Thursday, April 27, 2017

ESPN Layoffs: The Struggling Industry Giant Sheds On-Air Talent


High-profile names among ESPN layoffs

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. Theyve 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 searches for ways to cut costs and adapts to changing consumer habits, with fans increasingly watching video clips on their smartphones at the expense of traditional highlight shows like SportsCenter. With ESPN locked into long-term contracts for programming rights with various sports leagues, savings must primarily come from a reduced staff.

In a letter to employees on Wednesday, ESPNs president, John Skipper, acknowledged the difficult decisions ahead and suggested what the network was looking for as it reshapes itself.

Dynamic change demands an 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, Disneys 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 Disneys $1 billion purchase in 2016 of part of BamTech, Major League Baseballs streaming division, will include coverage of sports like hockey, tennis, cricket and college sports mostly rights that are 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, Disneys chief executive, told analysts on a conference call in February. And some of that were going to end up doing to ourselves, meaning that we understand there is disruption, but we believe we have to be a disrupter, too.

Photo A 2015 photo of the ESPN headquarters in Bristol, Conn. Credit Jessica Hill/Associated Press

Disney has long relied on ESPNs 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):

Jay Crawford, SportsCenter anchor

Ed Werder, N.F.L. reporter

Jayson Stark, baseball writer

Trent Dilfer, N.F.L. analyst

Len Elmore, college basketball analyst

Dana ONeil, college basketball reporter

Eamonn Brennan, college basketball reporter

Danny Kanell, Russillo and Kanell radio host

Justin Verrier, N.B.A. reporter

Robin Lundberg, radio host

Calvin Watkins, N.B.A. reporter

Melissa Isaacson, columnist

Ted Miller, Pac-12 reporter

Jane McManus, writer

Ashley Fox, N.F.L. reporter

Ethan Strauss, N.B.A. reporter

Jeremy Crabtree, 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

Correction: April 26, 2017

An earlier version of this article misstated the length of ESPNs broadcasting deal with the N.F.L. It is for eight years, not 10.

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Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNE7-x7eankvzfRJekiwdsahqY7ZNg&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779471406407&ei=yiUCWaLlPJSH3AHugreYCg&url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/26/sports/espn-layoffs.html

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Traina Thoughts: Reality about ESPN layoffs; Brandon McCarthy wins Twitter again; more


The Truth Behind ESPN Massive Layoffs
espn layoffs are about one thing and one thing only: Traina Thoughts | SI.com Search

2017 Time Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNHnxuLHkx2qIkD-z-3mbJKG2qHxMA&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779472945875&ei=FxYCWenaDtvIqALu242YBw&url=https://www.si.com/extra-mustard/2017/04/26/espn-layoffs

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Travis Scott"s "Antidote" Is Certified 3X Platinum


Travis Scott - goosebumps ft. Kendrick Lamar

The biggest single of Travis Scott"s career has now sold 3 million copies. "Antidote," released in July 2015 ahead of his debut album,Rodeo, received the triple-platinum certification earlier this month by the RIAA. The track, which famously begins with the line, "Don"t you open up that window," is produced by the Toronto duo of WondaGurl and Eestbound. Watch the "Antidote" music video below.

The announcement comes shortly after "Goosebumps," a single from La Flame"s latest album, Birds in the Trap Sing McKnight,received its first (perhaps of a few) platinum plaque.

source: http://www.hotnewhiphop.com/travis-scotts-antidote-is-certified-3x-platinum-news.31557.html

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Alexis Bledel Says The Handmaid's Tale "Raises The Bar" For Her Future Roles


The Handmaid"s Tale: Offred"s Room 360 • The Handmaid"s Tale on Hulu

"It felt like an adaptation of a book, so we had that road map to follow... and then more recently, i"ve become aware of what it was bringing up for people when they watch it," Bledel told Bustle. "Reading some of the reviews have really made me understand better what it might bring up for people. I think it"s going to shock some people at how hard it is to imagine people living in such a world like this one, because as Margaret Atwood has said, she didn"t make anything up. Everything that happens in the book has happened somewhere. Some of it can seem frighteningly real, which makes it scarier."

Source: http://www.refinery29.com/2017/04/151728/alexis-bledel-the-handmaids-tale

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Can "Alien: Covenant" Help the Franchise Remember What It"s About Once More?


