Byron Allen has been swinging at the big networks for years, taking unsuccessful runs at Paramount and a string of other large media targets. So this month, he wrote a check for BuzzFeed instead.
Allen agreed to take a majority stake in the digital publisher for $120 million, with the deal expected to close later this month.
The price is more than four times BuzzFeed's market cap heading into Monday's announcement, which was sitting under $30 million.
In March, BuzzFeed told investors it was running out of money and shopping itself around. Its most recent earnings carried a "going concern" warning - the formal note a company puts in its books when it doesn't know if it can keep paying the bills.
Why $120 Million For A $30 Million Company?
The simple answer: BuzzFeed still carries debt, and the deal price has to clear that debt before any of it lands in shareholders' pockets.
The more interesting answer is the bet behind the deal. Allen said in his announcement that "with the power of AI, BuzzFeed is officially chasing YouTube" - meaning he wants to spin up an AI-driven content engine and aim it at the kind of audience YouTube reaches.
That's the same playbook Wall Street has been using to justify wild valuations for every AI-flavored business, where even a sleepy publisher with falling revenue gets a fresh pitch deck when the magic letters show up.
BuzzFeed also spent part of 2024 fighting off a hostile takeover attempt by Vivek Ramaswamy, who pushed publicly for changes the company rejected. The Allen deal closes a chapter that started with a much bigger ambition.
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The End Of An Era For Digital Media
A decade ago, BuzzFeed, Vice, and Vox were the future of media, with Disney, Comcast, and Fox all writing big checks at huge valuations.
Now the scoreboard looks rough. Vice filed for Chapter 11 and Vox is breaking up, while BuzzFeed founder Jonah Peretti just sold to a man who collects late-night programming slots - Allen is also taking over the CBS spot left empty by Stephen Colbert.
The investors who once paid up for "digital first" media bought into a story that Facebook and Google would deliver readers forever. They didn't.
Worth Noting
Allen has done this before, swooping in on a struggling media asset and folding it into his portfolio. The pitch this time leans on AI.
The risk is the same one every BuzzFeed owner has dealt with: a digital audience built on social platforms that have since stopped sending traffic to news brands.
The flip side is that AI tools have lowered the cost of churning out content, which is the part Allen is betting on. Whether that turns BuzzFeed into a real YouTube rival or just lets it stay alive longer is the open question.
The new owner is betting AI can change that math. BuzzFeed already tried.
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