‘South Park’ creators reach $1.5 billion streaming deal with Paramount


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Summary

South Park deal

Trey Parker and Matt Stone, creators of "South Park," finalized a $1.5 billion, five-year deal with Paramount for streaming rights to the show, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Streaming and licensing

Paramount originally licensed streaming rights to Warner Bros. Discovery, allowing the show to appear on HBO Max until that deal ended in June.

Corporate merger impact

According to Variety, initial negotiations included a proposed 10-year, $3 billion deal, but Skydance's proposed acquisition of Paramount complicated and ultimately reduced the agreement.


Full story

Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the creators of “South Park,” have struck a $1.5 billion deal with Paramount for streaming rights of the beloved show, according to the Los Angeles Times. The deal was completed after tense negotiations between the parties.

The deal, worth $300 million annually for five years, will make “South Park” available on Paramount+, the company’s streaming platform.

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The agreement also calls for Parker and Stone’s production company to create 10 new episodes each year.

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“South Park” was released on Aug. 13, 1997, and has aired 328 episodes since then.

“South Park” originally aired on Paramount’s Comedy Central. Because Paramount+ was still in development, the company licensed the streaming rights to Warner Bros. Discovery, which offered the show on HBO Max. That deal expired in June.

The Times reports Paramount originally offered Warner Bros. Discovery a chance to co-license the show, but those talks broke down. The goal was to get the deal done before Wednesday, July 23, when the show’s 27th season premieres on Comedy Central.

Negotiations were complicated by the proposed purchase of Paramount by Skydance. Variety reports Paramount and Parker and Stone originally agreed to a 10-year deal worth $3 billion before Skydance reportedly balked.

The negotiations even pushed back the season 27 debut. Following the announcement of the postponement, the official South Park X account tweeted that “this merger is a s—show and it’s f—— up South Park.”

South Park valuation

Even before this deal, “South Park” was the 18th-highest-grossing television show of all time, trailing such iconic shows as “Seinfeld,” “Breaking Bad” and “The Simpsons.”

Paramount is reportedly also negotiating with Parker and Stone for a new overall deal to keep the show on Comedy Central beyond 2027. The previous deal, signed in 2021, was valued at $900 million.

That 2021 deal funded the main series as well as several made-for-streaming specials on Paramount+.

Paramount in the news

The announcement of the “South Park” deal comes amid criticism of Paramount’s decision to cancel the “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.” Paramount called the cancellation a “financial decision.”

The New York Post reported the show was losing between $40 million and $50 million each year.  Paramount reportedly pulled in $29 billion in 2024.

President Donald Trump and Colbert have frequently traded barbs, and the president celebrated Colbert’s cancellation on social media. “Go f— yourself,” Colbert responded on air. 

Paramount needs the Trump administration to approve the purchase by Skydance.

Several late-night hosts appeared on Colbert’s show Monday night in solidarity, while Jon Stewart ripped the cancellation on “The Daily Show” on Paramount’s Comedy Central.

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Why this story matters

Paramount's $1.5 billion deal for exclusive "South Park" streaming rights reflects the high stakes and shifting strategies in the streaming industry amid ongoing corporate realignments and broader media landscape changes.

Streaming rights competition

Securing exclusive streaming rights for popular content like "South Park" illustrates the intense competition among streaming platforms and how content availability drives subscriber growth.

Corporate negotiations and mergers

Negotiations between Paramount, Skydance, and the creators of "South Park," alongside the merger process, highlight the complexities and risks involved in major media mergers and business deals.

Impact on media programming

Changes to longstanding media lineups, such as the rescheduling of "South Park" and cancellation of "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," indicate the broader impact of financial and strategic decisions on content, creators and audiences.

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Synthesized coverage insights across 24 media outlets

Behind the numbers

The agreement between "South Park’s" creators and Paramount is reported to be worth $1.5 billion over five years, with $300 million per year allocated for global streaming rights. In real-world terms, this ranks among the highest streaming content deals, ensuring the show’s continued production and providing considerable revenue streams for both the creators and Paramount.

Community reaction

Many sources highlighted fans' concerns about delays and the future of "South Park" during the prolonged negotiations. Creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone expressed frustration with the process, stating it was disruptive to the show. Fans were reportedly relieved that an agreement was reached in time for the new season's premiere, which had already been postponed.

History lesson

"South Park’s" streaming rights have shifted multiple times in recent years. Previously, episodes were licensed to HBO Max, Netflix and Hulu. The ability of the creators to negotiate such high-value deals results from early contracts that secured them significant ownership stakes, demonstrating an evolution in the way television properties are valued and monetized.

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Certified balanced reporting

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame the $1.5 billion "South Park" streaming deal as a strategic cultural victory for Paramount+, emphasizing the creators’ passionate denunciation of the Paramount-Skydance merger as a “shit show” that disrupted production, thus infusing the narrative with vivid emotional language and a sense of tension.
  • Media outlets in the center de-emphasize such emotionally loaded rhetoric, depicting negotiations as “acrimonious” but primarily transactional, highlighting sublicensing complexities and delays without sensationalism.
  • Media outlets on the right, while less prominent on this topic, prescribe specific storylines "South Park" “needs to hit,” reflecting a prescriptive and culturally charged tone focused on ideological content rather than business details.

Media landscape

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24 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Trey Parker and Matt Stone have reached a $1.5 billion deal with Paramount for the global streaming rights to "South Park," bringing the show to Paramount+ in the U.S. for the first time.
  • The agreement guarantees the production of at least 10 new episodes of "South Park" each year over five years, valued at $300 million annually.
  • The deal resolves previous disputes between Parker, Stone and Paramount, aiming to prevent public relations issues as the new season premieres.
  • The new deal ensures Paramount can premiere Season 27 of "South Park" on July 23 after a two-week delay.

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Key points from the Center

  • On July 21, 2025, Paramount+ secured five-year global streaming rights for "South Park," valued at $300 million per year totaling $1.5 billion, marking U.S. availability for the first time.
  • After the HBO Max contract expired last month, Trey Parker and Matt Stone alleged interference by Jeff Shell and blamed Skydance for scuttling a $3 billion decade-long deal.
  • The agreement makes Park County produce 10 episodes annually, with a revenue-sharing venture expected to recoup nearly half the fee and underline the show’s value in the streaming wars.
  • The pact cements Parker and Stone’s status as streaming power players, restores the show internationally after last week’s pull, and patches relations ahead of Wednesday’s Season 27 premiere.
  • On July 23, Paramount+ will begin streaming "South Park" alongside Season 27’s launch, while Park County renegotiates a $900 million extension, aligning with their Comic-Con appearance.

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Key points from the Right

No summary available because of a lack of coverage.

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