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Move over, Murdochs – a new family dynasty is shaking up US media

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Natalie ShermanBusiness reporter

imageGetty Images Larry Ellison at the White House with Donald Trump in January 2025. Ellison is at a podium in a dark suit with burgundy tie with one hand up for emphasis while Trump stands on the side, with his hands folded in front of him and his head cockedGetty Images

Tech billionaire Larry Ellison and his son, Hollywood producer David, have long walked the halls of the world’s elite.

But this year, their power has taken on a new dimension, as they pursue deals involving names from TikTok to CNN that would give them control over some of the biggest media companies on the planet.

If the Murdoch name is already known the world over, it may not be long before the Ellisons join them.

Paving the way for the family’s ascent is Larry Ellison’s relationship with US President Donald Trump, who has blessed the dealings, praising the elder Ellison earlier this year as “an amazing man and amazing business person”.

“It’s well beyond technology,” he said, describing him as “sort of CEO of everything”.

In some ways, it’s an unlikely path for the Ellisons.

Larry Ellison, 81, made his name mastering the arcane realm of databases and cloud computing, co-founding the software and database company Oracle in 1977.

A giant of the tech world, his fortune, which rests in part on his roughly 40% stake in Oracle, has doubled over the last 12 months, to about $370bn, as the firm takes on a key role building up infrastructure for artificial intelligence.

For a moment this month, he even ranked as the world’s richest person, taking the top spot from Elon Musk.

Ellison’s extracurricular activity to date has tended to skew toward yachting, tennis, anti-aging research and buying an island in Hawaii.

But it’s his relationship with the president that has drawn the most attention recently.

Known as a Republican megadonor, he hosted a fundraiser for Trump in 2020, though he reportedly did not attend the event and federal records show no public contributions to the president.

Oracle became involved with TikTok during Trump’s first term, acting as a host for the app’s user data in the US.

Under a deal brokered by the White House, it is now poised to become an investor with an even greater role, in charge of retraining the algorithm that serves up what we see. (Trump has said the Murdochs, a long established media dynasty, could be involved in the deal as well).

Those ties with the administration have also proved useful for his 42-year-old son, David, as he makes moves to become a major media power player.

His first foray into Hollywood, a 2006 movie about World War I pilots that he financed and co-starred in, was a flop.

imageWireimage via Getty

But since founding his own studio, Skydance, in 2010, he has earned a name beyond his dad’s billions, producing hits movies such as True Grit, Mission Impossible and World War Z. In 2011, his sister, Megan Ellison, also founded her own production studio Annapurna Pictures, which went on to produce films American Hustle, Her, and Zero Dark Thirty.

Meanwhile, David Ellison pushed Skydance into television, gaming and sports.

But his takeover last month of Paramount, which was backed by his father, marked a significant leap into new territory. Now he’s the boss of a sprawling operation with more than 18,000 employees and new challenges, including overseeing one of America’s biggest news outlets, CBS.

The acquisition required a blessing from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which regulates broadcasting in the US and is led by Trump loyalist Brendan Carr.

The Ellisons are also said to be preparing a bid for Warner Brothers Discovery, home to Looney Tunes, Harry Potter and Superman, as well as HBO and CNN, a combination that would create one of the biggest media giants in the US.

That deal would require sign-off from the government, in the form of clearance from competition regulators.

Larry Ellison and David Ellison did not respond to requests for comment, made via their companies.

‘Dangerous for democracy’

imageBloomberg via Getty The Paramount Studios in Los Angeles, California, US, on Tuesday, Aug. 27, 2024.Bloomberg via Getty

But against the backdrop of wider White House pressure on the media, the Ellisons’ growing power and ties to Trump have stoked alarm on the left, where critics fear the president’s ability to influence news coverage of his administration.

“The Ellison duo taking over both CBS and CNN, as well as controlling a major social media network like TikTok, would be dangerous for democracy. And given their closeness to the Trump regime, that seems to be the point,” the media watch group FAIR warned recently.

Senator Elizabeth Warren has called for any Paramount-Warner Brother tie-up to be blocked, as a “dangerous concentration of power”. Other groups have criticised the TikTok deal as a giveaway to allies of the president.

