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Paramount Wins Warner Bros Battle, Purim, Qobuz Goes to War on AI, Robert Duvall, and Empire Ears Goes Kaput: Editor’s Round-up

Robert Duvall dies at 95 as Hollywood shifts, Qobuz fights AI music, Paramount takes Warner, and the industry braces for what comes next.

Paramount, Warner Bros. Discovery, Qobuz, Empire Ears

At sundown on Monday, Purim begins; a holiday rooted in survival, marking the Jewish people’s narrow escape from annihilation in ancient Persia. The story, told in the Book of Esther, is not subtle. A Persian court insider, named Haman convinces the king that the Jews must be wiped out. A young queen named Esther risks everything, steps forward, and turns the tide. Hamantaschen for everyone and don’t even think about handing me one that isn’t filled with poppy seed.

Poppy Seed Hamantaschen

Two and a half millennia later, history has a way of sounding uncomfortably familiar.

With hostilities resuming between Israel, the United States, and the Islamic regime in Tehran, the rhetoric stopped being theoretical and the missiles started flying. As Iran’s retaliation unfolded on Sunday, a ballistic missile struck Beit Shemesh, just west of Jerusalem, and in that instant, the war was no longer a headline scrolling past. It was immediate. It was personal. I put the pen down. I stopped writing. I called family. Nine neighbours were murdered in that strike. Politics disappears when your phone starts ringing and you’re counting names.

Believe what you believe about governments and geopolitics. But no people should live under the shadow of missiles or under a regime that exports death. May the Iranian people one day live in freedom and without fear. They deserve better than this nightmare.

And yet here we are, covering Paramount swallowing Warner Bros, Qobuz drawing a line in the sand over AI, Empire Ears going dark, AMC and indie theaters fighting for oxygen. The media and hi-fi worlds keep spinning. Deals get signed. Products launch. CEOs posture. But this week is a reminder that none of it exists in a vacuum. Not the mergers. Not the music. Not the movies. Not us.

Paramount Wins Warner Bros While Netflix Walks

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For the past few months, the future of Warner Bros. Discovery was negotiated behind closed doors; over private dinners in Los Angeles, New York, and Washington, with lawyers murmuring, investors hovering, and regulators quietly keeping score. That maneuvering is over. Paramount has secured the company, with the board approving the deal late on February 26, 2026. David Ellison stayed in the fight. Netflix’s CEO chose not to counter within the allotted window rather than ignite a bidding war.

All of it unfolded under the watchful gaze of the Trump administration, where antitrust scrutiny and political leverage made clear that no media empire moves without federal gravity. Paramount won. Netflix stepped aside. Now the real battle for your wallet begins.

Control of Warner Bros. Discovery means control of one of the deepest libraries in modern entertainment — films, franchises, cable networks, news divisions, and streaming platforms that have defined multiple generations. The dollars matter. The regulators matter. The politics matter. But beneath all of that is a larger shift: power in Hollywood is consolidating fast, and the streaming hierarchy is being rewritten in real time.

Now comes the part nobody puts in the press release. HBO Max, TNT, CNN, Warner Bros. Television, DC, and a sprawl of international assets have to be folded into a single operating strategy. Tens of thousands of jobs sit under that umbrella. Overlap will be cut. Billions in costs will be slashed. Paramount has made it clear this must turn profitable quickly and before its own board starts asking hard questions. With more than $110 billion in enterprise value and obligations tied up in this ecosystem, there is no room for sentimental restructuring.

Hollywood is not easing into a new era. It’s being forced into one.

Consolidation at this scale doesn’t lead to kumbaya town halls and better consumer bundles. It leads to layoffs. Platform convergence. Redundancies circled in red ink. Expect overlap to be cut aggressively and quickly. If HBO Max survives as a standalone brand under Paramount’s roof, it will be a minor miracle. The far more likely outcome is a folding into Paramount+, some Frankenstein hybrid pitched as “value.” As for the rest of the television portfolio under the umbrella; TNT, TBS, legacy cable properties, their long-term fate is anything but secure.

