Paramount Global will face shareholders virtually on July 2 in its first annual meeting since agreeing to merge with David Ellison’s Skydance Media, a deal still awaiting regulatory sign-off and a shareholder vote. The proxy filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 2 discloses three fresh board nominees—attorney Mary Boies, venture capitalist Charles Ryan and former judge Roanne Sragow Licht—chosen to lift the shrunken board back to seven directors ahead of the pivotal gathering.
The July webcast replaces last year’s in-person session and lands as Paramount’s special committee presses the Federal Communications Commission to clear the $8.4 billion transaction, which would transfer CBS broadcast licences to the Skydance-controlled successor company. FCC staff began a public-interest review in April and signalled that an unresolved news-distortion complaint against CBS could weigh on their recommendation, injecting new uncertainty into the timetable.
Long-standing controller Shari Redstone has already agreed to sell her National Amusements stake to Ellison investors as phase one of the complex two-step merger, but Class A shareholders must still bless the combination. Analysts at Bloomberg note that Paramount’s $14 billion debt load and continued streaming losses make the cash infusion embedded in the Skydance plan attractive despite potential ratings downgrades to junk status.
Directors will also contend with a $20 billion lawsuit brought by President Donald Trump, who accuses CBS News of deceptively editing a 2024 “60 Minutes” interview with Vice-President Kamala Harris. Negotiators have floated settlements in the $15–25 million range, though Reuters reports no agreement is imminent, meaning the reconstituted board could inherit the dispute.
Paramount’s proxy warns that legal liabilities or an adverse FCC ruling could scuttle the merger, but Variety says management sees the new slate as a signal of stability while regulators deliberate. Investors appear cautiously optimistic: Yahoo Finance data show the stock up 6 percent since the meeting date was announced, retracing some of the ground lost when talks first leaked last year.
If approved, the combined company would unite Paramount’s century-old studio and CBS network with Skydance’s production engine behind the “Top Gun” and “Mission: Impossible” franchises, ending the Redstone family’s decades-long control while injecting new capital into streaming and theatrical pipelines.