House Democrats last month also said they were launching an investigation to see if Paramount-Skydance had made any commitments to Trump to secure approval, a potential violation of anti-bribery laws.

They noted that just weeks before the deal was approved, Paramount agreed to pay $16m to settle a lawsuit with Trump, who had accused CBS of deceptively editing a Kamala Harris interview to help Democrats.

Trump has also said “the new owners” had promised him billions worth of free advertising or programming.

David Ellison has said Skydance was not involved in the Paramount settlement and his firm is in compliance with anti-bribery laws. But he has ducked questions about a side deal, telling reporters last month: “We’re not going to politicise anything today.”

He has also already made some changes at CBS, some of which were conditions announced by the FCC when it signed off on the deal.

Those have included appointing a conservative watchdog to review complaints of bias. The company has also said CBS’s political show, ‘Face the Nation’ will only air live or unedited interviews, a break with long established journalistic practice.

“These actions are in line with what the White House has made clear that they want so I think this is really concerning,” said Rodney Benson, a media professor at New York University and lead author of the book How Media Ownership Matters.

Speaking to reporters after the merger, David Ellison, whose track record of political giving shows contributions to Democrats last year, said he wanted to avoid being associated with either the left or the right.

“We’re an entertainment company first, and I genuinely believe if you’re breathing, you’re our audience,” he said, according to the LA Times. “We want to be in the business of speaking to everybody.”

Other executives pushed back on the notion the firm’s owners would seek to sway news coverage, with Gerry Cardinale, one of Skydance’s partners and the other major investor in the deal with Paramount, calling the idea “bad business”.

“The kernel of the entire investment thesis is independence and objectivity. If you can’t get your head around that, don’t buy it,” he said, according to Variety.

“There’s no way we’re going to try to influence it.”

On Wall Street, Paramount’s potential tie-up with Warner Brothers Discovery has plenty of fans, as investors see an opportunity to create a studio with the distribution power and library to rival Disney and Netflix.

Analysts noted that David Ellison’s background in movie-making and role as chief executive sets him apart from some other tech titans, like Jeff Bezos, who have purchased media publications as a kind of hobby.

But while Ellison has expressed love for the movies – holding onto his mother’s collection of VHS tapes as recently as 2022 – he has said little about the news industry.

Analysts said they would be surprised if it were a priority, given its relatively small financial contribution to the overall business. Ellison has also said he is looking to make $2bn in cuts at Paramount.

“I don’t view this as something that says ‘I want to get bigger into news’,” said Ric Prentiss, managing director at Raymond James. “I think this is something that says ‘I want to create content’… I don’t think news is a strong part of it.”

Paul Hardart, director of the entertainment, media and technology programme at New York University’s Stern School of Business, said the push to grow suggested the Ellisons were looking to seize the moment.

“Who knows how long they will have the administration’s ear?” he said.

After all, when Elon Musk, another mega billionaire and would-be media mogul, tied himself to the Trump administration, that relationship ended up going up in flames.

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‘You’d have to have been a turkey not to have made money in venture capital in 1997’

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Faced with deciding what to do when he left school, Fergal Mullen made the snap decision to study electronic engineering. It seemed like a good idea at the time but in fact Mullen’s calling lay elsewhere as he quickly discovered when an athletics scholarship saw him transfer from what was then Dublin Institute of Technology (DIT) – now TU Dublin – to Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, where he combined engineering with business studies and a passion for distance running.

“Going to Brown was my ‘get lucky moment’. The curriculum was liberal arts based and as I was a bit bored with all the engineering stuff I started exploring subjects within the business studies curriculum such as economics and organisational behaviour and absolutely loved it,” says Mullen, who credits Irish Olympian athlete John Treacy for encouraging him to move Stateside and helping him get enrolled at Brown.

“I met John at a race – he won, I came second – and we hit it off immediately and are still friends,” says Mullen. “John took me to meet the coach at Brown, reeled off my times and left. I started there in September 1986.”

Going to live in the US wasn’t a big upheaval for Mullen as he had been there before on a J1 working as a golf caddie by day and gigging at night, playing Irish traditional music.

“Studying at Brown opened so many doors for me, and somewhere along the line I came across private equity and venture capital. I didn’t jump into this field immediately but it’s where I have spent the last 26 years of my career,” says Mullen.

