What if Monogram Pictures remained open?

If you know much about DreamWorks Pictures, then you may know in our reality that this studio was founded in 1994 by entertainment legends Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen, but just imagine this: what if DreamWorks Pictures was founded in 1934, starting as a small studio and later expanding into a whole film production studio, a similar case to Columbia Pictures?

This may be what it could have been.

Changes

 * DreamWorks would've been originally known as Dalton Winter Pictures (1924-1955), DW Pictures (1955-1960), and then DW Pictures (1955-1960), DreamWorks Pictures (1960-present), DreamWorks Studios (1980-present), and DreamWorks SKG (1997-2017).
 * It would've be have two original founders: Donald Dalton and Jerald Winter (not real people but just made-up) until their deaths in 1955 and 1994.
 * Before its acquisition by NBCUniversal/Comcast, DreamWorks Studios would've be one of the major American film studios, along with Walt Disney Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, Paramount Pictures, 20th Century Fox (before its acquisition by The Walt Disney Company in 2019), Columbia Pictures, Universal Studios, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Lionsgate.
 * DreamWorks would've been a distributor from 1924 until 2005 where they stopped distributing their films after 70 years and only producing them as always.
 * In the 1970s, they would’ve join forces with Universal Studios, Paramount Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to form Cinema International Corporation (currently United International Pictures).
 * After adquiring DreamWorks Studios, NBCUniversal would've owned the largest film catalogue in the United States, as well as the largest animation catelog in the United States.
 * DreamWorks Animation would've been founded in 1934?