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Dan Le Batard’s New Media Startup Will Reportedly Target Jemele Hill And Bomani Jones
ROBBY KALLANDTWITTERSENIOR SPORTS WRITER
JANUARY 12, 2021





Dan Le Batard has ventured off on his own after two decades at ESPN, as the longtime columnist, radio host, and TV personality parted ways with the four-letter on January 4 with an emotional goodbye on Highly Questionable.

In the week-plus since, Le Batard’s radio show has been doing a “pirate” broadcast now that it is independent and while there was ample speculation about where the wildly popular show would land, the answer we got over the weekend was that Le Batard and former ESPN chief John Skipper would be teaming up to launch a new media company. While we don’t know specifics on a launch date for the new outlet or even a name, we do have some details on who they will be targeting to bring on board.

According to Front Office Sports, they are going after a number of Le Batard’s former ESPN colleagues, including Jemele Hill (who confirmed discussions in the story), Bomani Jones, Kate Fagan, and Erik Rydholm — the producer and creator of Highly Questionable, PTI, and much of ESPN’s afternoon block.
“We’re trying to figure out the most productive way to work together,” Hill told Front Office Sports. “Both John and Dan know I have such a deep level of respect for them. So me working with them again always felt like it was inevitable.”
Hill has a number of projects she is working on, like her Vice show Stick To Sports with Cari Champion as well as a Spotify podcast, so it seems the biggest hurdle is figuring out exactly what her role would be and how involved she is. Jones is still under contract with ESPN, having taken over Highly Questionable in Le Batard’s absence among other responsibilities, so swiping him away would be quite the task.

In any case, the Le Batard and Skipper company clearly has a vision for the type of personality they want to bring on board and see themselves as capable of landing some very big fish — which also indicates they will have ample funding behind them.
 

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John Skipper, Dan Le Batard’s Progressive Response To ‘Outkick’
  • Jemele Hill confirms early discussions with the new startup.
  • New outlet would be philosophical opposite of Clay Travis’ site.
PHOTO CREDIT: GAIL SCHULMAN/CBS BROADCASTING
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Former ESPN president John Skipper and personality Dan Le Batard are partnering on a politically progressive sports media company. The new venture is described as the strategic opposite of Clay Travis’ Outkick, sources told Front Office Sports.
Skipper and Le Batard will build a diverse lineup of progressive sports voices, said sources. Their target list includes former ESPN colleagues Jemele Hill, Bomani Jones and Kate Fagan.
Their still-unnamed startup has begun to seek sports talent in front of and behind the camera, said sources. Their strategy: sell various types of original content, from TV, radio and streaming sports shows to films and documentaries.
Hill confirmed she’s had early discussions with Skipper.
“We’re trying to figure out the most productive way to work together,” she told Front Office Sports. “Both John and Dan know I have such a deep level of respect for them. So me working with them again always felt like it was inevitable.”
Skipper, the executive chairman of sports streaming company DAZN, also wants to hire a “content creator” he trusts from his six-year stint as president of ESPN from 2012-2017.
Among possible executives on his wish list are three longtime colleagues: Erik Rydholm, who executive produced Le Batard’s “Highly Questionable” TV show at ESPN; Connor Schell, the former content chief who resigned to form his own production company; and DAZN executive vice president of content Jamie Horowitz, who launched DAZN’s “40 Days” documentary franchise after creating “SportsNation” and “First Take.”
A DAZN spokesman said Skipper was not available for comment.
Q&A: Jemele Hill Opens Up on Bubba Wallace, NFL Protests, and ESPN
BY MICHAEL MCCARTHY / JUNE 26, 2020
Skipper and Le Batard’s new content outfit faces plenty of hurdles. First, they’ll need financing. Their standard of personalities and executive talent won’t come cheap.
Some candidates on their wish list like Jones, host of “The Right Time” podcast, are still under contract with ESPN.
Hill, whom ESPN suspended in 2017 after calling President Donald Trump a “white supremacist,” has formed her own independent media platform after leaving the sports giant.
Her projects include “Stick to Sports,” the Vice TV talk show with Cari Champion, the “Jemele Hill is Unbothered” Spotify podcast, a production company, and a regular column in The Atlantic.
The media veterans are tapping into a culturally, politically progressive avenue at a perfect time. The country is one week removed from the U.S. Capitol riots and one week away from Joe Biden’s inauguration and Democratic control of the Congress.
Jimmy Pitaro, Skipper’s successor as ESPN president, had directed his talent to steer clear of pure politics unless it directly intersects with sports such as player protests over the death of George Floyd.
Le Batard, whose parents are Cuban immigrants, called ESPN “cowardly” in 2019 for not addressing Trump’s racist remarks about four Democratic congresswomen of color at a political rally.
Dan Le Batard Leaving ESPN; Asked Out Of Contract Early
BY MICHAEL MCCARTHY / DECEMBER 3, 2020
“Here, all of a sudden, nobody talks politics on anything unless we can use one of these sports figures as a meat shield in the most cowardly possible way to discuss the subject,” Le Batard had said on his show, adding that Hill’s public battle with Trump made ESPN afraid to tackle racial and social justices issues.
After signing off from ESPN on Jan. 4, Le Batard recently called Travis a “shit-stain” for hosting Trump on his radio show multiple times.
Even if they don’t reach an agreement on her involvement, Hill has “no doubt” Skipper and Le Batard will be successful in their new venture.
“John and Dan could fill a huge hole in the marketplace in terms of more content. Yes, of course, ESPN has a lot of it. But as streaming continues to grow and develop, this is still an untouched area for them,” she said. “So there’s a lot of opportunity out there.”
Travis tweeted he welcomes anyone who wants to start their own media business.
“Yay, capitalism. But this will just make [Outkick] even more successful because it pushes the rest of the sports media industry even farther left. It’s a woke knife fight to see who is the purest.”
If the Skipper/Le Batard startup gets off the ground, it should have its pick of available talent. Thousands of writers, editors, producers, directors, announcers and analysts have been thrown out of work by COVID-19-caused layoffs in the media business.
At the start of 2021, sports media free agents include ex-ESPNers such as Mike Golic Sr., Josina Anderson, Trey Wingo and Michelle Beadle. If Skipper and Le Batard hit it big, one hope is their independent company could one day sell for something close to the $200 million pocketed by ex-ESPN colleague Bill Simmons for The Ringer.
The Miami Herald first reported on Skipper and Le Batard’s plan to partner on a new venture.
 