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From Brown, Mullen joined US-based consulting firm Cambridge Technology Partners and spent 11 years there, rising to the rank of senior vice-president sales for the company in Europe. “I got large exposure to business in Cambridge at a very young age,” says Mullen. “We went public in 1993 and I wrote the IPO prospectus.

“We took the business from zero to $700 billion in revenues with 56 offices around the world. This equipped me with a broad set of business skills and experience in scaling, which I was then able to bring to my career in venture capital.”

In 2012, Mullen – who has an MBA from Harvard and is a former board member of the Michael Smurfit Graduate Business School in Dublin – cofounded the technology-focused investment firm Highland Europe, which employs 35 people and has offices in Geneva and London.

Highland invests in growth stage, product-led companies predominantly in software and consumer-facing internet businesses. Its sweet spot is companies turning over €10 million who are looking to raise €20-€80 million to accelerate their expansion.

“We have 70-plus companies in our portfolio with over €3 billion in assets under management,” says Mullen, who adds that Highland fishes in a competitive pool against some of the biggest names in international investment, including those from Silicon Valley.

The companies Highland invests in tend to be at the leading edge of their sectors and, to date, Highland has invested in and exited 29 ventures in areas such as mobile marketing, fraud prevention, software for waste and recycling, workplace scheduling software and online loan comparison.

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The company is a former investor in Limerick-based AMCS, which was sold last year, and more recently Highland has become an investor in 9 Fin, a Belfast-based debt market intelligence company.

“I’ve been hit by the luck truck more than once in my life,” says Mullen. “My first break was going to Brown and then to Cambridge, where the challenges and level of seniority entrusted to me were significant. I launched my first corporate fund there. It was $30 million, and we got a return of 10 times. That’s pretty extraordinary but I should point out that 1997 was the best year ever in the history of venture capital. You’d have to have been a turkey not to have made money at that time.

“At Highland Europe, we are 10 equal partners in the business and invest all over Europe. Each partner in the firm has five or six boards they sit on related to investments they’ve made, and we are about to raise our sixth fund, which will be €1 billion plus.

“Our investment decisions are based on consensus. We’re a ridiculously collaborative organisation with no fiefdoms, no office politics and no bullshit. We’re all completely equal and, if at any point I’m not delivering, my partners are perfectly entitled to ask me to move on.

“As investors, our hallmark is to back companies we believe can grow and scale a business. We’re not the kind of people who will come in and break up a team. We get behind them and support them to grow and achieve their full potential.”

Mullen lives about four kilometres from Geneva, “in a lovely quiet area with the lake and the mountains to enjoy. I divide my time between travelling, the office in Geneva and our office in London, where I spend three days every other week.”

Mullen still runs to keep fit and is quietly modest about the fact that he’s one of an elite group of athletes who have run seven marathons in seven consecutive days on seven continents. His efforts raised more than €1 million for a children’s cancer charity.

Apart from running, he relaxes by skiing and golfing and he also volunteers with Human Rights Watch in Geneva, where he is chairman of the Swiss branch.

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We can pull this round, Starmer says ahead of Labour conference

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Sir Keir Starmer has said he believes his government can still “pull this round” as the Labour Party heads into its annual conference hoping to revive public support.

With opinion polls suggesting Labour trails Reform UK, and mounting speculation that Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham could launch a leadership challenge, the prime minister told the Times it was time to “roll up our sleeves and get on with it”.

He also renewed his attacks on Nigel Farage, saying his party would “tear this country apart”.

Sir Keir told the paper that this week’s conference in Liverpool would be an opportunity for Labour to present an alternative to “toxic divide and decline”.

His comments mark the latest in a recent string of fierce criticisms of Farage, which the Reform leader has hit back at.

Farage told the Telegraph that Sir Keir’s language “smacks, frankly, of total desperation” after the prime minister referred to Reform as an “enemy” in an interview with the Guardian.

“To call somebody in politics an enemy is language that is bordering on the inciteful,” he added.

Sir Keir continued the attacks as the conference got under way, describing Farage as “grubby” in an interview with the Sunday Mirror, adding that the Reform leader was “unpatriotic” for “pretending” he would fix problems that mattered to voters.

