World
Why NBA Is Seeking Dismissal of TBS, WBD Lawsuit
In a comprehensive memorandum of law urging New York Judge Joel M. Cohen to dismiss TBS and Warner Bros. Discovery’s breach of contract lawsuit against the NBA, league attorneys Friday blasted the case as defying basic contract law principles and misconstruing a right to match.
Last month, TBS and WBD sued in the aftermath of the NBA concluding that the plaintiffs failed to match an offer by Amazon to broadcast games from 2025-26 through 2035-36. The NBA officially recognized Amazon Prime Video, Disney’s ABC/ESPN and NBC/Peacock as the league’s next media partners, and they’ll pay $76.9 billion over the course of the deals. TBS (in part through TNT) will no longer be the league’s primary media partner, a role it has enjoyed for 35 years. But TBS and WBD say they invoked a right to match Amazon’s offer and thus should remain tied to the league.
The motion to dismiss memorandum, authored by Robert A. Sacks and other attorneys from Sullivan & Cromwell as well as by NBA executives Rick Buchanan and Dan Spillane, asserts TBS and WBD’s theory fails for several reasons.
First, the NBA argues TBS’s matching rights—which are contained in a 2014 contract between TBS and the NBA granting TBS the right to distribute NBA games on the TNT linear cable television network through the 2024–2025 season—doesn’t authorize a match of Amazon’s offer. Amazon’s delivery of games is through streaming, whereas linear means TV channels that are “programmed in a time sequence, with content offered in a particular order and at a specific time.”
The 2014 contract also didn’t give TBS the right to distribute games on the Internet, the league points out. In contrast, Amazon’s offer says it “is the NBA’s first ‘streaming-only package” and makes clear Amazon is receiving “no over-the-air broadcast, cable, satellite or other linear television rights.”
The NBA acknowledges that NBA games are streamed on Max, which is owned by WBD, but maintains that is a fact without relevant legal significance in this dispute. The league says the “source of the rights” to stream games on Max is not the NBA/TBS 2014 contract, but instead a separate contract between NBA Media Ventures and Bleacher Report and that—most relevantly here—lacks a matching provision.
Second, the NBA maintains that even if TBS could match Amazon’s offer, its attempt to do so was an air ball. The league says TBS cannot “fundamentally change the method of distribution required by Amazon’s offer,” namely by moving games that would be streamed to linear cable TV. The NBA notes that TBS could have matched NBCUniversal’s “separate, more expensive third-party offer,” since it contemplates linear TV distribution rights. Instead, TBS tried to match the less expensive Amazon offer and, the NBA contends, unilaterally rewrote that offer’s terms.
Third, the NBA maintains that instead of matching Amazon’s offer, TBS took Amazon’s offer, rewrote key terms to advance TBS’s interests and then announced it had accepted the revised version. The NBA says that’s not a match, but instead a new document that neither Amazon nor the NBA would accept and that, by itself, doesn’t do anything. The matching provision from the 2014 agreement, the NBA contends, “unambiguously required” that TBS match each term of Amazon’s offer.
The league says TBS revised eight of 27 sections, altered 11 defined terms, crossed out about 300 words and brought in more than 270 new words. One alleged change involves the financial security of payments. Amazon agreed to maintain an escrow account that contains three years of rights fees, an amount in the ballpark of $5.4 billion since Amazon will pay about $1.8 billion a year. These fees will be automatically deducted. TBS, in contrast, has (as the NBA tells it) agreed to provide the league “with syndicated letters of credit that the NBA can access only if TBS’s payments are late.”
To be clear, a defendant’s motion to dismiss is an advocacy document, meaning, like a plaintiff’s complaint, it offers a one-sided view of the key issues. Attorneys for TBS and WBD will have the chance to attempt to rebut the NBA’s arguments. As Sportico detailed, the plaintiffs have insisted that the technological distinction between streaming and linear is not as bright line as the NBA paints it, including because (they claim) 70% of Prime video watching “occurs on a television” and because, like Amazon Prime, TNT and Max are distributed via the Internet. TBS and WBD thus insist they could and did match Amazon’s offer, despite the NBA’s insistence they couldn’t and didn’t.