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LOL. So ESPN kept the highly questionable show name even with Dan not on there. I see from the past shows they have a rotating 3 talking heads each day.
 

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LOL. So ESPN kept the highly questionable show name even with Dan not on there. I see from the past shows they have a rotating 3 talking heads each day.

At first I heard it was gonna be BOMANI show and Dan and Papi even happily passed the torch

but the last few days I have seen a rotation.

I aint sure how I feel about that.

but the show is fine so far maybe they still working out the kinks.

Sidebar..

Rumor is Dan and Skipper want all those folks including the producer to come over to their NEW SITUATION.
 

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NBC Sports Network Will Shut Down to Bolster Peacock Streaming Service
NBCSN was the No. 2 sports channel on cable last year, but coverage of the N.H.L., the English Premier League and NASCAR is now moving to Peacock and the USA Network.



NBCSN’s coverage of the N.H.L. will move to other NBCUniversal properties as more sports coverage shifts to streaming services.Credit...Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images
By Kevin Draper
  • Jan. 22, 2021
NBCUniversal will shut down its NBC Sports Network cable channel by the end of the year, according to an internal memo obtained by The New York Times, and move some of its sports programming to USA Network and the Peacock streaming service.
The move will shutter a reliable stream of revenue for the company — NBCSN brings in hundreds of millions of dollars annually — in order to help build Peacock into a bona fide competitor to other streaming services, like Netflix and Disney+, and to shore up the USA Network.
The changes signal that the traditional cable bundle, which has lost tens of millions of subscribers over the past decade to cord cutting but has been kept afloat largely by live sports programming, may soon lose some of that ballast, too. They also continue a trend of consolidation among cable channels, as cable operators seek to curtail the hefty fees they have to pay the networks to carry them.
Some of NBCUniversal’s biggest sports franchises will soon appear on USA Network, according to the memo, which was sent by Pete Bevacqua, chairman of the NBC Sports Group.
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“Commencing later this year, USA Network will begin carrying and/or simulcasting certain NBC Sports programming, including N.H.L. Stanley Cup playoff games and NASCAR races, as part of a larger transition within the company,” Bevacqua wrote.

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The news of NBCUniversal’s plans was first reported by Sports Business Journal and The Wall Street Journal.

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NBCSN was founded in 1995 by Comcast as the Outdoor Life Network, and was later renamed Versus. After Comcast, the nation’s largest cable operator, moved to acquire NBCUniversal in 2009, the channel was renamed again, and NBCSN became the home for NBC’s sports programming that did not fit on, or was not big enough for, NBC itself.
Sports fans know the network for its heavy coverage of the N.H.L., English Premier League soccer and NASCAR. For three weeks every other year, it has hosted Olympics coverage nonstop, and in off-years it sustained Olympic sports like track and field and cycling.
NBCSN is still quite popular and generates plenty of revenue. It was the second most viewed cable sports channel in 2020, behind only ESPN and ahead of FS1 and ESPN2. The channel is available in 76.6 million homes, each of which pays 42 cents per month for it, according to Kagan, a media research group within S&P Global Market Intelligence. That means NBCSN is on track to earn more than $380 million in revenue this year, even before advertising is taken into account.
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But the future of television is streaming, and Comcast is determined not to be left behind.
Comcast has shifted its strategy in recent years to focus on its growing broadband internet business, starting Peacock as part of that effort. The ad-supported service, which is free but includes a paid tier, has drawn at least 22 million subscribers and now outpaces Comcast’s more traditional cable video business, which has 19 million subscribers.
NBCUniversal has already moved most of its Premier League broadcasts to Peacock, and adding more sports could give the company more leverage when negotiating bundling deals with other broadband services.
The decision will have major ramifications for a number of upcoming rights negotiations.
For the past decade NBCUniversal has paid an average of $200 million annually to be the sole national broadcaster of the N.H.L. in the United States, with most of those games appearing on NBCSN. But that deal expires after this season, and NBC’s agreement with the English Premier League expires a year later, in 2022.
One question that is likely to come up in future negotiations is whether NBCUniversal can find enough airtime on NBC and USA Network to ensure those leagues and others plenty of games on traditional television — which retains the widest reach — or if the leagues can be sold on the virtues of Peacock, which is still a relatively niche streaming service.
Peacock is available to Comcast customers for free, but the company is also making it available to other broadband providers. Most cable operators, such as Charter and Cox, now rely on broadband business for growth and have been bundling streaming services such as Netflix into their internet packages. The cable operators take a fee from the streaming platforms in this arrangement.
For the last two decades, television networks have needed cable sports channels to serve as repositories for the overflow of game broadcasts they have the rights to. ESPN broadcasts so many games that it now has nine cable channels to show them all. But one streaming service can show an infinite number of simultaneous games, making obsolete the main utility of cable sports channels.
While entertainment programming has moved to streaming services in droves, sports has lagged, with the biggest leagues and events still appearing on traditional network television but the bulk of the games on cable. Only the smallest leagues have the majority of their programming available on streaming platforms — which, perhaps, makes them the most forward-thinking.
 