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And then there’s CNN. That’s the real live wire. Owning CBS News and CNN hands one studio extraordinary influence over the tone, framing, and velocity of national news coverage. That level of concentration will not go unnoticed. CNN’s ratings are soft even on a good week. Its on-air talent is expensive. Very expensive. Does Paramount maintain two separate news divisions? Do they merge them into something unified with a very prominent “C” at the beginning? No one at CNN is sleeping particularly well right now.

It’s difficult to imagine that decision unfolding quietly or without casualties; Bari Weiss has every reason to be smiling right now, knowing that after selling The Free Press to Paramount and stepping into control at CBS News, she now holds the professional fate of many who once lined up to attack her.

The ripple effects extend to theaters. Both Netflix and Paramount made promises during the bidding process about theatrical commitments, windowing strategies, and respect for exhibition. We’ll see. The length of theatrical runs before titles shift to streaming is now a corporate lever, not a creative one. If windows shrink below three weeks, exhibitors, especially chains like AMC are going to feel it fast. Theaters are already operating on thin margins. Compress the window and you accelerate the decline.

Then there’s physical media — the part enthusiasts still care about. As buyers of discs, many of us felt marginally safer with Paramount controlling Warner’s catalog. But let’s not kid ourselves. What was once a multi-billion-dollar category is now a thin, diminished version of itself. Outside of specialty labels like The Criterion Collection, Arrow Video, and Kino Lorber, mainstream studio releases in 2026 are lucky to hit low six figures in unit sales. Low. Six. Figures. For companies the size of Paramount and Warner, that’s a rounding error tolerated, not prioritized.

Talent is the final pressure point. Do we really believe someone like James Gunn who has been openly critical of President Trump — remains comfortably in place at DC when Ellison did not win this fight without political gravity on his side? Maybe. But Hollywood loyalty lasts exactly as long as leverage does. Don’t be shocked if Gunn finds his way back to Marvel or under the Disney umbrella where the corporate alignment is cleaner.

This is what monumental change actually looks like. Jobs will disappear. Platforms will merge. Newsrooms will consolidate. Theatrical windows will compress. Physical media will shrink further into boutique territory. And consumers? They won’t be the primary beneficiaries. Power has concentrated. Now we find out what that concentration costs and don’t expect the bill to be lower than what you’re paying now.

Qobuz Cracks Down on AI Content to Protect Artists

AI music is no longer some nerdy weird science experiment in a lab. It is a content factory running three shifts before its workers head out to Waffle House for eggs, grits, and fisticuffs.

Streaming platforms are getting buried under machine generated tracks. Endless ambient playlists by artists who have never seen a sunrise. Jazz trios that have never boozed it up and fought backstage over a set list. Singer songwriters with flawless pitch and the emotional range of a toaster. Upload by the truckload. Tweak the metadata. Scoop up fractions of a penny at industrial scale.

If that sounds familiar, it should. It is basically the subplot of Office Space. Skim a microscopic amount from each transaction and hope nobody notices until the money adds up. Except this time it is not Initech. And there are no conjugal visits. It is the global music ecosystem. And the people getting screwed over are real musicians trying to pay the rent and afford health insurance. Spotify has been playing whack a mole with this stuff for a while now and they’re not winning. When the system rewards sheer output, you get a flood. Not art. A flood. Quality gets shoved to the curb and the consumer gets stuck listening to garbage they really didn’t want to pay for.

That is the mess Qobuz is stepping into.

Earlier this month Qobuz rolled out its AI Charter, which was easy to applaud and just as easy to ignore. Instead of leaving it as a mission statement, they built a proprietary detection system to scan the catalog and flag music that is one hundred percent AI generated. Not “possibly.” Not “we think so.” Tagged. Labeled. Out in the open. Those identifiers will begin showing up across the apps in the coming months so you actually know what you are listening to.