Alien: Covenant | Clip Prólogo: El cruce | Próximamente - Solo en Cines

Wasn"t this once a series about scary alien monsters, and not the origins of species?

The release of a second prologue to this summer"s Alien: Covenant was intended as a way to mark this year"s "Alien Day," but it might indirectly highlight just where the franchise has gone wrong in the decades since Ridley Scott"s original movie.

"The Crossing" is, essentially, two-and-a-half minutes of exposition about what happened to Noomi Rapace and Michael Fassbender"s characters after the end of 2012"s Prometheus, paired with some impressive visual spectacle when they arrive at what is seemingly the home planet of the Engineers, the creatures who were responsible for the black goo that eventually created the Xenomorphs that appeared in the 1979 original alien.

for fans of the larger Alien mythology, it"s a short that answers some questions about the end of Prometheus, and teases potential revelations that might come during Covenant. It features none of the same characters from the earlier prologue, but both shorts share two important things in common: a suffocating sense of foreboding and more worryingly, a complete lack of any of the familiar xenomorphic aliens that give the franchise its name (though, there"s plenty of that in the most recent trailer).

For the first three movies in the series, Alien had a central narrative: it was the story of Ellen Ripley"s (Sigourney Weaver) relationship with the titular threat, which shifted from movie to movie depending on the particular obsessions of the director du jour. 1997"s Alien: Resurrection attempts to reboot the franchise by literally rebooting Ripley as a clone, but the continuity is lost and things got more confused with the Alien Vs. Predator movies, even before Ridley Scott returned to the franchise for his prequel projects.

By this point, it"s hard to identify what the Alien movies are actually about, beyond perpetuating their own mythology. Indeed, as the latest prologue to Alien: Covenant demonstrates, the franchise is now focused in large part on topics and concepts that weren"t even part of the series for the first three decades of its existence. The Engineers? The origin of the species and just why it is the way it is? Are those questions that really need to be answered?

In many ways, the trailers for Covenant and certainly the first prologue have made the movie feel like a retread of the very first Alien, or at least a revisiting of that movie"s aesthetic and tone. As unlikely as it might seem, this backwards-looking attitude might just be what the franchise needs right now: a reminder about what made people fall in love with Alien in the first place, and a way to get things back on track.

Well, as long as Michael Fassbender"s creepy androids don"t steal the show again, of course.

Alien: Covenant

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/alien-covenant-can-franchise-remember-what-again-997907

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ESPN Layoffs: A List of Which Employees Have Been Fired


ESPN layoffs affect local businesses

ESPN laid off 100 employees on Wednesday as part of a company-wide restructuring.

The struggling cable sports network first announced the layoffs last month.

We have long been about serving fans and innovating to create the best content for them. Todays fans consume contentin many different waysand we are in a continuous process of adapting to change and improving what we do, ESPN said in a March statement. Inevitably, that has consequences for how we utilize our talent. We are confident that ESPN will continue to have a roster of talent that is unequaled in sports.

Among those who were let go includeanchor Jay Crawford, radio host Danny Kanell,NFL reporter Ed Werder, and baseball reporter Jayson Stark.

Below is a list of former espn employees who have confirmed their departures via social media (this list will continue to be updated).

General

SportsCenter anchor Jay CrawfordESPNU anchor Brendan FitzgeraldSportsCenter anchor Chris HasselColumnist Johnette HowardColumnist Melissa IsaacsonRadio host Danny KanellRadio host Robin LundbergColumnist Jane McManusSportsCenter anchor Jaymee SireCorrespondent Reese Waters

MLB

MLB analyst Jim BowdenDodgers peporter Doug PadillaMLB writer Jayson StarkBaseball reporter Mark Saxon

NBA

New Orleans Pelicans reporter Justin VerrierHouston Rockets reporter Calvin WatkinsNBA reporter Ethan Sherwood Strauss

NFL

NFL analyst Trent DilferNFL analyst Ashley FoxNFL reporter Ed Werder

NHL

NHL columnist Scott BurnsideNHL columnist Pierre LeBrunHockey writer Joe McDonald

