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What Happened at Sun Valley 2026 as CEOs Converged

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There may not have been any deals struck at Allen & Co.’s annual Sun Valley retreat over the weekend, but it would be surprising if nothing emerged from this power-packed-per-square-inch gathering. 

This year more than the usual CEOs showed up — FOMO is a powerful force — at a time when media dealmaking is at a fever pitch and technology leaders keep pushing AI’s disruptive force on every industry. The Trump era is also driving dealmaking; everyone knows that this government is not going to stand in the way of its friends, and is inclined to look the other way when properly incentivized. So the sense of making hay is very present.  

FOMO is always a big part of every Sun Valley. But right now, with media in full chaotic disarray, the imperative is to fire up the jet and be there. With a new deal announced seemingly on a weekly basis, it’s better to be in the room and having the conversations than reading about it after the fact.

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, arrives at the the Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, arrives at the the Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Comcast co-CEOs Brian Roberts and Mike Cavanagh needed to make clear that they are buyers, not sellers as they spin off NBCU from the broadband and mobile business. 

Outgoing CEOs, including Disney’s Bob Iger and Warner Bros. Discovery’s David Zaslav, needed to be there because they are no doubt looking for new opportunities.  

Pretty much everybody showed up with the notable exception of Paramount CEO David Ellison, who is on the cusp of closing his deal to buy Warner Bros. Discovery. Still, his controversial CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss was in Sun Valley, which makes me wonder if it was awkward crossing paths with Anderson Cooper, who in May exited “60 Minutes” and attended as well. 

The guest list included the tech elite — Apple CEO Tim Cook and his successor John Ternus, OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg. And a healthy representation from sports was there, including NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, National Hockey League (NHL) Commissioner Gary Bettman and billionaire Stan Kroenke, owner of Arsenal and the LA Rams, who spoke on a panel on Saturday with other team owners, Dan Gilbert (Cleveland Cavaliers) and John Henry (Boston Red Sox, Liverpool F.C.)

That’s not a surprise, since so much deal heat is being driven by the massive sports deals that we’ve reported on in the last two years.  

The deal discussions often happen in random walkabouts or intentional pairings. I reached out to a half dozen people who were there, most did not want to talk. (This is not unusual, I assure you.) 

According to my sources, Cook and Ternus were seen meeting with Amazon CEO Andy Jassy. Microsoft founder Bill Gates — who is battling a serious reputational turnabout that he’s been unable to shake — was spotted in a meeting with OpenAI’s Altman. Microsoft owns more than a quarter of OpenAI, but the two companies in May ended their exclusive partnership.

Other CEOs included Google’s Sundar Pichai, Netflix’s Ted Sarandos and YouTube’s Neal Mohan. YouTube is the belle of the ball right now, having taken over traditional television and spawned the summer box office horror heroes Curry Barker and Kane Parsons. Meanwhile, Sarandos needs to figure out how to claw back the 40 percent loss in his company’s market cap over the past year and reverse serious declines in user engagement.

Netflix conquered Hollywood. But it faces even bigger giants in Silicon Valley.

Since it’s an election year, there were plenty of politicians around too, including Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Dan Caine, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff.

Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh (3rd-L) speaks to Chairman of LA28 and CEO of Wasserman Casey (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

So where is entertainment in all this? According to my sources, Imagine’s Brian Grazer and mega-writer Taylor Sheridan (“Yellowstone” et al) did a panel on creativity moderated by Anderson Cooper. (Sheridan, who is based in Weatherford, Texas, was typically grumpy and apparently said he hadn’t been to Hollywood in eight years.)

What’s key here is context. As OpenAI pushes off its IPO into 2027, there is plenty of speculation about who is winning this technology sweepstakes that keeps promising to upend society. And at the same time, media and entertainment has to reconfigure itself into business models that will work for the next decade. 

This year’s conference comes amid a flurry of dealmaking. As a reminder of the extraordinary pace of things, here’s a recap of just a few of the current deals, courtesy of my colleague Lucas Manfredi: 

* Paramount acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery merger (pending) 

* Charter-Cox merger (pending) 

* Fox acquiring Roku (pending) 

* Sky’s acquiring ITV’s media & entertainment arm (pending)

* Mediawan acquisition of Peter Chernin’s The North Road Company (pending)

* Netflix acquiring Ben Affleck’s InterPositive

* Electronic Arts acquisition by Silver Lake, Affinity Partners and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (pending)

* James Murdoch acquiring Vox and New York magazine

* Banijay Entertainment’s acquisition of RedBird IMI’s All3Media.

