ESPN To Layoff over 100 employees

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ESPN on Wednesday began another round of layoffs, this one aimed at on-air personalities, perhaps the starkest sign yet of the financial reckoning playing out in sports broadcasting as cord-cutting proliferates.
ESPN is by far the biggest and most powerful entity in the industry, and it also may feel the sting more as viewers turn away from traditional ways of consuming live sports.
The network has lost more than 10 million subscribers over the past several years. At the same time, the cost of broadcasting major sports has continued to rise. ESPN committed to a 10-year, $15.2 billion deal with the N.F.L. in 2011; a nine-year, $12 billion deal with the N.B.A.; and a $7.3 billion deal for the college football playoffs, among many others.
“ESPN was wrapped in Teflon for many years, but big payouts for rights fees plus significant losses in their subscriber base were like punches to the gut and head, and now the company is trying to make sure they are strong enough to fight in the future,” said James Andrew Miller, who wrote a book on ESPN and has contributed to The New York Times.
“They’ve decided one way to do this is to change their approach to content and rely more heavily on digital; this has enabled them to let go of a big chunk of their talent base.”
In October 2015, ESPN laid off about 300 people, most of whom were not on camera. The network has been periodically culling its staff as it adapts to changing consumer habits — fans increasingly watch video clips on their smartphones at the expense of traditional highlight shows like “SportsCenter” — and searches for ways to cut costs. It is locked into long-term contracts for programming rights with various sports leagues, which means savings must primarily come from a reduced staff.
In a letter to employees on Wednesday, ESPN’s president, John Skipper, acknowledged the “difficult decisions” ahead and suggested what the network was looking for as it reshaped itself in the coming days.
“Dynamic change demands and increased focus on versatility and value, and as a result, we have been engaged in the challenging process of determining the talent — anchors, analysts, reporters, writers and those who handle play-by-play — necessary to meet those demands,” Mr. Skipper said in the statement.
In the most recent quarter, Disney’s cable networks division reported $864 million in operating income, an 11 percent drop from the same period a year ago, with ESPN the reason for the entire decline, Disney said at the time. The company blamed higher N.B.A. and N.F.L. programming costs and lower ad sales for the weak results.
Earlier this month, Amazon paid $50 million for streaming rights to 10 of the N.F.L.’s Thursday night games for the 2017 season — or five times more than what Twitter paid a season ago, according to SportsBusiness Journal, which also reported that Facebook and YouTube bid on the package.
The ESPN layoffs come as Disney accelerates efforts to introduce an ESPN-branded subscription streaming service. The offering, expected this year and made possible by Disney’s $1 billion purchase in 2016 of part of BamTech, Major League Baseball’s streaming division, will include coverage of sports like hockey, tennis, cricket and college sports — mostly rights that are already owned by ESPN but not televised.
“You have to be willing to either create or experience some distribution as we migrate from what has been a more traditionally distributed world to a more nontraditional distribution world,” Robert A. Iger, Disney’s chief executive, told analysts on a conference call in February. “And some of that we’re going to end up doing to ourselves, meaning that we understand there is disruption, but we believe we have to be a disrupter too.”
Disney has long relied on ESPN’s steadily climbing cable subscriber fees as a profit engine. But cable networks across the board have been losing viewers to online media, which has slowed growth, and Wall Street has responded unfavorably.
Despite assurances by Mr. Iger that ESPN remains strong, investors and analysts have remained concerned about upheaval in the television business. Viewership via satellite and cable services is declining as streaming options proliferate, and ESPN, the naysayers contend, is particularly exposed to a slowdown because Disney has locked itself into lavish, long-term payments for sports rights. In a sign that Disney had done a good job preparing investors for the layoffs, shares climbed slightly in Wednesday morning trading.
Here are some of the ESPN employees who have made statements on social media so far (we will update this list):
Ed Werder, N.F.L. reporter
Jayson Stark, baseball writer
Trent Dilfer, N.F.L. analyst
Dana O’Neil, college basketball reporter
Eamonn Brennan, college basketball reporter
Danny Kanell, “Russillo and Kanell” radio host
Jane McManus, writer
Jeremy Crabtree, college football reporter
Brett McMurphy, college football reporter
Brian Bennett, Big Ten reporter
Doug Padilla, baseball writer
Max Olson, college football reporter
C.L. Brown, college basketball reporter
Mike Goodman, soccer writer
Johnette Howard, columnist
Austin Ward, Big Ten football reporter
Joe McDonald, hockey writer
Pierre LeBrun, hockey writer
Scott Burnside, N.H.L. columnist
Jesse Temple, Big Ten football reporter
Jim Bowden, baseball analyst
Mark Saxon, baseball reporter
Brett McMurphy, college football reporter
Paul Kuharsky, Tennessee Titans writer
Derek Tyson, SEC recruiting analyst
Jean-Jacques Taylor, ESPNDallas
Brendan Fitzgerald, ESPNU host.
