New York Post

LAND OF THE GIANTS

Business bigwigs set for Sun Valley confab

- By THOMAS BARRABI

The Sun Valley resort in Idaho is set to play host this week to Allen & Co.’s annual “summer camp for billionair­es” — and as usual, the biggest names in media, tech and business are jetting in.

The invite-only events on the lodge’s sprawling grounds are a closely guarded secret to the public, but the annual conference has traditiona­lly served as a hotbed for dealmaking among moguls such as Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and Disney’s Bob Iger.

This year’s key guests include Shari Redstone, who will likely court suitors for Paramount Global even after she agreed to sell her family’s National Amusements Inc., the Hollywood studio’s controllin­g shareholde­r, to David Ellison’s Skydance Media for $2.4 billion.

The deal, which would see Redstone step aside after years of speculatio­n, includes a 45-day “go shop” window for other bidders to make competing offers. That window convenient­ly opens just as Redstone is set to rub elbows with media and entertainm­ent bigwigs in Idaho.

Diller a possibilit­y

IAC billionair­e Barry Diller, who was reportedly considerin­g a bid for Paramount as recently as last week, could make an appearance in Sun Valley, according to a guest list obtained by Variety.

Elsewhere, OpenAI boss Sam Altman — who has exploded to the forefront of the artificial-intelligen­ce race due to the success of ChatGPT — will be in attendance as his firm looks to ink more licensing deals to power the chatbot.

NBA Commission­er Adam Silver, who dished about the league’s work with Apple to bring games to the “Vision Pro” virtual-reality headset last year, will be under scrutiny as he works to finalize what is expected to be a $76 billion media-rights package with broadcast partners.

Things could get awkward with David Zaslav, the CEO of TNT parent Warner Bros. Discovery, also set to appear at the conference. TNT, a longtime NBA TV partner, is reportedly on the brink of losing broadcast rights as the NBA works on deals with the likes of ESPN, Amazon and NBC.

Iger, who made waves at last year’s confab by announcing plans to remain at Disney’s helm through 2026, is slated to return. The 73year-old be joined by several potential successors, including Dana Walden, Josh D’Amaro, Alan Bergman and Hugh Johnston.

Other media honchos who received invites include New York Post and News Corp owner Rupert Murdoch and his sons Lachlan and James, Comcast’s Bob Roberts and Netflix coCEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters.

The 2024 presidenti­al election will loom large over business discussion­s. Most of the focus will be on the status of President Biden — who has faced calls to drop out of the race after a disastrous performanc­e at last month’s debate with former President Donald Trump.

Several prominent Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Josh Shapiro and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, are invited.

From the tech world, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Apple CEO Tim Cook, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy and Salesforce boss Marc Benioff are expected to join Altman and Zuckerberg in Idaho.

Meanwhile, legendary investor Warren Buffett — a Sun Valley fixture — is not attending this year.

 ?? ?? Moguls on a mission
While hea hitters ex ected at this week’s annual Allen & Co. conference in Sun Valle , Idaho won’t include event fixture Warren Buffett s uare inset CEO of Berkshire Hathawa those lanning to attend include circles clockwise from to left National Amusements Paramount Global's Shari Redstone, NBA Commission­er Adam Silver and Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger.
Moguls on a mission While hea hitters ex ected at this week’s annual Allen & Co. conference in Sun Valle , Idaho won’t include event fixture Warren Buffett s uare inset CEO of Berkshire Hathawa those lanning to attend include circles clockwise from to left National Amusements Paramount Global's Shari Redstone, NBA Commission­er Adam Silver and Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger.

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