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ESPN reporter Tom Rinaldi signs with Fox Sports
Scott Gleeson
USA TODAY




ESPN award-winning reporter Tom Rinaldi is leaving the network to sign with Fox Sports, it was announced Wednesday.

Rinaldi is set to cover major sporting events, including the Super Bowl, World Series, World Cup and major college football games.

“Tom is one of the all-time great people in this business and a generational storyteller,” Eric Shanks, Fox Sports’ CEO and executive producer, said in a statement. “The biggest events on Fox just got bigger because of Tom, and we are honored to have him as our newest teammate.”

Rinaldi, winner of 16 Sports Emmy Awards and seven Edward R. Murrow Awards, reported on emotional feature stories for ESPN, where he began in 2002, and was often on the sidelines for the NCAA national championship games of the College Football Playoff in conjunction with his coverage on "College GameDay".
“I’m beyond excited to join the great team at Fox Sports,” Rinaldi said in a statement. “To contribute to the network’s incredible collection of live events, and to continue to tell the stories across those sports and in those venues, is such a fantastic opportunity. I can’t wait to get started.”

Some of Rinaldi's most notable interviews include the first interview in 2010 with golf star Tiger Woods following his car accident and the scandal that followed.

He authored the book, “The Red Bandanna: A Life, A Choice, A Legacy,” which chronicles the tragic death of Welles Crowther, a former Boston College lacrosse player, volunteer firefighter and equities trader who lost his life while saving others in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
ESPN recently eliminated 500 positions and let go of 300 employees.

 

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Bomani Jones wonders if he’s still a fit at ESPN
"I don’t know what the paradigm is going to be for guys on television talking about sports if you’re not Stephen A. Smith."
ESPNBy Ian Casselberry on 01/26/2021
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Does Bomani Jones have a future at ESPN?
In light of layoffs and departures from the network — the most notable being Dan Le Batard’s recent exit — the commentator and host is wondering if he’s still a fit when personalities are phased out for more SportsCenter, more athletes are hired for on-air roles, and a bombastic, hot take approach is being favored over insightful discussion and analysis.




“I don’t know what the paradigm is going to be for guys on television talking about sports if you’re not Stephen A. Smith,” Jones told the


Less than three years ago, Jones’s star appeared to be on the rise at ESPN. Following a co-hosting stint on Highly Questionable and a national show on ESPN Radio, Jones scored a showcase with High Noon, a talk show with Pablo Torre that seemingly put the two in position for future stardom. Tony Kornheiser predicted that Jones and Torre would eventually take over Pardon the Interruption from him and Michael Wilbon, and High Noon appeared to be an ideal warm-up for that.

Unfortunately, the show was canceled after less than two years on the air. Format shifts and timeslot changes made it difficult for High Noon to find an audience, though viewers didn’t respond to the show either. For that, Jones blames himself and Torre, telling Strauss that their friendship didn’t translate into on-air chemistry, something with which Kornheiser and Wilbon thrived.

Jones and Torre are still at ESPN, having signed new contracts after High Noon‘s cancellation. Yet while both are still featured on TV and online with appearances on Highly Questionable and Around the Horn, Torre’s place at the network appears to have solidified with his role as host of the ESPN Daily podcast. That show provides the longform content and in-depth analysis previously seen with Outside the Lines, often with a lighter, more fun sensibility.

However, Jones hasn’t found that foothold, that signature platform.

Strauss reports that Jones wanted to take over as Highly Questionable host, but ESPN executives opted for a rotating cast. (And without Le Batard, the future of the show, especially in a midday timeslot, is uncertain anyway.) A show on ESPN+ is another possibility, but viewers may only look for live sports on the streaming platform.




Jones is reportedly a personality that Le Batard and John Skipper have targeted for their new content venture, Meadowlark Media. But with the company still trying to figure out exactly what it will be and who fits, Jones will likely wait. He’s still under contract with ESPN into 2022.
Whether or not Jones stays with ESPN and finds the ideal role will also say a lot about what the network wants to be in years to come. Does ESPN want to be a place that features substantive commentators like Jones, even if they’re not stars, or is the preference to push personalities that can possibly break into the mainstream, as Smith has?
For what it’s worth, ESPN president Jimmy Pitaro told Strauss that Jones’s “future was bright” at the network. If that’s true, executives and producers will have to follow through and find a showcase for him.
 

