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SuccessBillionaires

Meet Larry Ellison, the 81-year-old tech billionaire-turned-media mogul

By
Jessica Coacci
Jessica Coacci
Success Fellow
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By
Jessica Coacci
Jessica Coacci
Success Fellow
Down Arrow Button Icon
October 8, 2025, 12:13 PM ET
Larry Ellison
The Ellison name is taking shape to be the future of movies, streaming, TV shows and more. Anna Moneymaker-Getty Images

Larry Ellison, Oracle’s chairman and chief technology officer, has by all means conquered the tech world. With a net worth near $345 billion, the database pioneer began his success by founding Oracle in the 1970s. Earlier this month, he briefly became the richest person in the world, topping Elon Musk before going back to second place. 

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However, the Ellison name now has a new venture: media. Larry Ellison is 81 and a tech billionaire best known for cofounding Oracle and now moving aggressively into media alongside his son David. The Ellison family’s influence over Paramount and CBS has surged because David Ellison’s Skydance deal to acquire Paramount Global places him atop the company that owns CBS.

CNN could come into the fold only if the family succeeds in a potential Warner Bros. Discovery pursuit, and TikTok involvement is tied to a U.S. consortium where Oracle/Ellison would hold a stake.

Ellison has been an ongoing ally of the president, raising millions for his campaign and advising him during the COVID-19 pandemic. And now, he’s poised to play a critical role in President Donald Trump’s executive order for TikTok’s U.S. operations. The U.S. branch of TikTok is valued at approximately $14 billion. Oracle, along with private equity group Silver Lake and Abu Dhabi’s MGX would together hold around 45%.

Meanwhile, with the help of his father’s money, David, the 42-year-old founder and CEO of Skydance Media—the company behind hit films like Top Gun: Maverick and Mission Impossible— has secured an $8 billion deal to purchase  Paramount and its subsidiaries including CBS, MTV, and Comedy Center. David is also reportedly eyeing a bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, the parent media conglomerate behind brands like HBO, CNN and TBS. 

Altogether, the Ellison family name is taking shape to be the future of movies, streaming, TV shows and more.  

Larry Ellison’s road to wealth as a two-time college dropout 

Before the Oracle founder spent his free time racing sailboats and flying planes, the self-made billionaire was raised by his aunt and uncle in Chicago. He first attended the University of Illinois but dropped out after his adoptive mother passed away. Later in 1966, he enrolled at University of Chicago, where he took computer science classes for about a semester before dropping out once more. 

He then swiftly moved to California and picked up programming skills. From there, he hopped around different jobs from Wells Fargo to tech company Amdahl, where he adapted more programming skills before becoming his own boss at just 33 years old. 

With an initial investment of just $2,000, Ellison co-founded Software Development Laboratories in 1977—the database company which would later become Oracle Corporation. It went on to become the backbone of some of the world’s most popular enterprise software offerings, and even stayed as a salient figure in the dot-com boom when it supplied databases to startup companies. 

With a market cap of over $811 billion, Ellison still owns about 40% of the technology giant—and his technology giant has become so influential it provides data services to governments. 

Today, the billionaire pledged to give away 95% of his fortune through the Ellison Institute of Technology, which aims to address global issues such as healthcare, food insecurity, climate change, and AI advancements, with a major new campus opening in Oxford worth approximately $1.3 billion. And he’s already donated millions to cancer research and treatment centers. 

Fortune Brainstorm AI returns to San Francisco Dec. 8–9 to convene the smartest people we know—technologists, entrepreneurs, Fortune Global 500 executives, investors, policymakers, and the brilliant minds in between—to explore and interrogate the most pressing questions about AI at another pivotal moment. Register here.
About the Author
By Jessica CoacciSuccess Fellow

Jessica Coacci is a reporting fellow at Fortune where she covers success. Prior to joining Fortune, she worked as a producer at CNN and CNBC.

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