ESPN is by far the biggest and most powerful entity in the industry, and it also may feel the sting more as viewers turn away from traditional ways of consuming live sports.
The network has lost more than 10 million subscribers over the past several years. At the same time, the cost of broadcasting major sports has continued to rise. ESPN committed to a 10-year, $15.2 billion deal with the N.F.L. in 2011; a nine-year, $12 billion deal with the N.B.A.; and a $7.3 billion deal for the college football playoffs, among many others.
“ESPN was wrapped in Teflon for many years, but big payouts for rights fees plus significant losses in their subscriber base were like punches to the gut and head, and now the company is trying to make sure they are strong enough to fight in the future,” said James Andrew Miller, who wrote a book on ESPN and has contributed to The New York Times.
“They’ve decided one way to do this is to change their approach to content and rely more heavily on digital; this has enabled them to let go of a big chunk of their talent base.”
In October 2015, ESPN laid off about 300 people, most of whom were not on camera. The network has been periodically culling its staff as it adapts to changing consumer habits — fans increasingly watch video clips on their smartphones at the expense of traditional highlight shows like “SportsCenter” — and searches for ways to cut costs. It is locked into long-term contracts for programming rights with various sports leagues, which means savings must primarily come from a reduced staff.
In a letter to employees on Wednesday, ESPN’s president, John Skipper, acknowledged the “difficult decisions” ahead and suggested what the network was looking for as it reshaped itself in the coming days.
“Dynamic change demands and increased focus on versatility and value, and as a result, we have been engaged in the challenging process of determining the talent — anchors, analysts, reporters, writers and those who handle play-by-play — necessary to meet those demands,” Mr. Skipper said in the statement.
In the most recent quarter, Disney’s cable networks division reported $864 million in operating income, an 11 percent drop from the same period a year ago, with ESPN the reason for the entire decline, Disney said at the time. The company blamed higher N.B.A. and N.F.L. programming costs and lower ad sales for the weak results.
Earlier this month, Amazon paid $50 million for streaming rights to 10 of the N.F.L.’s Thursday night games for the 2017 season — or five times more than what Twitter paid a season ago, according to SportsBusiness Journal, which also reported that Facebook and YouTube bid on the package.
The ESPN layoffs come as Disney accelerates efforts to introduce an ESPN-branded subscription streaming service. The offering, expected this year and made possible by Disney’s $1 billion purchase in 2016 of part of BamTech, Major League Baseball’s streaming division, will include coverage of sports like hockey, tennis, cricket and college sports — mostly rights that are already owned by ESPN but not televised.
“You have to be willing to either create or experience some distribution as we migrate from what has been a more traditionally distributed world to a more nontraditional distribution world,” Robert A. Iger, Disney’s chief executive, told analysts on a conference call in February. “And some of that we’re going to end up doing to ourselves, meaning that we understand there is disruption, but we believe we have to be a disrupter too.”
Disney has long relied on ESPN’s steadily climbing cable subscriber fees as a profit engine. But cable networks across the board have been losing viewers to online media, which has slowed growth, and Wall Street has responded unfavorably.
Despite assurances by Mr. Iger that ESPN remains strong, investors and analysts have remained concerned about upheaval in the television business. Viewership via satellite and cable services is declining as streaming options proliferate, and ESPN, the naysayers contend, is particularly exposed to a slowdown because Disney has locked itself into lavish, long-term payments for sports rights. In a sign that Disney had done a good job preparing investors for the layoffs, shares climbed slightly in Wednesday morning trading.
Here are some of the ESPN employees who have made statements on social media so far (we will update this list):
Ed Werder, N.F.L. reporter
Jayson Stark, baseball writer
Trent Dilfer, N.F.L. analyst
Dana O’Neil, college basketball reporter
Eamonn Brennan, college basketball reporter
Danny Kanell, “Russillo and Kanell” radio host
Jane McManus, writer
Jeremy Crabtree, college football reporter
Brett McMurphy, college football reporter
Brian Bennett, Big Ten reporter
Doug Padilla, baseball writer
Max Olson, college football reporter
C.L. Brown, college basketball reporter
Mike Goodman, soccer writer
Johnette Howard, columnist
Austin Ward, Big Ten football reporter
Joe McDonald, hockey writer
Pierre LeBrun, hockey writer
Scott Burnside, N.H.L. columnist
Jesse Temple, Big Ten football reporter
Jim Bowden, baseball analyst
Mark Saxon, baseball reporter
Brett McMurphy, college football reporter
Paul Kuharsky, Tennessee Titans writer
Derek Tyson, SEC recruiting analyst
Jean-Jacques Taylor, ESPNDallas
Brendan Fitzgerald, ESPNU host.
Comments
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? yo thread scrub
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? like Netflix and Kodi got these cable companies making moves.
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5th Letter wrote: »? like Netflix and Kodi got these cable companies making moves.