Legal disputes over matching provisions have a long history in the sports industry, among other industries. They usually center on the degree to which a “match” can change an offer before the changes become too substantial that it is no longer a match. Here, the NBA asserts not only has TBS dramatically altered Amazon’s offer but that, as a matter of first principle, TBS literally couldn’t match Amazon’s offer.
World
A look at some of the contenders to be Iran’s supreme leader after the killing of Khamenei
Iran’s leaders are scrambling to replace Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who ruled the country for 37 years before he was killed in the surprise U.S. and Israeli bombardment.
It’s only the second time since the 1979 Islamic Revolution that a new supreme leader is being chosen. Potential candidates range from hard-liners committed to confrontation with the West to reformists who seek diplomatic engagement.
The supreme leader has the final say on all major decisions, including war, peace and the country’s disputed nuclear program.
In the meantime, a provisional governing council composed of President Masoud Pezeshkian, hard-line judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei and senior Shiite cleric Ayatollah Ali Reza Arafi is guiding the country through its biggest crisis in decades. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Sunday that a new supreme leader would be chosen early this week.
The supreme leader is appointed by an 88-member panel called the Assembly of Experts, who by law are supposed to quickly name a successor. The panel consists of Shiite clerics who are popularly elected after their candidacies are approved by the Guardian Council, Iran’s constitutional watchdog.
Khamenei had major influence over both clerical bodies, making it unlikely the next leader will mark a radical departure.
Here are the top contenders.
Mojtaba Khamenei
The son of Khamenei, a mid-level Shiite cleric, is widely considered a potential successor. He has strong ties to Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard but has never held office. His selection could prove awkward, as the Islamic Republic has long criticized hereditary rule and cast itself as a more just alternative.
Ayatollah Ali Reza Arafi
Arafi is a member of the provisional government council. The senior Shiite cleric was handpicked by Khamenei to be a member of the Guardian Council in 2019, and three years later he was elected to the Assembly of Experts. He leads a network of seminaries.
Hassan Rouhani
Rouhani, a relative moderate, was president of Iran from 2013 to 2021 and reached the landmark nuclear agreement with the Obama administration that U.S. President Donald Trump scrapped during his first term. Rouhani served on the Assembly of Experts until 2024, when he said he was disqualified from running for reelection. Rouhani criticized it as an infringement on Iranians’ political participation.
Hassan Khomeini
Khomeini is the most prominent grandson of the founder of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. He is also seen as a relative moderate, but has never held government office. He currently works at his grandfather’s mausoleum in Tehran.
Ayatollah Mohammed Mehdi Mirbagheri
Mirbagheri is a senior cleric popular with hard-liners who serves on the Assembly of Experts.
He was close to the late Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi, a fellow hard-liner who wrote that Iran should not deprive itself of the right to produce “special weapons,” a veiled reference to nuclear arms.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Mirbagheri denounced the closure of schools as a “conspiracy.”
He is currently the head of the Islamic Cultural Center in Qom, the main center for Islamic teaching in Iran.
World
US cleared to use British bases for limited strikes on Iranian missile capabilities
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
The U.S. has been cleared to use British bases for limited strikes on Iran’s missile capabilities after Prime Minister Keir Starmer signed off on the plan, and while U.K. Defense Secretary John Healey stated on Sunday Britain had “stepped up alongside the Americans.”
“The only way to stop the threat is to destroy the missiles at source, in their storage depots or the launchers which are used to fire the missiles,” Starmer confirmed in a recorded statement to the nation.
“The U.S. has requested permission to use British bases for that specific and limited defensive purpose,” he said. “We have taken the decision to accept this request.”
The decision came amid escalation across the Middle East in the wake of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran and Tehran’s retaliatory missile and drone attacks, raising fears of a broader regional conflict.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer signed off on a plan to use British bases for limited strikes on Iranian missile capabilities. (Kin Cheung / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)
On Feb. 28, in the wake of Operation Epic Fury, Starmer confirmed British planes “are in the sky today” across the Middle East “as part of coordinated regional defensive operations to protect our people, our interests and our allies.”
Healey went on to disclose Sunday that two Iranian missiles were fired in the direction of Cyprus, where Britain maintains key sovereign base areas.
The Royal Air Force confirmed that Typhoon jets operating from Qatar as part of the joint U.K.-Qatar Typhoon Squadron successfully intercepted an Iranian drone heading toward Qatar.
