Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Major media company with $41B revenue; HBO/Max streaming, Warner Bros. film, and CNN news after AT&T/Discovery merger competing with Netflix and Disney+ amid cable decline.
Warner Bros. Discovery is a major global media and entertainment company formed through the 2022 merger of WarnerMedia (spun out from AT&T) and Discovery, Inc. — combining Warner Bros. film studio, HBO/Max, CNN, TNT, TBS, Discovery Channel, HGTV, Food Network, Animal Planet, and the Max streaming platform under a single company. Listed on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: WBD) and led by CEO David Zaslav, Warner Bros. Discovery generates approximately $41 billion in annual revenue and competes across streaming, theatrical film, broadcast, and cable television.\n\nWarner Bros. Discovery's content portfolio spans some of the most valuable entertainment IP in media: DC Comics superheroes (Superman, Batman, The Flash), Harry Potter (Wizarding World), Looney Tunes, HBO prestige drama (House of the Dragon, Succession, The White Lotus), CNN news, March Madness (NCAA basketball), and Discovery's lifestyle programming (Chip and Joanna Gaines' Magnolia Network, 90 Day Fiancé). Max (formerly HBO Max) serves as the company's streaming platform with over 95 million global subscribers.\n\nIn 2025, Warner Bros. Discovery faces significant financial challenges from the debt load acquired through the merger and the secular decline of linear cable television advertising. The company has made significant cost cuts including laying off thousands of employees, canceling or not renewing content, and restructuring its streaming losses. The Max streaming service competes with Netflix, Disney+, and Apple TV+ for subscription streaming share. WBD's 2025 strategy focuses on improving Max's subscriber economics, maximizing theatrical film revenue from DC and Harry Potter franchises, managing the cable TV decline gracefully, and reducing the merger debt burden.
US #2 sports betting operator with 35.3% market share; Q3 2025 revenue $1.14B; ESPN's exclusive sports-betting partner since Nov 2025; listing on Nasdaq; differentiated through same-game parlays, DraftKings Network media, and Dynasty Rewards loyalty.
DraftKings is a Boston-based digital sports entertainment and gaming company founded in 2012 by Jason Robins, Matthew Kalish, and Paul Liberman. Originally a daily fantasy sports platform, DraftKings pivoted following the 2018 Supreme Court PASPA ruling to become a full-service sportsbook and online casino operator. The company went public via SPAC merger in 2020 and now operates in 25+ states with online sports betting and in 7+ states with online casino products, under the DraftKings Sportsbook and DraftKings Casino brands.\n\nDraftKings has built product differentiation through its same-game parlay features, in-play betting markets, and the DraftKings Marketplace (an NFT-adjacent digital collectibles platform). Its loyalty program, Dynasty Rewards, and the DraftKings Network media content strategy help drive organic player acquisition. The company's ESPN partnership—announced as an exclusive sports-betting integration in November 2025—gives it access to ESPN's 75 million monthly unique visitors across linear TV and digital.\n\nDraftKings reported Q3 2025 revenue of $1.144B, with full-year 2025 revenue on track for approximately $4.5B+. The company holds approximately 35.3% of the U.S. sports betting market by gross gaming revenue, second only to FanDuel's 39.6%. DraftKings continues to invest in customer acquisition while targeting EBITDA profitability at scale.
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