The world's biggest media companies and the brands trying to steal their audience
News of the (media) world

iHeartMedia, media revenue: $6.17 billion (£4.69bn)

iHeartMedia, media revenue: $6.17 billion (£4.69bn)

Discovery Inc., media revenue: $6.5 billion (£4.94bn)

Discovery Inc., media revenue: $6.5 billion (£4.94bn)

News Corp, media revenue: $8.14 billion (£6.19bn)

News Corp, media revenue: $8.14 billion (£6.19bn)

Viacom, media revenue: $13.26 billion (£10.09bn)

Viacom, media revenue: $13.26 billion (£10.09bn)

CBS Corporation, media revenue: $13.69 billion (£10.41bn)

CBS Corporation, media revenue: $13.69 billion (£10.41bn)

Bertelsmann, media revenue: $19.9 billion (£15.15bn)

Bertelsmann, media revenue: $19.9 billion (£15.15bn)

21st Century Fox, media revenue: $30.40 billion (£23.13bn)

21st Century Fox is one of the two companies formed from the 2013 spin-off of the publishing assets of News Corporation, as founded by Rupert Murdoch (pictured with wife Jerry Hall) in 1979. It deals primarily in the film and television industries. On 27 July 2018, shareholders agreed to sell the company to The Walt Disney Company for $71.3 billion (£54.6bn).
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21st Century Fox, media revenue: $30.40 billion (£23.13bn)

AT&T Entertainment Group, media revenue: $32.9 billion (£25bn)

AT&T Entertainment Group, media revenue: $32.9 billion (£25bn)

In October 2018, WarnerMedia announced plans to launch a steaming service to compete with Amazon and Netflix by the end of the following year. One of the most successful divisions of the company is HBO, the home of Game of Thrones, Westworld, Curb Your Enthusiasm and True Detective.
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The Walt Disney Company, media revenue: $55.14 billion (£41.96bn)

The Walt Disney Company, media revenue: $55.14 billion (£41.96bn)

The Disney Channel is perhaps the best-known of Disney's TV properties, but it also owns Lucasfilm, and therefore the rights to the Star Wars franchise, Pixar, Marvel Studios, ESPN and US national TV network ABC, which broadcasts shows such as Modern Family and Grey's Anatomy. Disney also owns a 50% stake in digital media company Fusion and a 33% stake in video streaming platform Hulu.
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Comcast, media revenue: $84.53 billion (£64.32bn)

Comcast, media revenue: $84.53 billion (£64.32bn)

The majority of Comcast's media revenue comes from its NBCUniversal cable networks and broadcast TV divisions including USA Network, Syfy, CNBC, Telemundo and NBC, including its hit shows The Blacklist, Friends, Will & Grace and Saturday Night Live. The rest of Comcast's media revenue comes from its cable business, and it also owns video streaming service Hulu.
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The competition: Amazon (Amazon Prime)

Amazon.com was founded by Jeff Bezos in 1994. Now a trillion-dollar company, the e-commerce giant's Amazon Prime division makes up just a small part of that revenue...
The competition: Amazon (Amazon Prime)

With more than 100 million members worldwide, Amazon Prime gives customers access to streaming video, free shipping, Prime Day discounts and a variety of other services. Among the hit original series on Amazon Prime Video are The Man in the High Castle, Sneaky Pete, Transparent, The Marvelous Mrs Maisel, Vanity Fair (a co-production with the UK's ITV) and The Grand Tour. Amazon has also bought the rights to 20 English Premier League games in the UK from 2019.
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The competition: Facebook

Mark Zuckerberg’s Harvard social-networking website quickly developed a global internet phenomenon after it was founded in 2004. Every day, content creators around the world – from digital publishers, to public figures, to video producers – use Facebook to connect with their audiences. But Facebook is moving away from just being a social network.
The competition: Facebook

Facebook has bought the rights to screen Spanish La Liga soccer games across southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent, English Premier League soccer matches in southeast Asia and UEFA Champions League and UEFA Super Cup matches in Spanish-speaking Latin American territories from 2018 to 2021.
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The competition: Alphabet (YouTube)

The holding company that owns Google was created through a corporate restructuring of Google in October 2015 and the two founders of Google assumed executive roles in the new company, with Larry Page serving as CEO and Sergey Brin as President. One of the brands it owns is YouTube, which is making moves into producing original content as well as hosting it.
The competition: Alphabet (YouTube)

YouTube has recently expanded its subscription-based YouTube Premium, which features a host of exclusive shows produced by its most popular stars, to 12 other countries.
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The competition: Netflix

The competition: Netflix

A recent earnings report beats most analysts' expectations, and that's in part because Netflix is luring subscribers with acclaimed original series such as Stranger Things, House of Cards, Orange Is The New Black, BoJack Horseman and The Crown.
The competition: Baidu

The competition: Baidu

The Chinese language search giant is the fourth largest in the world behind Google, Bing and Yahoo but it's now also investing hundreds of millions of dollars into film and TV production.
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