But there’s still plenty of dealmaking left for the entertainment elite to consummate. We’re all waiting for Casey Wasserman to sell his stake in his talent agency as promised — does he think no one noticed?

Assets that have previously been floated as potential takeover targets include Lionsgate, Starz, AMC Networks and ITV Studios. Imax and Letterboxd have also had early talks to gauge interest in potential sales. Versant, spun off from Comcast, has been active on the M&A front, but is ultimately probably a sale target itself. 

This is what I mean when I said this year is about FOMO as much as figuring out the next deal. The current disarray is going to be rearranged — and soon. 

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Sam Neill Dead; Jurassic Park Actor Was 78

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Sam Neill, the New Zealand actor best known for his role in the Jurassic Park franchise, Peaky Blinders and a plethora of independent films has died in Australia, it was announced tonight. The multiple Golden Globe and Primetime Emmy nominee was 78.

“It is with immense sadness that the whānau of Sam Neill share the news of his passing on Monday 13th July, in Sydney Australia,” a post on the Neill’s social media feed said late Sunday. “Sam was surrounded by family and passed with the dignity that has characterised his whole life. The loss was sudden and unexpected but blessed by the fact that Sam remained cancer free. They would like to express their deepest gratitude to the staff at St Vincent’s Private Hospital for their incredible care. More details will be shared later, but for now, on behalf of the family, we ask that you respect their privacy as they navigate this immeasurable loss.”

Knighted in 2022 as a Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, Neill was born in 1947 in Omagh, Northern Island. He and his family moved back to his father’s South Pacific homeland in 1954. Once his acting career had started, Neill moved to Australia in the late 1970s. In 1979, Neill achieved international recognition with the success of the Judy Davis-led My Brilliant Career.

Today, Australian PM Anthony Albanese praised Neill for his role “in so many beloved Australian stories and he earned a special place in Australian hearts.”

After a long battle with blood cancer, the Did I Ever Tell You This? author revealed earlier this year that he was now free of the disease thanks to Australian clinical trials he participated in.

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Sam Neill Dead: ‘Jurassic Park,’ ‘The Piano’ Actor Was 78

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Sam Neill, the amiable and adventurous leading man who emerged from New Zealand to make his mark in such films as Jurassic Park, The Piano, Dead Calm, In the Mouth of Madness and so much more, has died. He was 78.

The news was shared in a post on Neill’s official Instagram account.

“It is with immense sadness that the whānau of Sam Neill share the news of his passing on Monday 13th July, in Sydney Australia,” the post read. “Sam was surrounded by family and passed with the dignity that has characterised his whole life. The loss was sudden and unexpected but blessed by the fact that Sam remained cancer free. They would like to express their deepest gratitude to the staff at St Vincent’s Private Hospital for their incredible care. More details will be shared later, but for now, on behalf of the family, we ask that you respect their privacy as they navigate this immeasurable loss.”

Neill revealed in March 2023 that he had been diagnosed with angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma a year earlier.

“I’m not in any way frightened of dying. That doesn’t worry me. It’s never worried me from the beginning,” he told the TV news magazine Australian Story in October 2023. “But I would be annoyed, because there are things I still want to do.”

Early in his career, the boundary-breaking Neill starred in Sleeping Dogs (1977), one of the first New Zealand films to play internationally; in the Australian period drama My Brilliant Career (1979), opposite Judy Davis; and as Damien in the third Omen film, The Final Conflict (1981), filmed in the U.K.

Neill also played a Russian officer in John McTiernan’s The Hunt for Red October (1990); a captain of a doomed spaceship in Paul W.S. Anderson’s Event Horizon (1997); the father of Scarlett Johansson’s character in Robert Redford’s The Horse Whisperer (1998); and the patriarch of a family with a robot (Robin Williams) in Chris Columbus’ Bicentennial Man (1999).

On television, he portrayed a real-life spy on the 1983 ITV series Reilly: Ace of Spies; the King Arthur magician Merlin in Hallmark miniseries that aired in 1998 and 2006; Cardinal Thomas Wolsey on Showtime’s The Tudors in 2007; the corrupt police inspector Chester Campbell on the BBC’s Peaky Blinders in 2013-14; and a husband whose wife goes missing in Peacock’s Apples Never Fall in 2024.