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Dana White puts UFC, ESPN in middle of Gina Carano controversy
By Justin Terranova
February 15, 2021 | 10:15am | Updated


Gina Carano says ‘They can’t cancel us,’ reportedly has new project


UFC president Dana White ensnared his own company in the Gina Carano cancel controversy.

White was asked about Carano, the MMA fighter-turned-actress, on Saturday night after UFC 258.

“Leave her alone. We make mistakes, we all make mistakes,” White said. “For everybody to go in on her … I love how Ariel Helwani made it all about him, such a douche.”



Carano was recently fired from “The Mandalorian” by Disney after a series of bizarre social media posts, including one in which she compared today’s political climate to the Nazi era.

“Jews were beaten in the streets, not by Nazi soldiers but by their neighbors…. even by children,” she wrote on Instagram with an image of Nazi Germany.

“Because history is edited, most people today don’t realize that to get to the point where Nazi soldiers could easily round up thousands of Jews, the government first made their own neighbors hate them simply for being Jews.”

Helwani is a top UFC reporter and is Jewish. He posted a video over the weekend in which he shared his thoughts on Carano.



“Obviously I am very disappointed in what she posted. To be honest I haven’t agreed with a lot of the things she has posted over the past year,” Helwani, who heads ESPN’s MMA coverage, said in part. “This last post, essentially comparing being a Republican in America, or having a certain political view, to being a Jew in Nazi Germany during World War 2 is asinine. It is an absolutely crazy comparison to make and is completely insensitive to think that Jewish people and other minorities as well, not just Jews, but in this particular post Jews were the ones discussed, had to hide in attics and in gutters and had to be separated from their families and murdered six million of them.

“Umm.. to compare that to what is going on in this country is just a very tone deaf analogy to make, to put it mildly. Now I am not one, I am not into the whole cancel culture and all of that. I am not here to talk about someone’s employment or something like that. I am hear to talk about the comment. The statement. The analogy.

“As a Jewish person, and as a human being, it just doesn’t sit well. And I wish she would have never posted that. And quite frankly I wish someone would have talked to her about her social media posts over the past year. Some of them not even political. Just in general, they felt off to me. I am sorry she has gone down this path.”

https://nypost.com/2021/02/11/gina-caranos-firing-has-some-alleging-double-standard/

Carano fought for Strikeforce and EliteXC, earning a 7-1 record between 2006 and 2009 before turning her attention to acting.
White and Helwani have a tumultuous history. White suspended the reporter briefly in 2016 for breaking news that Brock Lesnar was returning to the sport. White had Helwani escorted out of UFC 199 for reporting on that information and then claimed he was banned for life before rescinding that after two days.

“Ariel is a valued colleague and an exceptional MMA reporter. His record speaks for itself,” ESPN said in a statement.

Helwani’s colleagues, both within ESPN and the UFC community, have also voiced their support for him.

ESPN and UFC are in the middle of a five-year, $1.5 billion rights partnership that began in 2019.

Carano has vowed to resume her career, apparently with controversial website the Daily Wire.

“They can’t cancel us if we don’t let them,” Carano told that outlet. “The Daily Wire is helping make one of my dreams — to develop and produce my own film — come true. I cried out and my prayer was answered. I am sending out a direct message of hope to everyone living in fear of cancellation by the totalitarian mob.”


ESPN’s Ariel Helwani-Dana White response took far too long
By Andrew Marchand
February 17, 2021 | 5:21pm | Updated


ariel-helwani-dana-white-douche-espn.jpg


Over the weekend, UFC president Dana White called ESPN MMA insider and reporter Ariel Helwani a “douche” after Helwani, who is Jewish, thoughtfully commented on his personal Instagram about MMA fighter and actress Gina Carano’s firing by Disney after she compared Jews in Nazi Germany to the current plight of Republicans.

The combative White has not been a big fan of Helwani, who is sort of the Adrian Wojnarowski of MMA. It is not uncommon for reporters and the people they cover to have issues. They are usually, however, aired in private.

While big name ESPN colleagues, like Jeff Passan, Cassidy Hubbarth and Kevin Neghandi supported Helwani on Twitter, ESPN remained silent until three days later when it released a statement saying: “Ariel is a valued colleague and an exceptional MMA reporter. His record speaks for itself.”

There was no mention of White and the situation. ESPN’s parent company, Disney — which let go Carano from its Mandalorian series — wanted it to fade.

That leads to what ESPN, under chairman Jimmy Pitaro, wants to be as it balances its employees and its rights holders. While ESPN seems more than willing to step up for its league partners with huge deals — understandably as that’s the core of its business — it is simultaneously laying off and cutting salaries of its reporters and commentators. This makes the ground uneasy.

When ESPN takes so long to publicly back its employee, the tremors increase. It has always been a complicated balance, covering the people you do business with, but in this current state of layoffs, it did not go unnoticed how long it took for ESPN to publicly support one of its top reporters.​
 

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Skip Bayless inks new $32M Fox deal after ESPN’s failed Stephen A. Smith reunion attempt
By Andrew Marchand

March 4, 2021 | 2:11pm | Updated


Enlarge Image

Skip Bayless (right) is staying with Fox Sports on a $32 million contract after ESPN sought to reunite him with Stephen A. Smith (left).FilmMagic

ESPN made a full-court press to reunite Skip Bayless with Stephen A. Smith, The Post has learned.

