Disney Will Hold Out As Long As YouTube TV Wants in Carriage Dispute, CFO Says


Disney chief financial officer Hugh Johnston says the media giant is ready to go as long as YouTube TV wants to as the two sides remain locked in a carriage dispute that has hit the two-week mark.

“We’re in the middle of negotiations right now. Things are live. They’re happening. Obviously, as we entered the year, we knew this was going to be a challenging battle and we prepared ourselves for it, and we’re ready to go as long as they want to,”Johnston told CNBC on Thursday as the company reported earnings for its fiscal fourth quarter of 2025.

During the interview, Johnston pushed back on the idea that Google-owned platform may have more leverage in the fight.

“This is ultimately about your customers, and, right now, YouTube customers are suffering without this critical content for them, right? Sports in the middle of football season is about as important as you can get,” Johnston said. “So, I think from that perspective, we perhaps have some leverage as well, because there are other places people can go to get that sports.”

He also declined to address the outstanding issues that the two sides remain apart on.

“I’m just not going to comment on the various elements of the negotiation,” he said. “It’s a negotiation. There’s back and forth. They want certain things, you want certain things.”

The programming blackout between Disney and YouTube TV first began on Oct. 30. Disney has accused YouTube TV of insisting on receiving “preferential terms that are below market” and making “few concessions.”

In a memo to staff, Disney leadership argued that it has offered a deal that would cost less overall than the terms of its recently expired contract, with “fair” terms that are “in-line with the more than 500 other distributors that have renewed their agreements since last summer, including the top distributors, who are far larger than YouTube TV.” Additionally, the company says it offered programming packages tailored to sports fans, entertainment fans, kids and families to offer more flexibility and value.

Meanwhile, YouTube TV argues that Disney is asking them for a rate above what Charter and DirecTV pay for the ABC networks and to pay more for their content than what they charge the Hulu and Fubo, which recently completed its merger with Hulu + Live TV.

It added that it isn’t asking for better rates, but for size-based “most favored nations,” a contractual promise that a programmer will not offer better terms to any other distributor without offering the same terms them. It also disputed that the tailored programming packages are Disney’s proposal, noting that it’s a topic they’ve had conversations with all of their partners about.

Dana Walden, Jimmy Pitaro, Alan Bergman

The latest carriage dispute comes after Disney resolved a 13-day programming blackout with DirecTV in September 2024, a 10-day dispute with Charter Communications in 2023 and a 48-hour dispute with Dish in 2022, while YouTube TV recently reached agreements with Fox and NBCUniversal.

In addition to Disney, YouTube TV has yet to reach a deal with TelevisaUnivision, whose programming has been dark on the platform since Sept. 30. President Donald Trump weighed in on the latter dispute, urging YouTube TV to restore the Spanish-language network’s programming.

With over 8 million subscribers, YouTube TV is one of the largest pay TV operators alongside Charter Communications, Comcast and DirecTV. It is the largest virtual multichannel video programming distributor (vMVPD), followed by Hulu + Live TV and Fubo, which combined total nearly 6 million subscribers in North America.

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