“Add to that that he spends more time grubbing around in America, trying to make money for himself than he does representing his constituents,” the prime minister said.

“He goes there not just to make money, but to talk our country down. The leader of a political party going to another country to talk his own country down. Grubby.”

Comparisons with Reform could be a theme of this conference, as Sir Keir tries to portray his party as a patriotic alternative to Reform, who continue to lead opinion polls.

Last week, Reform announced it will replace ILR with visas and force migrants to reapply every five years, if the party wins the next election. That includes hundreds of thousands of migrants currently in the UK.

Applicants would also have to meet certain criteria, including a higher salary threshold and standard of English. ILR is a key route to gaining British citizenship and allows people to claim benefits.

According to a YouGov poll published on Saturday, abolishing indefinite leave to remain divides the public, with 58% of Britons opposed to removing it from those who already hold it.

But more than 44% say they support ending ILR as a policy, while 43% are opposed to the idea.

During a visit to the office of newspaper Liverpool Echo, Sir Keir said: “These are people who have been in our country a long time, are contributing to our society, maybe working in, I don’t know, hospitals, schools, running businesses – our neighbours, and Reform says it wants to deport them in certain circumstances.

“I think it is a real sign of just how divisive they are and that their politics and their policies will tear this country apart.”

In an interview with the Sun on Sunday, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said legal migration was a “good thing” and the UK had “always welcomed people who want to come and work here”.

However, she said migrants should make a “contribution to their wider community”.

“So I am looking at how to make sure that settlement in our country – long term settlement, Indefinite Leave to Remain – is linked not just to the job you are doing, the salary you get, the taxes you pay, [but] also the wider contribution you are making to our communities,” she added.

Speaking to teenagers at the Liverpool Echo visit, Sir Keir also insisted the government would not legalise cannabis, and defended his plans to lower the voting age to 16 in general elections.

“It already happens in Scotland, already happens in Wales, and the sky didn’t fall in,” he said.

Ahead of the Labour conference, backbench MPs and unions renewed calls to end the two-child benefit cap.

Several MPs from Liverpool were among those who wrote to Sir Keir ahead of the conference insisting the cap “is one of the most significant drivers of child poverty in Britain today”.

Two MPs – former shadow chancellor John McDonnell and Apsana Begum – have had the whip restored, after a year-long ban for voting against the government on the cap.

McDonnell told the BBC: “If this is a signal the government is going to scrap the two-child limit I’m really pleased.”

The prime minister’s plans for a new digital ID system, revealed on Friday, will also likely face scrutiny at the conference.

Senior Labour figures are meanwhile expected to set out the details of a fresh tranche of “New Towns” at the event.

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Florence Welch says she had life-saving surgery after ectopic pregnancy

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Singer Florence Welch has revealed she underwent life-saving emergency surgery after experiencing an ectopic pregnancy in August 2023.

The Grammy nominee told the Guardian she was unknowingly suffering serious internal bleeding while performing on stage at a festival, telling the paper her pregnancy was “the closest I came to death”.

She was diagnosed with a ruptured fallopian tube after suffering a miscarriage, which required surgery “within the hour”.

At the time, Welch, 39, cancelled some planned concerts, telling fans she was doing so for “reasons I don’t really feel strong enough to go into yet”.

She told the Guardian she was left devastated after experiencing a miscarriage but was advised by a doctor that she would be able to honour her performance schedule.

On the day of a headline show in Cornwall, Welch said she felt unwell but was able to complete her set as planned.

However, the singer said a scan shortly after revealed there was “a Coke can’s worth of blood in my abdomen”.

She was told she would need to immediately undergo emergency surgery to have her fallopian tube removed.

According to the NHS, one in 90 pregnancies in the UK are ectopic, and occur when a fertilised egg implants itself outside of the womb.

Symptoms for women usually start between four and 12 weeks, and can include pain low down on one side of the abdomen and pain in the tip of the shoulder.

If undiagnosed, the fallopian tube can burst, leading to life-threatening internal bleeding. In those circumstances, immediate surgery to either repair or remove the organ is required.

Welch, who performs with Florence and the Machine, is due to release a new album, Everybody Scream, in October.

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