I think shes independentAnother DEI turd bites the dust. Next up Jamelle hill I hope, if she's still on some media somewhere.
I think shes independentAnother DEI turd bites the dust. Next up Jamelle hill I hope, if she's still on some media somewhere.
Walt Disney
's ESPN has reached a landmark deal with the National Football League to acquire NFL Network and other media assets from the league in exchange for the NFL taking a 10% equity stake in the sports network, the parties said on Tuesday.
The deal, which ESPN said would bolster the offerings on its upcoming ESPN streaming service, is subject to regulatory approval. Financial terms were not disclosed.
ESPN also will acquire NFL Fantasy, a digital offering, and will gain the rights to distribute the NFL RedZone television channel to its cable and satellite television customers...
Yup.. I just posted about it in the general thread.. forgot about this one.
Red Zone, the last bastion of watchable NFL broadcasts, is now dead.
The WWE is coming to ESPN.
The Disney-controlled sports and entertainment business will pay an average of $325 million per year for five years of U.S. rights to the WWE's biggest live events, including WrestleMania, the Royal Rumble and SummerSlam, beginning in 2026, according to people familiar with the matter who declined to be naming speaking about the deal specifics. Spokespeople at WWE and ESPN declined to comment.
NBCUniversal's Peacock had previously paid $180 million per year over five years for the package, according to two people familiar with the matter.
All 10 of the WWE's premium live events each year will stream on ESPN's new $29.99 per month direct-to-consumer platform in the U.S. Select events will be simulcast on ESPN's linear networks...
On Thursday, ESPN officially launched ESPN+, a sports streaming service that costs $29.99 a month. The company said the new offering was targeting two distinct consumer groups: a. cord nevers, aka those people who have never had a cable or satellite subscription, and b. cord cutters, aka those who have cut the cord and no longer have cable or satellite subscriptions. The move is necessary because, according to the New York Times from Thursday: "ESPN is in around 61 million homes today between cable, satellite and services like YouTube TV. ESPN receives around $15 per subscriber monthly from distributors for all of its networks."...