The duo would have done a daily ESPN+ show together, while being splashed all over ESPN, including weekly spots on the “Monday Night Football” halftime show.



After lengthy negotiations, it culminated in Fox Sports retaining Bayless with a four-year, $32 million contract, according to sources.



As part of the agreement, Bayless, a professional provocateur, continues to do his daily morning sports debate show on FS1’s “Undisputed” with Shannon Sharpe and host Jenny Taft. Bayless and FS1 are in the early planning stage of a potential second daily show for the afternoons. Bayless is expected to be a solo act for that program.



Smith, who makes close to $8 million per year, was a driving force in ESPN’s recruitment of Bayless. The long negotiations went over several months and did not conclude until late fall.



In August, ESPN offered the 69-year-old Bayless a four-year deal in the $30 million range. There is disagreement among sources on ESPN’s best offer, as some officials had it as high as $31 million and others had it as low as $26.5 million. The desire, though, was unquestioned.

The impetus for the move was not to put the “First Take” band back together, but rather to bolster the network’s burgeoning new subscription platform, ESPN+.



The duo would have appeared on ESPN on a variety of programs in an effort to drive viewers to watch and subscribe to ESPN+.

Smith and Bayless have had a kinship, dating back two decades. The two have remained close since Bayless left ESPN five years ago, with Smith making it a point to meet up with Bayless and his wife, Ernestine, whenever he was in Los Angeles.



“Stephen A. Smith is even more of a brother to me than my real brother,” Bayless told The Post. “I love the man, as you know, on and off the air. Since I left ‘First Take’ for ‘Undisputed’ back in June of 2016, Stephen A. and I have remained in close touch.”

Bayless expressed an appreciation for both the leadership at Fox Sports and ESPN. He also lauded his relationship with Sharpe, saying the two get along great, even though it is not the family-like bond that he and Smith have forged. Bayless declined to go too deep into the finer points of the deal.



Fox Sports and ESPN declined comment.



When Bayless left ESPN for Fox Sports five years ago, there was a boilerplate matching clause included in his four-year, $24 million deal. In these negotiations, Fox Sports used that, while adding a $1 million sweetener, to top the ESPN offer.



The story did not end there.



Even when Fox Sports had an agreement with Bayless to stay, ESPN was still determined to add a Smith and Bayless show to ESPN+. This is the area that Disney, ESPN’s parent company, is focused on and looks at as its future.



ESPN executives broached the idea of having Bayless stay on FS1 in the mornings, debating on “Undisputed” with Sharpe, while Smith continued on ESPN’s “First Take” in the mornings with Max Kellerman.


Then, in a rare cross-pollination between ESPN and Fox Sports broadcasters, Smith and Bayless would still team up for their ESPN+ program.


Ultimately, there were too many hurdles to make such a cross-corporation setup feasible.



Smith has started a solo ESPN+ program called “Stephen A’s World,” which is said to be doing well.



ESPN’s aggressive push for Bayless happened amid planning for layoffs, which complicated matters. In November, ESPN eliminated 500 positions, letting go of 300 people in the process.



There was optimism at some points that the deal would happen, as the setup for Smith was being planned. Smith, 53, would have had a bicoastal arrangement, where he would be in New York for “First Take” some weeks and in Los Angeles on others to be in person with Bayless.



Ultimately, Smith and Bayless did not reunite. But their friendship remains strong and Bayless did say he has no plans for this to be his final contract.

,
 

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ESPN Investigating Alleged Sexist Comments By Basketball Analyst Dan Dakich On Radio Show, Twitter
By Erik Pedersen
Erik Pedersen
Managing Editor
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March 1, 2021 8:03pm


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ESPN is looking into alleged comments byt college basketball analyst Dan Dakich last week during an argument about monetary compensation — or lack thereof — to collegiate athletes. During the back-and-forth, Dakich went after several academics who disagreed with him, using Twitter and his Indianapolis radio show to do so.

Asked whether Dakich would take part in the network’s broadcasts this week, an ESPN spokesperson told USA Today: “We are taking this matter very seriously and are in the process of looking into it.”

The row was over Duke star Jalen Johnson. Johnson announced in February that he would skip the remainder of the college basketball season and declare for the 2021 NBA draft. On February 20th Dakich tweeted, “Tell me again how Duke isn’t better without Jalen Johnson.”


Duke lecturing fellow and host of the “End of Sport” podcast Dr. Nathan Kalman-Lamb called out Dakich and another sports journalist for building their careers “entirely on the unpaid labor of young people” who, continued Kalman-Lamb, “they will also gleefully attempt to publicly humiliate.”



During the dispute, Dakich ripped into Dr. Kalman-Lamb and his podcast co-host Dr. Johanna Mellis, reportedly using sexist and misogynistic language during the back-and-forth. Dakich later deleted his Twitter account.