Qobuz Music Streaming on multiple devices

Qobuz is also tightening the screws on fraud. Impersonation attempts. Streaming patterns that look like they were engineered in a basement server farm in Tehran. The company is expanding its detection tools so if something smells off, it does not get the benefit of the doubt. It gets flagged, refused, or removed. And those fake streams do not count toward royalty reports. Good luck getting Spotify to offer up something like that.

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On the editorial side, Qobuz is keeping actual humans in the driver’s seat. Real editors picking Albums of the Week. Real teams building playlists and Qobuzissimes. No content mill dumping twenty thousand tracks into the hopper and hoping the algorithm gets bored enough to promote one. The Discover page will lean on curated data from in-house teams and trusted music labels.

And here is the line that will make certain tech executives roll their eyes. Qobuz says it will not generate audio for its catalog. It will not replace human curation with AI systems and not use customer data to train external AI models. That almost feels like open rebellion against the Emperor.

Why should you care?

Because the money is not theoretical. A 2024 CISAC study projected that by 2028 music creators could lose around ten billion euros over five years due to AI competition and unlicensed use of their work. At the same time, generative AI companies could be pulling in billions annually from that same ecosystem. None of that sounds like a win for the artists who create real music and don’t be surprised when that becomes an even uglier fight for screenwriters, actors, and cinematographers.

The WGA and SAG have already gone on strike to fight against these practices and if you think studios undergoing acquisition and consolidation will continue to spend hundreds of millions on individual films when they can produce 10 for the same price using AI — you’re about to find out that profits matter more than quality.

For artists, this is survival. If machine output floods playlists and crowds out real musicians, visibility collapses and compensation shrinks even further. For listeners, it is about knowing whether the song you love was written by someone with rent due or generated by a prompt and a power bill.

Qobuz Deputy CEO, Georges Fornay explained that “the hyperinflation of AI content is creating distrust across the industry.” He is not wrong. When everything looks and sounds polished, authenticity becomes the differentiator.

Qobuz is betting some of you still care who made the music. In a business chasing endless content like it is oxygen, backing humans is slower and messier. You didn’t sign up for synthetic background noise pretending to be art so it will be interesting to see if the rest of the market follows or bends the knee.

Empire Ears Shuts Down After 10 Years in the High End IEM Market

Empire Ears, a name that meant something in the boutique, high-end IEM world — is gone. After a decade of carving out a reputation for sonic excellence and obsessive craftsmanship, the brand quietly shut its doors on February 27, citing health challenges, rising costs, and an increasingly inhospitable market. For enthusiasts who watched Empire’s cables and custom monitors become fixtures on enthusiast wish lists, this is not a footnote. It’s a sign.

empire-ears-closed-2026

And let’s be honest: not all is well in the high-end wired IEM market.

Brands like FiiO, Campfire Audio, and other smaller Asian boutiques are still shipping products and carving out niches, but Empire’s departure forces a hard question: have we hit saturation with ultra-premium wired IEMs in a world that has moved on to wireless? Four-figure cables and hand-crafted shells feel increasingly like boutique curiosities next to the convenience and everyday usability of wireless. The market that once justified artisanal attention has shrunk, shifted, and in some corners evaporated.

That tension will be on full display this weekend at CanJam NYC 2026, and yes, we will be there covering it. If wired IEMs still have gas in the tank, this is where the next spark of innovation should show up: new driver tech, refreshed tuning philosophies, perhaps unexpected form factors that justify carrying wires in the age of Bluetooth dominance. We already know that one of our favorite European headphone and IEM manufacturers plans to unveil a new $1,000 wired IEM this weekend, and it will be very interesting to see how the market reacts.

