Paramount Plus Is Getting Dragged for Backing UFC Star Sean Strickland After That Wild Media Day Meltdown
Paramount Plus has spent the last few years auditioning for the role of serious industry heavyweight. From blockbuster franchises to live sports swagger, the platform has tried to project corporate confidence with the polish of a red carpet premiere.
Its billion-dollar bets signal ambition. Its partnerships signal power. Yet beneath the brand gloss and boardroom choreography, a storm is gathering that threatens to test how much conviction sits behind that polish.
While the service flexes its sports portfolio like a trophy cabinet, a single microphone moment has turned brand strategy into a public ethics exam.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Paramount Plus faces fire for backing Sean Strickland after wild media day comments
Paramount Plus is facing sharp backlash for continuing to platform UFC fighter Sean Strickland after his inflammatory remarks at media day reignited debates about brand responsibility and hate speech.
“No one gives a fu-- about women’s sports. There’s nothing wrong with women. They do great things. They cook, they clean,” Strickland declared at the UFC Media Day in Houston. He further attacked the NFL’s Super Bowl LX halftime performer, Bad Bunny, using a homophobic slur and calling him a “ga- foreigner who doesn’t speak fu----- English.”
Variety noted that Paramount did not immediately respond to requests for comment, intensifying criticism that the streamer is prioritizing its lucrative UFC rights deal over public accountability.
The debate arrives at a sensitive corporate moment. Paramount Plus became the exclusive United States home of Ultimate Fighting Championship events under a seven-year, $7.7 billion agreement with TKO Group Holdings, binding the platform’s subscriber growth strategy directly to the league’s most polarizing personalities.
Strickland’s appearance was his first major promotional event since a 2025 suspension, drawing intense scrutiny. For a publicly traded conglomerate juggling advertiser expectations and diversity commitments, Paramount’s silence, as noted by Variety, comes across less as neutrality and more as calculated risk disguised as restraint.
As boardrooms juggle billion-dollar sports contracts, another negotiation simmers in the background, turning the situation into collateral during a larger media power shuffle.
Paramount Plus plays high stakes game with Warner Bros Discovery amid UFC fallout
At the same time, Paramount is caught in high-stakes maneuvering with Warner Bros. Discovery. Reports suggest Warner Bros. Discovery is reconsidering its deal with Netflix after Paramount sweetened a competing bid.
The platform has offered to cover multibillion-dollar termination fees and provide extra financial safeguards, signaling bold ambition. The scene is almost theatrical, with one hand extending corporate reassurance while the other sidesteps the uproar surrounding Sean Strickland’s explosive media day remarks.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
If Warner Bros. Discovery reopens negotiations, Netflix retains the right to match any superior offer, potentially sparking a renewed bidding war that drives valuations even higher. Paramount’s readiness to increase terms signals confidence in regulatory approval and long-term integration strategy.
Yet reputational risk hovers like a shadow. Critics argue that the platform’s handling of Strickland’s fallout could influence both subscriber sentiment and investor trust amid Hollywood’s volatile realignment.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
What are your thoughts on Paramount Plus backing Sean Strickland amid corporate upheaval and cultural backlash? Let us know in the comments.
ADVERTISEMENT
Edited By: Aliza Siddiqui
More from Netflix Junkie on Hollywood News
ADVERTISEMENT










