-record statement this week defending her mandate. The Raiders ownership news is the most visible signal yet that Emanuel and Shapiro are building a personal sports portfolio that runs parallel to — and increasingly intersects with — the businesses they operate professionally. For anyone whose career touches WME, TKO, the NFL, or the combined Paramount-WBD entity, the summer of 2026 is a period of active repositioning. Watch the NFL owners' vote on the Raiders stakes, watch the July 15 merger target, and watch who Weiss installs in a linear programming deputy role before fall. Subscribe to The Option for daily updates on the business behind the business.
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