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But the departure of Empire cannot be ignored. It underscores a larger industry truth that many in audio enthusiast circles are quietly wrestling with: excellence does not guarantee survival. Passion does not pay rent. And even the most covetable products can find themselves adrift when consumer priorities shift faster than product cycles.

Smells Like Victory

robert-dubal-movie-scene

Robert Duvall died on February 15 at 95, and with him goes the kind of actor Hollywood does not turn out anymore.

Duvall did not arrive in Hollywood fully formed. He earned it the old way. He started on stage in 1952, grinding through summer stock at the Gateway Playhouse in Bellport on Long Island, taking a year off to serve in the United States Army before returning to the boards. Those early contacts opened the door to television in the 1960s, with appearances on serious dramas like The Defenders, Playhouse 90, and Armstrong Circle Theatre, where actors were expected to act, not pose.

He made his Broadway debut in Wait Until Dark in 1966. More than a decade later, already a film star, he went back to the stage for David Mamet’s American Buffalo in 1977 and earned a Drama Desk nomination. That tells you something. He did not see theater as a stepping stone. It was part of the craft.

His film debut came quietly but memorably as Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird in 1962. No grand speech. Barely any lines. Just presence. Then the run started. Bullitt. True Grit. M*A*S*H. THX 1138. He slipped into supporting roles and made them stick. You might not have walked into the theater for Robert Duvall in those early years, but you walked out remembering him.

Everything changed with The Godfather. Tom Hagen. Quiet consigliere. The man in the room who did not need to raise his voice because he already understood the temperature. It was a supporting role that felt like a lead. Duvall did that a lot. He made space feel heavier. He made silence do the talking.

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Apocalypse Now is the obvious landmark. Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore, sunburned and unhinged, delivering lines about napalm with a grin that told you everything about war and madness in a single breath. But go deeper and you see the range that defined him. The Apostle, which he wrote and directed, was raw and fearless. Tender Mercies earned him an Academy Award and showed how much power he could summon by barely moving at all. Lonesome Dove on television turned him into Augustus McCrae, all warmth and steel, reminding Hollywood that the small screen could still carry epic performances if you put the right actor in the saddle.

He was also a better dancer than anyone remembers. Watch him in Tender Mercies or The Apostle. Loose hips. Total commitment. No vanity. He moved like a man who did not care who was watching. He understood rhythm. Not just musical rhythm. Emotional rhythm. Scene rhythm. He could charm you in one beat and terrify you in the next.

Duvall belonged to the old guard. The Clint Eastwood school. The Al Pacino and Gene Hackman generation. Actors who showed up prepared, knew their lines, respected the craft, and did not spend their days refreshing social feeds to see how the discourse was trending. He was not shy about his political views. He did not tailor them for applause. He also did not make them the centerpiece of his career. The work came first.

That is the difference. Today too many performers treat acting like branding. The right cause. The right quote. The right viral moment. Duvall did not need any of that. He was about the scene. About the truth inside it. He could be gentle and disarming. He could be solemn and wounded. And when the role demanded it, he could be cold, manipulative, and downright evil without blinking.

Even late in his career he could walk into a scene and own it. In Thank You for Smoking, he played tobacco tycoon Captain, half mischievous uncle, half corporate warlord, dancing around the moral hypocrisy of Washington with a grin and a glass in hand. 

Every film or television project he joined improved simply because he was in it. He raised the standard in the room. Directors trusted him. Co-stars leaned on him. Audiences believed him.

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He was not flashy. He was not desperate to be liked. He was a professional in the purest sense of the word. And in an industry that increasingly rewards noise over depth, Robert Duvall felt like something rarer each year. A craftsman. A grown up. A cut above what too often passes for acting today.

We will not see many more like him.

7 Comments

7 Comments

  1. Anton

    March 3, 2026 at 1:09 am

    While some might bristle at your inclusion of the world outside of hi-fi and home theater in your weekly roundups, I think it puts it all in perspective. Not being Jewish, I knew nothing about the holiday you referenced and the crossover with the war that just started was quite shocking to read. Tragic loss of life in Israel.

