Less than a year ago, Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav stood up and announced that the company was putting “HBO” back on its streaming service. After two years of stripping the prestige brand out of the name — rebranding as simply “Max” in a move that baffled just about everyone in the industry — Zaslav called HBO “the brand that represents the highest quality in media” and said it was coming back.
This week, a Wall Street analyst said it’ll be gone by the end of next year.
“We expect HBO Max to essentially be shut down at the end of 2027,” MoffettNathanson analyst Robert Fishman wrote in a research note this week.
‘We expect HBO Max to essentially be shut down at the end of 2027 ‘ — MoffettNathanson analyst Robert Fishman in a research note today…
— Brian Steinberg (@bristei) March 6, 2026
Paramount won the bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery last week, with the WBD board declaring David Ellison’s $31-per-share offer superior to the deal it had already struck with Netflix, and Netflix declining to counter and walking away. The months-long process that started with Netflix announcing an $82.7 billion deal in December and ran through round after round of Paramount’s hostile takeover bids ended with Ellison owning Warner Bros. and HBO, and with the question of what happens next.
His answer on the streaming side, which he laid out for analysts on Monday, is to merge HBO Max and Paramount+ into a single platform. He also said “HBO should stay HBO” and committed to letting the brand operate with some level of independence, without spelling out how a brand operating independently also gets absorbed into a combined app under Paramount’s umbrella. Nobody asked him to square that circle, and the answer isn’t coming until the deal clears regulatory approval anyway.
That said, a merged Paramount+/HBO Max is one app with one name, and it seems likely that the reborn HBO Max name is on its way out once more.
About Sam Neumann
Since the beginning of 2023, Sam has been a staff writer for Awful Announcing and The Comeback. A 2021 graduate of Temple University, Sam is a Charlotte native, who currently calls Greenville, South Carolina his home. He also has a love/hate relationship with the New York Mets and Jets.
Recent Posts
TSN moves off VCU-UNC NCAA Tournament finish with 2.4 seconds left to show curling
"This is basically telling us Canadians to subscribe to TSN+."
High Point student radio announcers lose their minds in upset win over Wisconsin
"THIS IS NOT REAL, JIM! THIS IS NOT REAL!"
Linear TV tops streaming again after Nielsen methodology change
An unreleased report from Nielsen will find that linear television accounted for more viewing than streaming, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal.
ESPN unveils MLB schedule with return to weeknight games
While ESPN’s schedule is certainly more fragmented than in previous years, the focus on summer makes sense for both MLB and ESPN.
Stephen A. Smith blames FCC for preventing him from presidential run
"You want me to run? Fix it."
NFL Sunday Ticket moving to streaming-only model for businesses
As has continued to be the case, it's not clear that the streaming revolution will meaningfully benefit the sports-watching experience.