After starring alongside Nicole Kidman and Billy Zane in the psychological thriller Dead Calm (1989), directed by Australian Phillip Noyce, Neill had quite the year in 1993 with his turns as the cynical paleontologist Alan Grant in Steven Spielberg‘s Jurassic Park and as the cold, cruel frontiersman Alisdair Stewart in The Piano, directed by New Zealander Jane Campion.

From left: Richard Attenborough, Laura Dern and Sam Neill in 1993’s ‘Jurassic Park’

MCA/Courtesy Everett Collection

And in John Carpenter’s In the Mouth of Madness (1994) — one of his many horror films — Neill played the insurance man John Trent, whose investigation leads him into an insane asylum.

The versatile Neill portrayed heroes and villains with equal aplomb, sparkled in art house and tentpoles alike and had a knack for exploring the shades of gray in his characters. “I’d like to think I’m able to suggest ambiguities and complexities in the people I play, because I think all of us have hidden aspects or contradictory qualities,” he once said.

Nigel John Dermot Neill was born on Sept. 14, 1947, on the kitchen table in the family home in Omagh, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, where his father, Dermot, a third-generation New Zealander, was stationed with the Royal Irish Fusiliers as a member of the British Army. His mother, Priscilla, was English.

They moved in 1955 to New Zealand, where his family had a wine and spirits merchant business, and he attended boarding school at Medbury School and Christ’s College in Christchurch. He started calling himself Sam — he liked Westerns, and “Western people were called things like Sam,” he wrote in his 2023 memoir, Did I Ever Tell You This? — and had a stuttering problem.

He got interested in acting while attending the University of Canterbury, then earned a degree in English literature at Victoria University. After graduation, Neill toured for a year doing Shakespeare with the Players’ Drama Quartet and spent six years as a director of shorts and documentaries with the New Zealand National Film Unit.

“The informal agreement there was that you’d make one film for the post office or the railways or the banana company and you’d make one for yourself,” he said in a 2009 interview. “I wanted to make a film about skiing — I love skiing — but I had to dress it up and say that it would be really good for tourism.”

Neill also did a bit of acting, and after he was spotted playing a priest in the short film Ashes (1975), he was cast in the lead as a man on the run from a totalitarian government in Sleeping Dogs (1977), directed by Roger Donaldson. The thriller, the first color film made in New Zealand, helped kickstart the country’s “cinema of unease” movement.

He said he fell in love with Australia while he was portraying Davis’ complicated love interest in Gillian Armstrong’s My Brilliant Career (1979), which screened in competition in Cannes and made him realize that he could make a living doing what he loved to do. Around this time, he also recurred as Ben Dawson on the Nine Network period soap opera The Sullivans.

Sam Neill with Judy Davis in 1979’s ‘My Brilliant Career’

Analysis Films/Courtesy Everett Collection

Recommended by James Mason, Neill got to play Damien — the antichrist is now a grown-up U.S. ambassador — in The Final Conflict. Two years later, he was the dashing Russian adventurer turned British secret agent Sidney Reilly on Reilly: Ace of Spies, and he earned a Golden Globe nomination for that.

He would become a favorite in Sweden after starring as the villain Brian de Bois-Guilbert on a 1982 TV adaptation of Ivanhoe that airs on New Year’s Day every year in the country, then starred alongside Meryl Streep for Aussie director Fred Schepisi in Plenty (1985) and Evil Angels (1988), the latter about one of the most controversial legal cases in Australian history.

Neill auditioned for James Bond in The Living Daylights (1987) but said he really didn’t want the part, he explained in a 2021 interview.

“I felt so awkward all that day when we made that thing. It went on and on and on,” he said. “I’m so relieved they offered it to someone else. You really don’t want to be the Bond that no one likes. That’s a fate worse than death.” (Timothy Dalton would play 007 for the first time in that film.)

Neill described Dr. Grant in a 2001 interview as a man who has “tremendous ambivalence. He knows Jurassic Park is a horrible place to be and knows there’s nothing more dangerous than a dinosaur that is not behind bars. But because he lives and breathes dinosaurs, he finds them completely compelling.”

He would return as Grant in Joe Johnston’s Jurassic World III (2001) and Colin Trevorrow’s Jurassic World Dominion (2022).

