‘South Park’ Showdown 2.0: Paramount Global Strikes Back At Warner Bros Discovery In $50M Countersuit Over Streaming Rights

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UPDATED with HBO Max statement: They haven’t quite killed Kenny, but Paramount Global tonight took a hard swipe at Warner Bros Discovery over South Park.

In a bold jab back at the David Zaslav-run company’s $200 million lawsuit over steaming rights to the long-running cartoon satire created by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the Shari Redstone-run conglomerate just filed a $50 million-plus countersuit in New York – and they left nothing in the corner.

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“Through this Counterclaim, South Park Studios seeks to recover all of the unpaid license fees, totaling more than $52 million to date, based upon WarnerMedia’s blatant breaches of the Term Sheet,” the response and counterclaims document says. “In addition, based on WarnerMedia’s material breaches of contract, and its indications that it will continue to withhold the $225+ million in license fees still owed for the rest of the five-year term, South Park Studios is entitled to a declaratory judgment confirming the parties’ rights and obligations under the Term Sheet,” the dense 59-page filing adds (read it here).

“Further, WarnerMedia has given clear indications that it will not pay any of the remaining $225+ million in license fees still owed for the rest of the five-year term of the Term Sheet,” the document goes on to say. “Paramount Global certainly has not agreed that WarnerMedia can continue to disregard its contractual obligations in this manner.”

And, as funny as South Park can be and corporate dust-ups can appear, this clearly is no laughing matter — especially as WDB prepares to launch its revamped Max streaming service next month.

RELATED: Max Launch Date, Programs, Pricing & All You Need To Know About Warner Bros Discovery’s Rebranded Streamer

“Warner Bros. Discovery has indefensibly refused to pay more than $50 million it owes for South Park content that it has undisputedly received, and which HBO Max continues to air and exploit,” a Paramount Global spokesperson told Deadline on Wednesday after the counterclaims and a rudimentary motion to dismiss hit the New York Supreme Court docket.

“Warner Bros. Discovery’s argument that Paramount Global was required to deliver additional South Park content is baseless and wholly unsupported by the parties’ agreement,” the exec added. “Furthermore, it certainly does not justify WBD’s refusal to pay for immensely valuable content all of which it has received and from which it continues to profit.”

An HBO Max spokesperson told Deadline late Wednesday: “We believe that Paramount and South Park Digital Studios embarked on a multi-year scheme of unfair trade practices and deception, flagrantly and repeatedly breaching our contract, which clearly gave HBO Max exclusive streaming rights to the existing library and new content from the popular animated comedy South Park.”

A.K.A.: See you in court.

In the meantime, let’s talk some fairly recent history.

In 2019, the then-AT&T-owned WarnerMedia jacked up its streaming inventory with a hard-fought $500 million deal to snag the 23-season past run of South Park plus several new seasons. That agreement for around 300 episodes, which were delivered almost immediately, was to be paid in installments of about $25 million a quarter – which it was, up until earlier this year.

Throwing around accusations of “illicit conspiracy,” and “verbal trickery” on the part of the Comedy Central parent company, WBD asserted that in 2021 Paramount Global, Parker and Stone’s South Park Digital Studios and MTV Entertainment Studios drilled a big hole in the big-bucks 2019 agreement that would permit the Bob Bakish-led gang keep the linear and streaming rights new seasons of South Park and around 14 “original movies” based on the sitcom.

That $900 million “f*ck you-money” deal that ViacomCBS struck with Parker and Stone two years ago put a lot more Cartman in the pipeline, and a lot more South Park coming down the line for the burgeoning Paramount+ streamer.

Now, nothing in the 2019 agreement specifies how many episodes each future South Park season could or could not be, well-informed sources tell us. However, at this point, you have South Park on two separate streaming platforms — both trying to gain a solid foothold in a very crowded market, and both looking at trying to squeeze more premium content out of tighter budgets.

So, whatever is or is not in that much-celebrated deal of four years ago, expect to see a lot of lawyers make a lot of hay and — a lot of money. And that could make a great episode of South Park, on one streamer or another.

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