    I have zero faith in the Ellison master plan and I suspect prices will skyrocket to pay for it all and I would agree that the physical media side of it is so small that only videophiles and film fans will care about this.

    I read today that Paramount promised theater operators 45 days for new releases before they land on streaming. That sounds reasonable. If a movie can’t make money over 6+ weeks — it’s never making money.

    Qobuz and the AI thing is sad. Why bother paying for Spotify if they allow this BS.

    Duvall was brilliant. Your obit was better than the one in the Times. Well done.

  2. Jim

    March 3, 2026 at 3:47 am

    A small addendum: the (tragic) loss of life in Israel was the direct result of retaliation against massive US/Israeli strikes, not least the one that killed more than 100 girls at a school in southern Iran. As always, civilians on all sides bear the cost of their safely-bunkered leaders’ hubris.

    • Ian White

      March 3, 2026 at 3:33 pm

      The deaths of any innocent civilians in war is a tragedy, but you left out the fact that the school in Iran was physically connected to an IRGC Naval base that was hit by the USAF. We’ve seen this before from Hamas and Hezbollah putting their missile launchers and people in civilian areas. The neighbourhood in Beit Shemesh had no military facilities. It was a deliberate attempt to murder civilians. In a neighbourhood where 20 of my relatives live.

      IW

  3. David

    March 3, 2026 at 8:51 pm

    Ian,

    Thanks for the continuing education and for your continued openness in regard to your faith and its relevance to your perspective, which shows clearly in your writing. Will the warfare, hatred, and sorrow never cease in that part of the world?

    Wonderful tribute to Robert Duvall. We just started watching Lonesome Dove this week. Duvall and Tommy Lee Jones don’t just act out their respective roles. They are two old-west former lawmen living out their lives in front of a television camera. Speaking of cameras, my son noticed that the Amazon stream was in wide screen format and said that the production surely would have been intended for viewing on a 4:3 screen. Sure enough, in one of the shots where the cattle are herded across a river you can see on the left of the screen a cameraman (wearing shorts with his camera on a tripod) in the shade of a tree on the far side of the river. We got a chuckle out of that one.

    David

    • Ian White

      March 4, 2026 at 1:44 am

      David,

      It’s a very hard place to live. Making “Aliyah” permanently has been a family issue for years. My eldest is moving there to be with my future son in-law while he finishes graduate school and my family has definitely given at the office more than once since the 1920s. I’m named after a deceased IDF tank commander. I actually think this moment in time might be a huge step forward for the region if it ends the way it needs to end. Take the regime out in Tehran and let the Iranian people regain their country and freedom and it’s ballgame over for Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. Israel would be in a much better position to make a Palestinian state in parts of the West Bank and Gaza a reality. Even a hardcore Likudnik like myself could get behind that.

      Israel is like no other place on the planet. I hope there is a CanJam Tel Aviv at some point. Ethan O. who runs the shows lives in Israel and he’s a great person. Music is a deep part of the culture in Israel. Almost as much as food. And we Jews love to eat.

      Duvall was so rare. I can’t think of any actors still alive who come close to his gravitas. DeNiro has become a nutcase and Pacino doesn’t get any great roles anymore. Daniel Day-Lewis retired so Duvall was the last of his kind.

      IW

  4. J.B.

    March 5, 2026 at 12:23 pm

    Where’s ORT? Over at Headfi we think he’s no longer with us as no sign of him in months. Miss his comments there and we never saw the much promised column here. He was controversial so thats probably why.

    • Ian White

      March 5, 2026 at 2:33 pm

      J.B.

      I’ve had the same bad feeling for awhile. I wrote him a few months back and no response which was very strange for him. I know he had surgery but nothing since. He submitted something to me but it wasn’t complete. I met him in person a few times and he was a lovely guy.

      IW

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