He wrote in his memoir that The Piano, winner of the Palme d’Or and three Oscars, was a “lonely” job because Holly Hunter, who portrayed Ada, the wife his character abuses, “was of necessity remote” (not surprising since Alisdair cuts off her finger in the movie). “Happily,” he added, “Jane is a very caring director for her cast and was always there to hug me when I was at my lowest.”

Sam Neill as Alisdair Stewart in 1993’s ‘The Piano’

Miramax/Courtesy Everett Collection

Neill also did lots of work (2002’s Dirty Deeds, 2008’s Dean Spanley, TV’s Old School, etc.) alongside his “brother from another mother,” Aussie actor Bryan Brown.

His film résumé also included Possession (1981), Death in Brunswick (1990), Carpenter’s Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992), Country Life (1994), Restoration (1995), Snow White: A Tale of Terror (1997), The Dish (2000), The Zookeeper (2001), Perfect Strangers (2003), Skin (2008), Daybreakers (2009), The Hunter (2011), Taika Waititi‘s Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016) and, as a stage actor playing Odin, Thor Ragnarok (2017) and Thor: Love and Thunder (2022).

In 1983, Neill bought some acreage in central Otago in New Zealand — this was “always the land of my dreams; this was where we came for holidays when I was a kid,” he said in 2020 — and launched his Two Paddocks vineyard.

“I don’t expect people to take me seriously, but I’m determined that they respect my wine,” he told the London Times in 2014. “A few weeks ago it won a trophy and two gold medals in London. I call that the ‘up yours’ factor.”

He also was a comforting, entertaining presence during the pandemic, when he posted videos of him singing and playing the ukulele on Twitter.

Survivors include his children, Andrew, Tim and Elena, and six grandchildren.

After a long relationship with New Zealand actress Lisa Harrow (they met on The Final Conflict), he was married to Japanese makeup artist Noriko Watanabe (they met on Dead Calm) from 1989 until their 2017 divorce. More recently, he dated Laura Tingle, a political journalist for Australia’s ABC network.

In 2022, a writer for the Sydney Morning Telegraph noted that Neill is the least “celebrity” celebrity there is.

“I do hope I’m not a celebrity because … I think it’s two different jobs,” he said. “You can be an actor — hopefully a very good actor — but it’s another job to be a celebrity, and that’s one you can sign up for or not. And I never signed up for that. I’ve avoided that like the plague.

“The winemaking thing is absolutely half my life and has been immensely rewarding, and it’s very different from everything else that I do. I’m sort of … half-farmer, half-thespian, if you like.”

Sam Neill overlooking his Two Paddocks vineyard in the central Otago region of New Zealand’s South Island in 2001.

Ross Land/Getty Images

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Ariana Madix Pays Tribute To Late ‘Love Island USA’ Producer James Barker After Unexpected Death

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Ariana Madix paid tribute to Love Island USA producer James Barker after his unexpected death while production of Season 8 of the Peacock dating series was underway.

Amid the celebration of the Season 8 finale of the dating series, Madix took some time to remember Barker and call fans to contribute to a crowdfunding effort in his honor.

“As many of you know, we unexpectedly lost a dear friend this summer,” Madix shared on a post on Instagram Stories. “James Barker is the kindest person you could ever meet with the kind of soul that truly radiates from within.”

She continued, “We will miss him always. If anyone is so able to donate or to just share this, thank you. And thank you to James for touching all of our lives with your amazing light. We miss you.

Madix shared a link to a GoFundMe page dedicated in Barker’s honor “to help cover the costs of honoring James’ life with the celebration he deserves, as well as mortgage payments on the home he shared and adored with his partner, monthly bills, legal fees, and taxes.”

Barker died in June at the age of 40 after suffering an unexpected medical emergency, ITV America and Peacock confirmed.

“James’ unimaginable loss has been deeply felt across not just the entire Love Island USA production, but throughout all of ITV and Peacock,” ITV America and Peacock said in a joint statement. “He was a beloved and greatly valued member of our collective family whose kindness, talent, and dedication left an indelible mark on all of us and everyone who had the privilege of knowing and working with him. We extend our heartfelt condolences to James’ partner, family, friends, and colleagues.”

Barker began his television career in 2011 at Leftfield Pictures, where he worked as a producer on shows like Counting Cars, Forged in Fire, and Pawn Stars. At ITV America, he produced Queer Eye and numerous seasons of Love Island USA and Love Island Games.

Ariana Madix's tribute to James Barker

Ariana Madix’s tribute to James Barker

Instagram / arianamadix

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