About 300 British personnel are stationed at a naval facility in Bahrain, where Iranian missiles and drones struck nearby areas.
“We’re taking down the drones that are menacing either our bases, our people or our allies,” Healey told “Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips” on Sky. “We’ve stepped up alongside the Americans. We’ve stepped up our defensive forces in the Middle East. We’re flying those sorties.”
ISRAEL’S LARGEST EVER MILITARY FLYOVER HAMMERS IRANIAN MILITARY TARGETS
British Defense Secretary John Healey stressed that the U.K. had “no part” in the American-Israeli strikes on Iran. (Peter Nicholls/Pool via Reuters)
Healey also made sure to stress that the U.K. had “no part” in the U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran and insisted all British actions were defensive. “All our actions are about defending U.K. interests and defending U.K. allies,” he said.
When asked if the U.K. would join the U.S. in offensive action, Healey said, “I’m not going to speculate,” according to Sky News.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Downing Street also confirmed Feb. 28 that Starmer and President Donald Trump had spoken by phone about the “situation in the Middle East,” the BBC reported.
Fox News Digital has reached out to Downing Street for comment.
World
Pakistan calls troops, orders 3-day curfew as 24 killed in pro-Iran rallies
Army deployed and some areas in northern Gilgit-Baltistan region put under curfew after deadly violence over Khamenei’s killing.
Published On 2 Mar 2026
Pakistan has called in the military and imposed a three-day curfew in some areas following deadly protests over the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in a joint United States-Israeli attack on Saturday.
At least 24 people were killed and dozens injured in clashes between protesters and security forces across the country on Sunday, prompting authorities to tighten security around the US embassy and consulates.
list of 4 itemsend of listRecommended Stories
The curfew was imposed before dawn Monday in the districts of Gilgit, Skurdu, and Shigar in the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region, where at least 12 protesters and one security officer were killed and dozens of others wounded during confrontations, according to an official statement.
Of those, seven were killed in Gilgit, a rescue official said, while six others died in Skardu, a doctor told AFP news agency on Monday.
Thousands of demonstrators on Sunday attacked the offices of the United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP), which monitors the ceasefire along the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, and the UN Development Programme in Skardu city.
Protesters also burned a police station and damaged a school and the offices of a local charity in Gilgit, according to officials.
UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric on Monday said protesters became violent near the UNMOGIP Field Station, which was vandalised.
“The safety and security of UN personnel and premises throughout the region remain our top priority, and we continue to closely monitor the situation,” Dujarric said.
Shabir Mir, a Gilgit-Baltistan government spokesman, said the situation was under control and that the curfew would remain in place until Wednesday. Police chief Akbar Nasir Khan urged residents to stay indoors, citing “deteriorating law and order conditions”.
In the southern port city of Karachi, the country’s commercial hub, 10 people were killed and more than 60 injured during a protest outside the US consulate.
Two additional protesters were killed in the capital, Islamabad, while heading towards the US embassy.
Pakistani authorities have beefed up security at US diplomatic missions across the country, including around the US consulate building in Peshawar, to avoid any further violence.
The US embassy and its consulates in Karachi and Lahore cancelled visa appointments and American Citizen Services on Monday, citing security concerns.
The federal government warned that the situation could further deteriorate amid large-scale demonstrations condemning Khamenei’s killing on Saturday.
Tehran has responded with a series of drone and missile attacks targeting Israel and US assets in several Gulf countries.
-
World5 days agoExclusive: DeepSeek withholds latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, sources say
-
Massachusetts5 days agoMother and daughter injured in Taunton house explosion
-
Denver, CO5 days ago10 acres charred, 5 injured in Thornton grass fire, evacuation orders lifted
-
Louisiana1 week agoWildfire near Gum Swamp Road in Livingston Parish now under control; more than 200 acres burned
-
Technology1 week agoYouTube TV billing scam emails are hitting inboxes
-
Politics1 week agoOpenAI didn’t contact police despite employees flagging mass shooter’s concerning chatbot interactions: REPORT
-
Technology1 week agoStellantis is in a crisis of its own making
-
News1 week agoWorld reacts as US top court limits Trump’s tariff powers