Two words from the President of the United States to the world’s largest streaming platform: “Stop the cultural takeover.”
Trump posted the warning Sunday in response to an article by constitutional attorney John M. Pierce, who argued that Netflix’s bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery isn’t just another corporate deal — it’s an attempt to consolidate unprecedented cultural power in one of America’s most ideologically aggressive corporations.
Netflix needs federal approval for the merger. They just got put on notice that approval isn’t guaranteed.
The Biggest Cultural Power Grab in History
Here’s what Netflix is trying to acquire:
Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming service. One of the most valuable film and television libraries ever assembled. Major intellectual property franchises that have shaped American culture for generations.
Combined with Netflix’s existing dominance, the merged entity would control a massive share of premium scripted content, global streaming distribution, and cultural narratives.
Pierce didn’t mince words: this would create “the most powerful cultural gatekeeper the United States has ever seen.”
One company. One ideological perspective. Unprecedented power over what Americans watch, think, and believe.
Netflix’s Track Record
This isn’t about corporate consolidation in the abstract. It’s about who’s doing the consolidating.
Netflix has spent years pushing progressive narratives while marginalizing dissenting viewpoints. You’d be hard-pressed to find a show on the platform that doesn’t include obligatory “woke” content, regardless of whether it fits the story.
Remember “Cuties”? The French film that sexualized prepubescent girls and sparked international outrage? Netflix defended it.
Remember “Stranger Things” — a terrific series about supernatural threats that suddenly pivoted to a coming-out scene during the climactic battle? Even as a monster from another dimension threatened to kill everyone, the show found time for characters to navel-gaze about sexual preferences.
It was forced. It was ideological. And it’s the template for virtually everything Netflix produces.
Lesbian Kisses as Plot Requirements
Here’s a game: try to find a Netflix original series that doesn’t feature a close-up same-sex kiss, regardless of genre or storyline.
Action thriller? There’s a lesbian subplot. Historical drama? Gay romance shoehorned in. Children’s animation? “Age-appropriate” gender content.
It’s not organic storytelling. It’s ideological mandate. Every show must include the approved messages, whether they serve the narrative or not.
Now imagine that sensibility controlling not just Netflix, but Warner Bros. too. Every DC superhero film. Every HBO prestige drama. Every classic franchise in the WBD library, subject to Netflix’s content guidelines.
That’s what this merger would create.
The Rival Offer They’re Ignoring
There’s a competing bid from Paramount Skydance to acquire WBD. Some observers say it’s actually a better offer financially.
But it’s not getting as much love from Warner. Why?
The key financial backer of Paramount Skydance’s proposal is billionaire Larry Ellison — who’s generally considered a conservative.
And you know how much Hollywood likes conservatives.
Warner Bros. would rather take a worse deal from ideologically aligned Netflix than a better deal from someone who might not push their preferred narratives.
That tells you everything about Hollywood’s priorities. Ideology over shareholders. Messaging over money.
Federal Approval Required
Here’s where Trump’s intervention matters.
Netflix can’t complete this merger without federal regulatory approval. The deal has to pass antitrust review. Multiple agencies will weigh in.
And now the President of the United States has publicly signaled his concern about the “cultural takeover” the merger would enable.
That doesn’t mean automatic rejection. But it means Netflix can’t assume smooth sailing through the approval process. Regulators will face pressure to scrutinize the deal’s implications — not just for market competition, but for cultural consolidation.
“A Political Flashpoint”
As Newsmax noted, with Trump’s entry into the story, “the Netflix-WBD merger is no longer just a corporate transaction, but a political flashpoint.”
That’s exactly right.
For years, conservatives have complained about Hollywood’s ideological capture — the systematic exclusion of right-leaning perspectives, the mandatory progressive content, the cultural messaging disguised as entertainment.
Those complaints rarely translated into policy action. Hollywood consolidated. Streaming platforms merged. The ideological monoculture deepened.
Trump is signaling that this administration will treat cultural consolidation as a legitimate regulatory concern. That mega-mergers enabling ideological gatekeeping won’t get rubber-stamped.
Whether that translates into blocking the Netflix-WBD deal remains to be seen. But the conversation has changed.
What “Cultural Takeover” Means
Trump’s phrase deserves unpacking.
“Cultural takeover” implies that entertainment isn’t neutral. That the stories we tell shape the values we hold. That controlling narrative distribution is a form of power — maybe the most important form in a media-saturated society.
Netflix understands this. They’ve explicitly positioned themselves as agents of cultural change. They don’t hide their ideological commitments; they celebrate them.
The question is whether one company should have dominant control over that cultural production. Whether competition in ideas requires competition in distribution. Whether allowing a single gatekeeper serves the public interest.
Trump is answering: no.
The Ellison Factor
Larry Ellison’s involvement in the competing bid is significant.
Ellison is a tech billionaire who’s maintained relationships across the political spectrum but is generally seen as more conservative than typical Silicon Valley figures. His son David has been building Skydance into a major player in entertainment.
An Ellison-backed acquisition of WBD would potentially introduce ideological diversity into Hollywood’s upper echelons. Not conservative propaganda — just content that doesn’t treat half the country as villains.
That’s apparently intolerable to Warner Bros. leadership. Better to sell to Netflix than risk a buyer who might greenlight projects that don’t conform to progressive orthodoxy.
Two Words, Massive Implications
“Stop the cultural takeover.”
That’s a warning to Netflix. It’s also a signal to regulators. And it’s a promise to Americans who’ve watched entertainment become increasingly hostile to their values.
The Netflix-WBD merger is still in process. Negotiations continue. Regulatory review hasn’t concluded.
But the terms of debate have shifted. Cultural consolidation is now a political issue. The President is watching. And Netflix’s assumption that the deal would sail through unopposed just got a lot less certain.
Two words. Massive implications.
Hollywood wanted to stay out of politics. Too late for that now.
