Taylor Sheridan has set a new studio home at NBCUniversal under a pact valued at more than $1 billion, a move that reshapes the talent landscape while leaving his current television slate in place at Paramount until his existing TV agreement expires in late 2028. According to TheWrap, the arrangement splits timing by medium: a film deal begins in 2026 and runs eight years, while television starts after his Paramount term, with the overall guarantee exceeding $1 billion.
People familiar with the transition say the strategy allows Sheridan to keep delivering contracted series to Paramount while standing up new features at Universal Film Entertainment Group before pivoting television to NBCUniversal at the end of the decade. Reporting indicates the pact was long in the works and represents a significant raise over his prior overall, with the figure described as potentially reaching the ten-figure threshold. Deadline has similarly framed the package as approaching $1 billion.
Industry context helps explain the timing. Sheridan’s shows helped anchor Paramount’s streaming and linear schedules, yet rights to the flagship Yellowstone library already sit at Peacock under a preexisting licensing arrangement, a dynamic that made NBCUniversal a logical beneficiary of any future expansion. Trade analyses note his television obligations with Paramount run through 2028, after which new series would be developed for NBCUniversal platforms, while feature development can commence sooner under the film-start provision.
The deal also arrives amid broader consolidation and cost discipline across media, with studios concentrating spending on bankable creators who can deliver multiple franchises across platforms. Coverage of the agreement points to continued collaboration with producing partners at 101 Studios and outlines a handoff period designed to minimize disruption to ongoing productions while giving NBCUniversal a runway to plan franchises and windowing. While neither company outlined project lists, the structure signals a pipeline that begins with films and later folds in television, positioning NBCUniversal to capitalize on Sheridan’s brand of contemporary Westerns and law-and-order dramas as it competes for subscribers and box office share.















