College sports

Big Ten reporter Brian BennettCollege basketball writer Eamonn BrennanCollege basketball reporter C.L. BrownSEC football reporter David ChingCollege football recruiting reporter Jeremy CrabtreeCollege basketball analyst Len ElmoreCollege sports reporter Chantel JenningsCollege football reporter Brett McMurphyPac 12 reporter Ted MillerBig 12 reporter Max OlsonCollege basketball reporter Dana ONeilSEC Reporter Greg OstendorfPredictive analytics expert Rufus PeabodyBig Ten football reporter Jesse TempleSEC recruiting analyst Derek TysonBig Ten football reporter Austin Ward

Miscellaneous

Boxing host Marysol CastroLegal analyst Roger CossackEnterprise reporter Tom FarreySoccer writer Mike GoodmanGolf commentator Dottie PepperAuto racing commentator Dr. Jerry Lee PunchSports gambling writer Dave TuleyESPN Dallas columnist Jean-Jacques Taylor

Source: http://variety.com/2017/tv/news/espn-layoffs-fired-list-1202399712/

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Ann Coulter Says UC Berkeley Canceled Speech; University Denies Claim


Ann Coulter’s “Hate Speech” IS Protected by the First Amendment

Political commentator and author Ann Coulter attends The Comedy Central Roast of Rob Lowe at Sony Studios on Aug. 27, 2016, in Los Angeles. (Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images)

Ann Coulter Says UC Berkeley Canceled Speech; University DeniesClaim

Political commentator and author Ann Coulter attends The Comedy Central Roast of Rob Lowe at Sony Studios on Aug. 27, 2016, in Los Angeles. (Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images)

ann coulter says she wont be speaking at UC Berkeley on Thursday after all.

The conservative pundit took to her verified Twitter account Wednesday to say the university canceled her speech something the school denied.

Coulters plan to speak had created a war of words on the campus roiled by recent protests.

A student group, the Young Americas Foundation, said Tuesday it had decided not to host the event, saying the university had created a hostile environment. The university said the speech would create security concerns and tried to move it to May 2.

Despite that, Coulter had held out hope Tuesday of speaking somewhere on campus but didnt know where. On Wednesday she announced the cancellation on Twitter. Im so sorry Berkeley canceled my speech, she tweeted.

Im so sorry YAF acquiesced in the cancelation (sic). And Im so sorry for free speech crushed by thugs.

University officials could not immediately be contacted for comment Wednesday afternoon. But before Coulter tweeted, the university put out a news release that said, Contrary to some press reports and circulating narratives, the UC Berkeley administration did not cancel the Coulter event and has never prohibited Ms. Coulter from coming on campus.

The news release said the school decided not to provide a venue for the Thursday speech because of reports that violence would occur. It suggested the speech be given May 2 but school is not in session that day, so Coulter and the YAF opposed that idea.

This is a university, not a battlefield, the news release said. We must make every effort to hold events at a time and location that maximizes the chances that First Amendment rights can be successfully exercised and that community members can be protected.

Coulter slammed the school in her tweets, saying in one: Im so sorry Berkeley had a different story every 20 minutes, which always was: No speech.

Troy Worden, president of the Berkeley College Republicans, said Wednesday that the university didnt provide a venue.

In effect our free speech has been stifled because the university has decided not to assist us in making sure the event can occur successfully, he said. We arent going to have a dangerous event.

The YAF and Berkeley College Republicans have filed a lawsuit that accuses the school of discriminating against conservative guest speakers by placing onerous time and location restrictions on their appearances. Berkeley, known for decades as a bastion of free speech, has seen protests turn violent in recent months.

Earlier this month, 21 people were arrested when anti-Trump and pro-Trump groups clashed in a city park.

In early March, 10 people were arrested when pro- and anti-Trump groups fought in Berkeley.

In February people took to the streets to protest an appearance by right-wing commentator Milo Yiannopoulos. The university said more than $100,000 in damage was done.

An attorney for the Berkeley College Republicans said the lawsuit will proceed.

A lawsuit is a long-term remedy that is going to affect not just Ann Coulters speech but other speakers at UC Berkeley, lawyer Harmeet Dhillon told reporters. The goal is much larger than Ann Coulters speech here tomorrow.

Dhillon said the university officials told her they wouldnt provide a room but Coulter could speak at an outdoor venue. The First Amendment requires equal access, not one level of open access for conservatives, out in the open, with attackers shouting us down, she said, and another level of access in a private, closed setting where people are allowed to enjoy an educational opportunity without interruption.

Source: http://ktla.com/2017/04/26/ann-coulter-says-uc-berkeley-canceled-speech-university-denies-claim/

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