Participant Closing Doors After Two Decades; Studio Was Behind Oscar Best Picture Winners ‘Green Book’ & ‘Spotlight’

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UPDATED with more details: Financier and producer Participant is shuttering after 20 years. Founder Jeff Skoll alerted staff at 10:30 a.m. PT on Tuesday, Deadline has confirmed.

Sources say Skoll did an audit of the company and wanted to pivot from entertainment. We understand that most of the 100-person staff is being let go except for core employees who will settle out remaining productions and oversee outstanding commitments to the catalog.

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Participant projects will still be released this year including Blknws, the adaptation of filmmaker, music video director, and video artist Kahlil Joseph’s video exhibition that Joseph is directing. A24 and Participant are teaming on that pic.\

Other film titles still in play include Lionsgate’s October release White Bird, starring Gillian Anderson and Helen Mirren and a follow-up from the studio’s 2017 hit Wonder; Disney+’s upcoming Out of My Mind, which premiered at Sundance earlier this year; and Gabriela Cowperthwaite’s documentary The Grab, which bowed at TIFF and hits theaters via Participant and Magnolia in June.

Participant’s m.o. was to bring content to the world that was socially conscious, read its Oscar Best Picture winners Spotlight from Open Road and Universal’s Green Book, as well as DreamWorks’ Oscar winner Lincoln. All in, Participant counts 135 films, five series, 21 Oscars — including the two Best Pictures, four Best Documentaries and two Best International Features — 18 Primetime Emmys and north of $3.3 billion in global box office.

Skoll told staffers in a staff memo today (read it below) that it was a “very difficult decision” and stems from it being “the right time for me to evaluate my next chapter and approach to tackling the pressing issues of our time.” He also mentioned that he hasn’t been involved in the day-to-day management of the studio.

Skoll is a Canadian engineer and billionaire who was the first president of eBay. He used his wealth to become a philanthropist through the Skoll Foundation and Participant. He also founded the investment firm Capricorn Investment Group.

Participant closing
Participant

Among the other movies that Participant propelled, and which sparked conversation, were Roma; An Inconvenient TruthContagionGood Night, and Good LuckWaiting for SupermanFood, Inc. and Food Inc. 2Judas and the Black MessiahRBGJust MercyAmerican FactoryFlee; and most recently Shirley. It also was behind the Emmy-winning limited series When They See Us.

Here are some examples of movies that enacted real-life change:

  • Netflix’s Roma, which fueled the passage of landmark legislation enacting labor production for 2.4 million domestic workers in Mexico in partnership with the National Domestic Workers Alliance in the U.S. and Centro de Apoyo y Capacitación para Empleadas del Hogar (CACEH) in Mexico. The United Nation’s Mexican ambassador called it “The Roma Effect.”

  • The 2020 documentary John Lewis: Good Trouble strengthened Get Out the Vote efforts in Georgia for 2020 election.

  • Spotlight re-energized a movement for institutional accountability to victims of clergy sexual abuse.

  • Participant worked with members of Congress, local officials, educators and community partners to honor the legacy of the Black Panther Party and the revolutionary work of Chairman Fred Hampton timed to the release of 2021’s Judas and the Black Messiah.

  • And the studio raised awareness and engineered a global discourse around climate change thanks to Davis Guggenheim’s Oscar-winning docu An Inconvenient Truth, featuring former Vice President Al Gore.

Variety first had the news of Participant closing down.

Here’s Skoll’s note to staff:

Dear Participant Team,

For 20 years, Participant has stood as the leading global media company focused on timely and emotionally transformational stories which speak to the world’s most pressing issues. When I founded this company in 2004, I set out to maximize impact. It was a groundbreaking philanthropic venture that was the first – and for a long time, the only – of its kind.

As many of you have heard today, after much reflection, I have made the very difficult decision to wind down company operations. This is not a step I am taking lightly, but after 20 years of groundbreaking content and world-changing impact campaigns, it is the right time for me to evaluate my next chapter and approach to tackling the pressing issues of our time.


I founded Participant with the mission of creating world-class content that inspires positive social change, prioritizing impact alongside commercial sustainability. Since then, the entertainment industry has seen revolutionary changes in how content is created, distributed and consumed.

Although I have not been active in the day-to-day management of Participant for some years, this is a farewell to one of the most gratifying ventures of my career and there is much to be proud of. We succeeded in creating something truly one-of-a-kind: an impact media company with a double bottom line. This was intentional, and by all measures, we have been incredibly successful in driving the impact we set out to create. We have achieved the highest levels of critical and commercial success. We have released 135 films and 5 series, won 21 Academy Awards, including 2 Best Pictures, 4 Best Documentaries and 2 Best International Features, won 18 Emmy Awards, earned more than $3.3 billion in global box office revenue and partnered with the greatest storytellers and changemakers of our time. Together, we have built a category-defining media pioneer with an iconic, globally recognized brand whose legacy will live on through our people, our stories and all who are inspired by them.

The global conversations sparked by films and series like “An Inconvenient Truth,” “Contagion,” “Good Night, and Good Luck.,” “Waiting for Superman,” “Lincoln,” “Spotlight,” “Roma,” “Food, Inc.,” “Judas and the Black Messiah,” “RBG,” “Just Mercy,” “American Factory” and “When They See Us” gave all of us a new roadmap to engage – earnestly and meaningfully – in the unending pursuit of a better world. It’s not an overstatement to say that Participant films changed the way we think and talk about impact-driven films, building a new lexicon for the power of transformational storytelling.

Our titles drove tangible real-world change. We got out the vote and championed investigative journalism. From the passage of landmark legislation to enact labor protections for domestic workers in Mexico, to spurring state and federal action to address forever chemicals in the United States and Europe, to driving increased global awareness and willingness to act on climate change – Participant content has made the world a safer, more just place for millions of people. 

I am so grateful to our global community of Participants, who remind me every day that even one person can change the world with the right tools and enough determination. That community includes you all – I can’t thank you enough for everything you have given to this incredible company in your time here. I’d also like to thank David for his vision, leadership and continued growth of the company over the past 8 years. Whether you have been with us for months or years, if there is one thing you take from your experience, I hope it’s that sense of purpose we have cultivated among our community.

As this chapter of Participant comes to a close, I am emboldened by the efforts of the next generation of storytellers and content creators who are building upon and reimagining this work. From philanthropists, to producers, to distributors, to social impact agencies, more and more individuals and organizations all over the world are recognizing and adopting impact models as core to their approaches. The ripple effects of Participant can be felt far and wide – what we have started together is just the beginning.

Thank you all for your hard work and unwavering dedication to Participant. I have nothing but respect and admiration for each and every one of you, and I know you will continue to carry the legacy of what we built together far into the future. 

Sincerely,

Jeff


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