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Television’s most prolific creator Taylor Sheridan is leaving Paramount for a lucrative five-year film and television deal with NBCUniversal that will begin in January 2029, marking a seismic shift in Hollywood’s ongoing talent wars.hollywoodreporter
The move represents one of the entertainment industry’s biggest talent acquisitions since Skydance’s $8.4 billion takeover of Paramount Global in August 2025. Sheridan, the mastermind behind the “Yellowstone” franchise and hits like “Tulsa King” and “Lioness,” will transition to NBCUniversal once his current Paramount television contract expires at the end of 2028.darkhorizons
The departure signals a dramatic power shift following Skydance’s acquisition of Paramount Global. According to industry sources, Sheridan grew increasingly dissatisfied with new leadership at Paramount, particularly after many executives he had worked with were dismissed or sidelined. Incoming streaming head Cindy Holland reportedly questioned budgets for Sheridan’s shows, which can reach $20 million per episode.reddit
“This is a shocker, underscoring the high stakes and intensity of the new era in the talent wars,” Deadline reported, comparing the move to NBCUniversal’s recent acquisition of “Stranger Things” creators Matt and Ross Duffer from Netflix.imdb
David Glasser and his production company 101 Studios, which produces Sheridan’s entire slate of shows, will also transition to NBCUniversal under a first-look deal beginning in March 2026.hollywoodreporter
Sheridan’s programming has been the backbone of Paramount+ streaming strategy, generating an estimated $263 million in subscriber revenue since “Mayor of Kingstown” premiered in 2021. His recent series “Landman” became Paramount+’s most-watched original series with 35 million global viewers, surpassing even “Yellowstone’s” debut numbers.parrotanalytics
However, Paramount will retain ownership of existing franchises including “Yellowstone,” “1883,” “1923,” and other Sheridan-created properties. The creator will need to develop entirely new intellectual property for NBCUniversal.hollywoodreporter
NBCUniversal’s entertainment chief Donna Langley has positioned the studio as a filmmaker-friendly destination, home to directors like Christopher Nolan, Jordan Peele, and Steven Spielberg. Sheridan, who received an Oscar nomination for writing “Hell or High Water,” was reportedly drawn to this creative environment.worldofreel
The transition reflects broader industry consolidation as media companies compete for top-tier talent amid evolving streaming economics and changing viewer habits.