Dakich played college basketball for Indiana under coach Bob Knight from 1981 to 1985. He was an assistant coach at Indiana under Knight when the program won a national title in 1987. He was a head coach for over a decade before becoming the interim head coach at Indiana at the end of the 2008.

He currently hosts Dakich “The Dan Dakich Show” on the ESPN radio affiliate in Indianapolis, WFNI. He is also heard in that market on The Fan 93.5. In November 2010, Dakich joined ESPN as color commentator and studio analyst for its a college basketball coverage.

In October 2019, Dakich was suspended from his show for failing “to adhere to the journalistic principles” of WFNI.

More recently Dakich, commenting on the firing of a high school basketball coach, called a player a “methhead” and threatened, “I may just drive down there and beat the hell out of every school board member.” He also said the town where the high school was located was full of “meth and AIDS and needles.”

At one point, there was a Change.org petition to have ESPN ban Dackich from announcing IU games.
 

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Ravens' Matthew Judon threatens to release photos of ESPN reporter at strip club after Twitter spat
Judon wasn’t happy with ESPN reporter Jamison Hensley's reporting of his contract negotiations with the Ravens


By Daniel Canova | Fox News

Baltimore Ravens linebacker Matthew Judon wasn’t happy with ESPN reporter Jamison Hensley's reporting of his contract negotiations with the franchise, so he decided to threaten to release old photos of Hensley in a strip club on Wednesday.

"I know ya’ll don’t because I just found out this year but you have about a month to sign a long term deal after being franchised tagged," Judon wrote on his Instagram story. "If a deal doesn’t get done in that time. Ain’t no deal or no talking between the two parties. @jamison.hensley so I’m waiting on your ESPN sourced apology or I’m leaking these photos I got with you in the strip club."



In the ESPN article, Hensley wrote about Judon and other Ravens players who are eligible to receive the franchise tag this offseason. Judon retaliated and disagreed with Hensley in tweets posted on Wednesday. Hensley countered by saying that he stood by his reporting.



"Where @jamisonhensley lying butt at? I got time today," Judon wrote. "Bro you have to stop lying, I know you want clicks and like and wanna be the people’s camp but stop lying. That weak."




Hensley responded: "Hi Matthew. I was told that Ravens offered you a deal similar to Za’Darius’ [Smith] ($16.5M per season) earlier this season and it was declined. If you have a comment, I would certainly add that to the piece. I’ve always been fair with you. Thanks and welcome back to Twitter."



Judon wrote in a separate tweet: "This isn’t true who told you this if you can’t tell me that we’re all@going to have to think you pulling stuff outta no where."



"I will definitely add your response to the piece," Hensley replied. "If you ever have an issue with any of my reporting, I would be happy to listen and explain. I’ve always aimed to cover you in a respectful manner in your five years in Baltimore. Hope you have a great offseason."



That’s when Judon took his thoughts to Instagram and threatened to release photos of Hensley in a strip club. As of Wednesday night, the Ravens and ESPN haven’t commented on the situation.

Judon finished the 2020 NFL season with 50 total tackles, six sacks and two passes defended.
 

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NHL embraces future with $2.8 billion ESPN deal
By Andrew Marchand
March 10, 2021 | 8:25pm | Updated


The sweet sound of ESPN’s iconic music will play again in the ears of longtime NHL fans. You can almost hear Steve Levy welcoming back hockey with nostalgia and enthusiasm.

Though the new deal between ESPN and the NHL feels out of yesteryear, it is really about tomorrow becoming today in the world of big-time sports media.

In paying, according to sources, around $2.8 billion over the next seven seasons beginning next year, Disney is making sure diehard hockey fans must have ESPN+, Hulu or preferably — in Mickey Mouse’s passive, aggressive, but cunning business mind — both.

In picking up the “A” package starting in 2021-22, ABC/ESPN will broadcast four of the next seven Stanley Cup finals. It will have its choice of conference finals. It will have half the playoffs. This will all arrive for fans the traditional way you receive games on network TV and cable. So you will have to keep your traditional subscription to ESPN to see the postseason.

During the regular season, there will be 75 exclusive games on ESPN+ and Hulu. You will only be able to get them there. So, a year from now, if Rangers-Islanders is one of those 75, you would need to have ESPN+ or Hulu to view it. No MSG Network.

We have already seen this trend in soccer, where big-time fans of the sport must have Peacock (Premier League), ESPN+ (German and Italian leagues and FA Cup) and Paramount Plus (Champions League) if they want English-language broadcasts of all these matches.

Big-time wrestling fans were recently shifted from WWE Network to Peacock. The NFL is soon expected to announce a deal with Amazon Prime for exclusive Thursday night broadcasts that will start in a couple of years.

The NHL’s new deal with ESPN is worth a reported $2.8 billion.Getty Images

But this NHL deal is more than the NFL’s dip in the water. It is more evidence of the transition from cable to streaming.

Besides the exclusive games, a subscription to ESPN+ will include 1,100 out-of-market matchups that were formerly on NHL.TV.
“ESPN+ will be a must-have for hockey fans,” ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro said.

There are various prices and bundles on all these platforms, but, generally speaking, they are in the $5-7 per month range. Once you start paying them, you may do it for life. At 12.1 million ESPN+ subscribers and growing, it could be quite a business.

