With television experience as being a former co-host of the
NBC series
Real People from 1979 until 1984,
stand-up comedian Byron Allen launched his own weekly syndicated
late-night talk show,
The Byron Allen Show, in 1989. It was produced by his BYCA Productions and
Allbritton Communications, and distributed by Genesis Entertainment. By 1991, Allen had created BYCA Television Distribution to take over distribution of his talk show as well as syndicate other programs. By early 1993, Allen's talk show, which became a weeknight
strip the previous fall, had been cancelled, and BYCA Television Distribution had been embroiled in a lawsuit filed by former employees who claimed they had not been paid by Allen. Amidst the legal and financial issues, creditors forced BYCA into
Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The same year, Allen founded
CF Entertainment. Following a similar business model to BYCA, Allen was able to succeed where he had failed before by focusing on producing low-cost, syndicated non-fiction programming, including interview series and
court shows (largely scripted from actual testimony). Allen served as host for some of these programs. In December 2003, CF became Entertainment Studios. The company ventured into scripted programming in 2012, with the third-quarter launch of the sitcoms
Mr. Box Office and
The First Family. Both were set for 104 episodes The two half-hour shows were picked up as a two-hour weekend primetime
programming block with two episodes of each show back to back by
Tribune,
Weigel and
CBS Television Station groups. In 2015, the company separately sued
AT&T,
Comcast, and
Charter Communications for racial discrimination in being biased against minority-run entertainment companies in not carrying its cable channels. AT&T settled in December with the addition of 7 of Entertainment Studios' channels added to AT&T's
DirecTV lineup. Entertainment Studios added similar suits against Charter and the FCC. The Comcast case, though initially dismissed at the district court, was allowed to go forward by the Ninth Circuit; Comcast was able to successfully petition the
Supreme Court to hear its case in
Comcast v. National Association of African-American-Owned Media in November 2019. In October 2015, Entertainment Studios acquired
Freestyle Releasing for an undisclosed amount "said to be sealed for high-eight figures". Freestyle also had an output deal with
Netflix. Its first release,
47 Meters Down, took in $44 million in box office revenue. In mid-September 2017, the company announced plans to launch an
over the top sports streaming service known as Sports.tv. On March 22, 2018, Entertainment Studios announced its intent to acquire
The Weather Channel's television assets from an
NBCUniversal/
Bain Capital/
Blackstone Inc. partnership. The actual value was undisclosed, but was reported to be around $300 million; the channel's
non-television assets, which were separately sold to IBM two years prior, were not included in the sale. In an interview with
Variety, Allen stated that he was "not a seller", and that he was "one or two acquisitions away from being a fairly large company". On May 6, 2019, Entertainment Studios announced that it would expand into television station ownership with the $165 million acquisition of four small-market TV stations from
Bayou City Broadcasting, establishing Allen Media Broadcasting. The company acquired another 11 broadcast television stations from
USA TV in February 2020. In June 2020, Comcast agreed to carry Entertainment Studios' Comedy.TV, JusticeCentral.TV, Recipe.TV, and The Weather Channel, and to retransmission consent for the Allen Media Broadcasting television stations, as part of a settlement of the Supreme Court racial discrimination lawsuit. Allen acquired
This TV and Light TV from MGM in October. In April 2021, Allen acquired seven television stations from
Gray Television, expanding the company's portfolio to 23 ABC-NBC-CBS-Fox network affiliate broadcast stations across 19 markets. In July 2022, Allen Media Group acquired
Black News Channel out of bankruptcy from
Shahid Khan for $11 million; it was discontinued as a separate service, with its carriage merged into TheGrio.TV. In 2023, Allen made multiple high profile offers on legacy media assets. In September, he offered $10 billion to Disney for
ABC,
FX, and
National Geographic Channel linear TV assets. He then made a $3.5 billion bid for Paramount's
BET Media Group in December. By January 2024, Allen's offer had become a $30 billion bid for
Paramount Global. When
Skydance Media's offer was accepted, he attempted to increase his bid. Beginning in late April 2024, Allen Media Group laid off about 300 employees, or around 12 percent of its staff, throughout all of its operating divisions. The company's explanation for the staff reduction is to better position themselves for further growth. In August, it was reported that Allen Media had been consistently late in making payments to network owners. Further layoffs took place in January 2025, with announced plans to lay off nearly all meteorologists from its local television stations in favor of centralizing weather coverage at The Weather Channel. However, following public criticism of the move, AMG partially reversed course and stated that it would retain some of its local meteorologists. In June 2025, Allen Media Group announced it would explore a sale of its 28 owned and operated broadcast TV stations. On August 8, 2025, it was announced that
Gray Media would acquire 10 stations for $171 million; expecting to be completed by the fourth quarter of 2025. On March 6, 2026, Byron Allen, owner of Allen Media Group, acquired an 11% stake in Starz Entertainment, paying $25 million for 1.8 million shares in the entertainment company.
McDonald's advertising suits In 2021 Allen sued fast food chain
McDonald's for $10 billion in federal court, alleging that the company "intentionally discriminated against Entertainment Studios and Weather Group through a pattern of racial stereotyping and refusals to contract" for advertising across its properties. This suit was dismissed in late 2021. Allen sued McDonald's again in federal court, alleging racial discrimination. The company said the case was "about economic inclusion of African American-owned businesses in the U.S. economy. McDonald's takes billions from African American consumers and gives almost nothing back." The lawsuit alleged that Blacks represent 40% of fast food customers, but McDonald's spent just 0.3% of its $1.6 billion U.S. ad budget in 2019 on Black-owned media. Separately, in May 2021, McDonald's publicly promised to raise its spending on Black-owned media from 2% to 5% of its ad budget by 2024. Two years later, in 2023, Allen sued McDonald's in California courts for not honoring that promise. Both the federal suit and the state suit were settled before a scheduled federal trial in 2025 for undisclosed terms. McDonald's said it would buy ads "in a manner that aligns with its advertising strategy and commercial objectives" while Allen said "we acknowledge McDonald's commitment to investing in Black-owned media properties and increasing access to opportunity. Our differences are behind us." == Television series distributed by Entertainment Studios ==