Paramount Global is laying off about 800 employees, or roughly 3% of its workforce, CNBC reported on Tuesday, citing a person familiar with the matter.
The media industry has been grappling with the changing landscape of streaming gaining dominance over traditional television and the impact from the Hollywood strikes last year. A soft advertising market and economic uncertainties have added to the pressure.
The affected workers will be notified Tuesday, the report quoted Chief Executive Officer Bob Bakish as saying in an internal memo to employees.
“These adjustments will help enable us to build on our momentum and execute our strategic vision for the year ahead – and I firmly believe we have much to be excited about,” Bakish wrote in the note, CNBC reported.
Paramount Global did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Bakish had said in January the company would let go of an unspecified number of employees.
Paramount will focus its resources on its “most powerful, resonant franchises, films and series” and produce fewer local, international originals, Bakish had said. The studio is home to film franchises such as “Top Gun” and “Mission: Impossible,” as well as the hit television show “Yellowstone.”
Overall, more than 34,000 workers have been let go from 141 tech companies worldwide so far this year, according to tracking website Layoffs.fyi. Major media outlets, including the Los Angeles Times and Business Insider, have also cut jobs.
Paramount had about 24,500 full- and part-time employees in 37 countries and about 5,800 project-based staff on its payroll as of December 31, 2022, according to a regulatory filing.
The layoffs come a day after Paramount’s CBS broadcast network said the Super Bowl drew record audience of 123.4 million viewers across TV and streaming platforms, according to preliminary Nielsen ratings.
—By Samrhitha Arunasalam, Reuters
Jelentkezéshez jelentkezzen be
EGYÉB POSTS Ebben a csoportban

In May of 1995, the video game industry hosted its first major trade show. Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) was designed to shine a spotlight on games, and every major player wanted to stand in

Robinhood cofounder and CEO Vlad Tenev channeled Hollywood glamour last month in Cannes at an extravagantly produced event unveiling of the trading platform’s newest products, including a tokenize

In the mid-1990s, Hollywood began trying to envision the internet (sometimes called the “information superhighway”) and its implications for life and culture. Some of its attempts have aged better

Ever since AI chatbots arrived, it feels as if the media has been on the losing end o

Aside from the obvious, one of the best parts of the work-from-home revolution is being able to outfit your workspace as you see fit.
And if you spend your days squinting at a tiny lapto

Child psychologists tell us that around the age of five or six, children begin to seriously contemplate the world around them. It’s a glorious moment every parent recognizes—when young minds start

During January’s unprecedented wildfires in Los Angeles, Watch Duty—a digital platform providing real-time fire data—became the go-to app for tracking the unfolding disaster and is credit