For the NHL, this deal made sense because there will be another one behind it. NBC is currently in the final year of its 10-year, $2 billion contract. A source said they are paying $240 million this year. ESPN, as part of a previous digital rights deal, was already spending $100 million on the NHL. If you add both those costs together, it is $340 million. Now, with both, ESPN will go to $400 million per year over the seven-year deal. A $60 million increase for you or me would be something else, but in the world of big TV is not that much.
SEE ALSO
NHL, ESPN reach TV deal with NBC in predicament
But the NHL still has three Stanley Cup finals, half of the playoffs and regular-season games to sell. NBC has the incumbent advantage, while Fox is the other main suitor.

They will likely come near the $200 million neighborhood, making the NHL around $260 million in the black, year-over-year. That’s the next story. Today, though, is about ESPN’s return.

ESPN comes back to the NHL, which is a win for those like Levy, Barry Melrose, Linda Cohn and John Bucigross, who stuck around and avoided the ceaseless staff cuts.

They will probably all be part of the coverage, while ESPN could look internally (ESPN New York’s Rick DiPietro seems like a natural as an analyst) and maybe outside to someone like Fox Sports’ Jenny Taft, who was born on skates.

The story of ESPN’s NHL reunion is 17 years in the making. The idea that these two are getting back together after all these years is a nice blast from the past, but this $2.8 billion agreement is all about how the future is quickly becoming the present for fans.
 

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NFL announces TV deals with ESPN/ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, Amazon

The NFL announced a new set of national television deals Thursday, keeping games on ESPN/ABC, Fox, CBS, NBC, Amazon and NFL Network through the 2033 season.

The agreement keeps Sunday afternoon games on CBS and Fox, Sunday night games on NBC and Monday night games on ESPN, with some games also airing on ABC. For the first time, Amazon will be the exclusive home for Thursday night games, which will also be on over-the-air channels in the competing teams' home markets. NFL Network will also air select games.

ABC picks up two Super Bowls during the deal -- the first in 2026 -- with the other networks airing three each.

ESPN's package adds six games to the network during the season. There will be three Monday night doubleheaders -- with games on ESPN, followed by a game on ABC. There will also be a Saturday doubleheader during the season's final weekend and one Sunday morning game streaming nationally on ESPN+.

ESPN, which has previously aired a wild-card playoff game, will add one game in the divisional round as well.

For the first time, ESPN's Monday Night Football will be able to "flex" games, starting with Week 12 of the season, to ensure better matchups. ESPN's package also includes the ability to include four teams up to two times each.

ESPN will also continue to televise the NFL draft, as it has since 1980, and the Pro Bowl. NFL PrimeTime will also return to ESPN+ on Sunday nights, streaming throughout the week.

"When ESPN and the NFL work best together, the results are transformational for sports fans and the industry," ESPN and sports content chairman Jimmy Pitaro said in a statement. "Some of the most remarkable collaborative examples have occurred in the past 12 months and have demonstrated the extraordinary range of The Walt Disney Company that is fundamental to this agreement. There are so many exciting new components, including Super Bowls and added playoff games, new end-of-season games with playoff implications, exclusive streaming games on ESPN+, scheduling flexibility and enhancements, and much more. It's a wide-ranging agreement unlike any we've reached with the NFL, and we couldn't be more energized about what the future holds."

Said Disney chief executive officer Bob Chapek in a statement: "This landmark agreement guarantees that ESPN's passionate fan base will continue to have access to the best the NFL has to offer. Bringing all the considerable and unique capabilities of The Walt Disney Company and ESPN to the table opens up so many opportunities across our industry-leading direct-to-consumer, broadcast, cable, linear, social and digital outlets. Special thanks to Roger Goodell and the NFL owners for continuing to embrace new ways to appeal to their fans, especially through increasingly important platforms like ESPN+."

ESPN has one more year on its current deal, and it added a bridge agreement for 2022. For the upcoming 2021 season, ESPN will add two Saturday games with playoff implications in the final week of the season. For 2022, those games will continue, and there will be the Sunday morning international game on ESPN+ and one ESPN/ABC Monday Night Football doubleheader.

The ESPN package also includes the ability to stream games on ESPN+, as well as one international series game on an exclusive national basis. NBC, CBS and Fox will also have the ability to stream games they hold the rights to.

NBC's package also includes "flex" games, as it has in the past.

"We're proud to grow our partnerships with the most innovative media companies in the market," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. "Along with our recently completed labor agreement with the NFLPA, these distribution agreements bring an unprecedented era of stability to the League and will permit us to continue to grow and improve our game."

Goodell also said the league plans to work with its partners to infuse legalized sports betting into broadcasts.
 

