Redbox Owner Chicken Soup For The Soul To Liquidate In Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Shift; Workforce Of 1,000 In Limbo Ahead Of Town Hall On Thursday

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Redbox parent Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment has shifted its bankruptcy filing from Chapter 11 to Chapter 7, meaning it will liquidate its business.

The company, sagging under the weight of nearly $1 billion in debt and a tall stack of unpaid bills, filed for bankruptcy protection on June 29. During bankruptcy court proceedings, it secured a “debtor in possession” loan of $8 million designed to help it resume paying workers after nearly a month of no paychecks and also restore their medical benefits. Deadline had earlier reported on the delays in pay and health care.

On Wednesday, HPS Investment Partners, which has been one of the company’s backers and arranged for financing for the DIP loan, said it could not extend any additional financial resources. It made a motion to shift the Chapter 11 case to Chapter 7, and U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Thomas M. Horan gave his approval, according to court filings.

The fate of the company’s workforce of 1,000 is unclear. In an email to employees obtained by Deadline, former board members Rob Warshauer and John Young explained that a Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee would be appointed and then determine the next steps. “The trustee may terminate all employees but that will be a decision that is up to the trustee,” they wrote.

A town hall meeting with employees has been scheduled for Thursday.

As the bankruptcy case unfolds, former CEO Bill Rouhana has obtained his own legal counsel as the court sorts through a number of claims about the company’s financial operations.

“We know that many of you have worked very hard (as we have along with the professionals) to provide a path forward that would allow for some continued operations, but as the court was informed, we cannot, in good conscience, continue down this path with no source of funding,” Warshauer and Young wrote. Their email highlighted a portion of Horan’s order affirming the Chapter 7 shift. “In no circumstance shall this order be deemed to require any employee of the debtors to provide any services without assurance of payment,” the order emphasized.

Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment, which spun off from the namesake self-help book publisher in 2017, grew via a series of acquisitions, buying properties like the streaming service Crackle and film distributors Screen Media and 1091 Pictures. Its biggest M&A deal, the $375 million acquisition of Redbox in 2022, proved its downfall for myriad financial and strategic reasons.

“It’s not right what they’re doing to the employees,” one worker told Deadline. “We’re all getting screwed over.”

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