CNBC is tweaking its game.
The NBCUniversal-backed business-news outlet said on Tuesday it intends to grow its coverage of the sports industry with the launch of a new vertical called “CNBC Sport.” The company has hired Michael Ozanian, a Forbes journalist known for rankings of the most valuable sports leagues and teams, as a senior sports reporter who will examine valuations of sports franchises and how they are affected by news and developments.
Various CNBC reporters will add beats tied to the topic,\and focusing on the intersection between business and sports. CNBC journalists Alex Sherman, Contessa Brewer, Scott Wapner and Jessica Golden will contribute to the endeavor, while others will contribute reports on individual sports, such as Sara Eisen on Formula 1 and Dominic Chu on golf.
Axios previously reported the launch of CNBC Sport.
“The spotlight on sports has never been brighter with more money at play than ever before,...
The NBCUniversal-backed business-news outlet said on Tuesday it intends to grow its coverage of the sports industry with the launch of a new vertical called “CNBC Sport.” The company has hired Michael Ozanian, a Forbes journalist known for rankings of the most valuable sports leagues and teams, as a senior sports reporter who will examine valuations of sports franchises and how they are affected by news and developments.
Various CNBC reporters will add beats tied to the topic,\and focusing on the intersection between business and sports. CNBC journalists Alex Sherman, Contessa Brewer, Scott Wapner and Jessica Golden will contribute to the endeavor, while others will contribute reports on individual sports, such as Sara Eisen on Formula 1 and Dominic Chu on golf.
Axios previously reported the launch of CNBC Sport.
“The spotlight on sports has never been brighter with more money at play than ever before,...
- 7/2/2024
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
In order to cover business Monday, CNBC and Fox Business Network had to forego some of their own.
The NBCUniversal-owned business-news cable network interrupted programming with just a single commercial break between 9:30 a.m. and noon, according to a person familiar with the matter, and was expected to remain commercial free through the close of the stock markets. Fox Corp.’s Fox Business Network, meanwhile, went ad free between 1 p.m. eastern and 4:40 p.m. eastern as the market’s dips became more pronounced.
Both networks’ editorial staffs were scrambling to cover one of the biggest business stories of the year, a more than 900-point drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and corresponding tumbles in the Nasdaq and S&p 500 as investors reacted to new trade threats between the U.S. and China.
Going commercial free remains an option rarely used by TV-news outlets, though it is something utilized on occasion.
The NBCUniversal-owned business-news cable network interrupted programming with just a single commercial break between 9:30 a.m. and noon, according to a person familiar with the matter, and was expected to remain commercial free through the close of the stock markets. Fox Corp.’s Fox Business Network, meanwhile, went ad free between 1 p.m. eastern and 4:40 p.m. eastern as the market’s dips became more pronounced.
Both networks’ editorial staffs were scrambling to cover one of the biggest business stories of the year, a more than 900-point drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and corresponding tumbles in the Nasdaq and S&p 500 as investors reacted to new trade threats between the U.S. and China.
Going commercial free remains an option rarely used by TV-news outlets, though it is something utilized on occasion.
- 8/5/2019
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
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