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WFAN’s ‘Carton & Roberts’ gaining ground with ESPN’s lineup in disarray
By Andrew Marchand
February 23, 2021 | 3:37pm | Updated
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Evan Roberts and Craig CartonWFAN/YouTube

The setup of ESPN New York’s lineup is so poorly constructed that it is a gift to WFAN, Craig Carton and Evan Roberts.
“Carton & Roberts,” just a few months old, has taken advantage of it, making the battle for New York afternoon sports radio supremacy neck and neck and stream for stream.
What is clear is the trends favor “Carton & Roberts” potentially toppling “The Michael Kay Show” this winter book, which is the first time the two shows have gone head-to-head for a full three-month period.
The way FAN looks at it, it already has the advantage with a 5.6-5.5 rating share among men 25-54, according to Nielsen Audio.
(ESPN doesn’t count FAN’s streaming ratings in the battle because FAN sells its advertising separately so ESPN looks at it as if Kay is up 5.5-to-4.1 over C&R.)
Under FAN’s view, C&R is second to Kay’s third in the market. It should be noted we are at the three-innings mark into the winter game.
The overall setup of ESPN’s latest lineup seems to be inspired by Abbott and Costello, who maybe should pick up a shift as they might out-rate Max Kellerman.
Who’s on first? Keyshawn, JWill and Zubin? They’re on second.

Here is the mishmash of a schedule that ESPN puts out on 98.7 FM everyday Monday-through-Friday:
DiPietro, Canty & Rothenberg (5-8 a.m.)
Keyshawn, JWill and Zubin (8-10 a.m.)
Greeny (10-noon)
Bart and Hahn (noon-2 p.m.)
The Max Kellerman Show (2-3 p.m.)
The Michael Kay Show (3-7)
Don La Greca, Michael Kay and Peter Rosenberg of The Michael Kay ShowJeff Skopin/ESPN
The Bristol-based decisions offer too many shows, especially national ones, that do not put the actual New York audience first. If ESPN cares about competing with 98.7 FM, it should localize and simplify.
FAN has three main shows, “Boomer and Gio” (6-10 a.m.), “Moose & Maggie” (10-2) and “Carton & Roberts” (2-7 p.m). You don’t have to think about what you are getting.
With the momentum of Kay, Don La Greca and Peter Rosenberg taking down Mike Francesa in his final years and with Rick DiPietro, Chris Canty and Dave Rothenberg finding a rhythm, ESPN NY had been going in the right direction.
Instead of using that wind at the back of its FM signal, ESPN in New York has taken a step back with its 1 millionth schedule, give or take, in its 17 years.

Who’s on second? Greenberg? No, he’s on third.
In the mornings, ESPN must decide if it wants to give DiPietro, Canty and Rothenberg four local hours to go head-to-head with FAN’s Boomer Esiason and Gregg Giannotti from 6-10.
https://nypost.com/2021/02/19/craig-cartons-wfan-gambling-radio-show-is-surprisingly-good/

Right now, it is not a fair fight, with FAN dominating; especially from 8-10 a.m., when “Boomer & Gio” goes against the national show of Keyshawn Johnson, Jay Williams and Zubin Mehenti.

“Boomer & Gio” is second in the market after 106.7 FM (which is also first in afternoons). From 6-10, Boomer and Gio’s 6.9 rating more than doubles ESPN’s.

From 5-8 a.m., ESPN’s DiPietro, Canty and Rothenberg have made a little noise with a 3.7 share. It’s a start.

At 10 a.m., Greenberg is losing to FAN’s “Moose & Maggie,” 6.8 (third) to 2.5 (15th). Overall, when you include “Bart and Hahn” from noon-2, FAN basically maintains its numbers (6.6 to 3.3) while ESPN receives a little bump.

From noon-to-2 p.m., Bart Scott and Alan Hahn are much stronger on football and basketball as compared to baseball. They are doing mostly a

New York show for a national audience. This is the New York Post, so the odd format of the program is Peoria’s problem.

What makes the least amount of sense is Kellerman’s one-hour show from 2-3 p.m. Kellerman is best on radio in an ensemble program.

As a solo artist, he meanders and, though, he is from New York, his nationally-focused show is not built for it.

Carton and Roberts crush Kellerman 9.1 to 2.2 in New York, giving FAN a huge head start in its race before Kay, La Greca and Rosenberg even pick up their earphones.
https://nypost.com/2021/02/01/wwe-royal-rumble-how-michael-kay-became-a-storyline/
To count radio streaming or not to count streaming is one of the great questions of our times, and has been raging since Francesa’s crown became wobbly and fell off.

The bottom line, the Nielsen ratings aren’t perfect however you slice it. They only count 25-54 year-old males, which is outdated, but it is how advertising is sold. So we could be headed for another streaming debate in afternoons.

What is of importance are the trends. FAN wins all day, making the Kay’s Show’s job even harder to hold on.

Three innings into the winter book, “Carton & Roberts” is well positioned. ESPN has to figure out if it really wants to play in New York sports radio or not.
 

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ESPN really need to get their shit together in the tri-state area
no one wants to hear Max, Greeny & their money crew talk national sports

this is a Yankees, Giants, Knicks, Mets, Jets, Rangers, Islanders, Devils and...Nets town
should follow the fan model...3 shows all NY based. It sucks to pay Greeeny & Max but leave em off in your biggest market but thats what they'll have to do if they home to complete
 

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ESPN really need to get their shit together in the tri-state area
no one wants to hear Max, Greeny & their money crew talk national sports

this is a Yankees, Giants, Knicks, Mets, Jets, Rangers, Islanders, Devils and...Nets town
should follow the fan model...3 shows all NY based. It sucks to pay Greeeny & Max but leave em off in your biggest market but thats what they'll have to do if they home to complete

They don't hear you fam...

But they SHOULD
 
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