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David M. Zaslav

President and Chief Executive Officer at warner bros discovery

Placeholder portrait card for David Zaslav, CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery — no photograph in use pending licensed image.
The State of Streaming

David Zaslav is President and CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, the role he has held since the April 2022 close of the Discovery–WarnerMedia merger he engineered. Previously CEO of Discovery Communications from 2007 through the WBD combination. Zaslav is the dealmaker behind the pending Paramount Skydance acquisition of WBD — a deal shareholders approved on April 23, 2026, the same day they rejected his merger-related compensation by an 82% advisory vote.

Why this profile exists

Zaslav sits at the center of the largest pending consolidation in U.S. media: Paramount Skydance’s acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery, approved by WBD shareholders on April 23, 2026. The same vote produced the largest shareholder rebuke of a named-executive-officer compensation package in Big-Media history — an 82% advisory rejection of his up-to-$886 million merger-related package — and the third consecutive year of escalating shareholder pushback on his pay (54% approval in 2024 on 2023 comp; ~60% rejection in 2025 on 2024 comp; ~82% rejection in 2026 on the merger package). The vote is non-binding under Dodd-Frank Section 951, so payouts proceed at the WBD board’s discretion if the deal closes.

The compensation-vote arc, on the record

The three-vote escalation is the through-line of Zaslav’s tenure as a public-company CEO under post-2022 WBD governance:

  • 2024 annual meeting (2023 pay of $39.3M): roughly 54% of votes cast in favor — a narrow win flagged at the time by governance analysts as a warning shot.
  • 2025 annual meeting (2024 pay of $51.9M, up 4.4%): approximately 60% of shares voted against, with 1,063,214,128 against and 724,453,004 for. Symbolic, non-binding; the package stood.
  • 2026 special meeting (merger-related compensation, up to $886M): 1,444,387,748 against and 307,742,302 for — an approximately 82% rejection. ISS had urged rejection in its proxy report, calling the package a “windfall.”

Each vote is reported in WBD’s subsequent Form 8-K under Item 5.07 (Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders), the SEC reporting requirement that makes these tallies public.

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