Kodi gang taking ? jobs away...Gangsta -
Ay ? in the industry are furious stephen A still works there and makes 3 mil
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Ed Werder? Wow thats the Cowboys OG reporter
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Surprised cari champion survived the axe
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SAS would have a job with Skip on FS1 if anything happened.
Shannon Sharpe would have to go. -
ESPN gonna have to make their own 30 for 30SAS would have a job with Skip on FS1 if anything happened.
Shannon Sharpe would have to go.
? that. Dont watch either show that much, but....
Shannon>>>>>>>>>>>>Screamin A. -
Anyone who studied and paid attention to the new method of media consumption, esp. Among millenials, would've saw this coming. You have twitter, blogs, podcasts, websites, fan sites and other cord cutting options. all of which can be easily accessed by your phone and tablet. The content can also be as personalized or as general as you desire. And as long as you have an Internet connection for the most part, it's free
Basically an ESPN-type business model can't thrive or succeed like it used to be able to. All they have at this point is live sports. And even that will probably migrate to online streaming at some point in the future (eg. Twitter and Amazon streaming TNF and Yahoo streaming the football games in London) -
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Lurkristocrat wrote: »Surprised cari champion survived the axe
Nah if u peeped, they kept all the prominent black faces in place, probably because the numbers show black ppl of a certain demographic are still watching TV.. that's why they promoted Cari to morning sportscenter and Mike and Jamelle to evening sportsscenter
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Yea i believe them not getting rid of Michael and jamele and moving cari to an earlier spot were strategic moves
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Crackas on twitter like "why do Cari and Jamele and Stephen A still have a job!!"
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The biggest issue is how much they are paying for NFL, NBA, and MLB. MLB and NBA national ratings are extremely bad. Add in the cord cutters and they aren't generating the same revenue they used to b/c the same amount of ppl aren't subscribing
Most of the ppl fired were dead weight. Better get ahead of it now. We will see half of these dudes on Fox next week. -
5th Letter wrote: »Crackas on twitter like "why do Cari and Jamele and Stephen A still have a job!!"
Somebody needs to respond "black folks got fired too. All lives Matter." -
RIP chad Ford and Marc Stein
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Damn Chad Ford too?
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Andy katz
Henry Abbott -
Lurkristocrat wrote: »Surprised cari champion survived the axe
Nah if u peeped, they kept all the prominent black faces in place, probably because the numbers show black ppl of a certain demographic are still watching TV.. that's why they promoted Cari to morning sportscenter and Mike and Jamelle to evening sportsscenterYea i believe them not getting rid of Michael and jamele and moving cari to an earlier spot were strategic moves
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/espn-will-look-dramatically-different-1-year-130050254.html
ESPN is now rethinking SportsCenter, focusing it around personalities and discussion—not at the cost of highlights and scores, necessarily, but what was traditionally a highlights show is now looking more like a variety show. In addition to heavily promoting the midnight SportsCenter with Van Pelt, in February it gave the 6pm SportsCenter slot to Jemele Hill and Michael Smith, previously the co-hosts of the talk show “His and Hers.” ESPN says SC6 is finding a diverse audience: 41% black, and its reach among black viewers ages 18-34 has increased 15% year over year since Hill and Smith took over. -
Lurkristocrat wrote: »Surprised cari champion survived the axe
Nah if u peeped, they kept all the prominent black faces in place, probably because the numbers show black ppl of a certain demographic are still watching TV.. that's why they promoted Cari to morning sportscenter and Mike and Jamelle to evening sportsscenterYea i believe them not getting rid of Michael and jamele and moving cari to an earlier spot were strategic moves
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/espn-will-look-dramatically-different-1-year-130050254.html
ESPN is now rethinking SportsCenter, focusing it around personalities and discussion—not at the cost of highlights and scores, necessarily, but what was traditionally a highlights show is now looking more like a variety show. In addition to heavily promoting the midnight SportsCenter with Van Pelt, in February it gave the 6pm SportsCenter slot to Jemele Hill and Michael Smith, previously the co-hosts of the talk show “His and Hers.” ESPN says SC6 is finding a diverse audience: 41% black, and its reach among black viewers ages 18-34 has increased 15% year over year since Hill and Smith took over.https://youtu.be/7C0xkSpGINY
New BET -
Lurkristocrat wrote: »Surprised cari champion survived the axe
Nah if u peeped, they kept all the prominent black faces in place, probably because the numbers show black ppl of a certain demographic are still watching TV.. that's why they promoted Cari to morning sportscenter and Mike and Jamelle to evening sportsscenterYea i believe them not getting rid of Michael and jamele and moving cari to an earlier spot were strategic moves
41% black, and its reach among black viewers ages 18-34 has increased 15% year over year since Hill and Smith took over.[/b]
Didn't know 3 months = year-to-year
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ESPN ain't ? around.
I watch the Sports Reporters every Sunday morning, and suddenly, this morning is now the last show.