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ESPN Leads the Pack in 47th Annual Sports Emmy Award Nominations

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The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences unveiled the nominees for the 47th Annual Sports Emmy Awards on Wednesday, with ESPN leading all networks after securing 62 nominations.

The eligibility window for this year’s awards covered programming that aired during the 2025 calendar year. In a statement, Amy Schmelzer, head of the Sports Emmy Awards, emphasized the wide-ranging impact of this year’s nominees. She noted that the submissions reflect both the energy of live competition and the depth of long-form storytelling. Additionally, she highlighted how the work continues to strengthen the bond between audiences and the defining moments in sports.

This year’s awards feature 47 categories. Among them are Outstanding Live Special, Outstanding Studio Host, Event Analyst and Emerging On-Air Talent. The breadth of categories underscores the industry’s continued growth across both traditional broadcasts and digital platforms.

Meanwhile, NATAS president and CEO Adam Sharp pointed to the ongoing evolution of sports television. He said the nominees represent a shift in how stories are crafted and delivered to fans.

“As sports programming continues to rank among the most popular and valuable content in media — dominating television viewership and driving streaming growth — these nominees represent the best of the industry. Whether through groundbreaking technical innovation or compelling, character-driven storytelling, we are proud to recognize their outstanding achievements at this year’s Sports Emmy Awards,” said Sharp via a statement.

The ceremony will take place on Tuesday, May 26, at Frederick P. Rose Hall in New York City. Organizers plan to announce both the host and the lifetime achievement honoree at a later date.

Outstanding Live Sports Special: Championship Event

  • College Football Playoff National Championship (ESPN)
  • FOX MLB: World Series – Toronto Blue Jays vs. Los Angeles Dodgers (FOX)
  • The Masters (CBS)
  • NBA Finals (ESPN)
  • Super Bowl LX (NBC | Peacock)

Outstanding Live Sports Special: Non-Championship Event

  • FOX MLB: 95th All-Star Game (FOX)
  • 151st Kentucky Derby (NBC | Peacock)
  • Monsters Funday Football (ESPN)
  • NHL in ASL: 2025 Stadium Series (NHL Productions)
  • NHL on ESPN: 4 Nations Face-Off (ESPN)

Outstanding Live Sports Series

  • FOX NFL (FOX)
  • Monday Night Football (ESPN | ABC)
  • Monday Night Football with Peyton & Eli (ESPN)
  • Sunday Night Football (NBC | Peacock)
  • Thursday Night Football (Prime Video)

Outstanding Sports Playoff Coverage

  • College Football Playoff (ESPN)
  • FOX MLB: American League Playoffs (FOX | FS1)
  • FOX NFL: NFC Playoffs (FOX)
  • NBC NFL Playoffs (NBC | Peacock)
  • NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament (CBS | TNT)

Outstanding Edited Sports Event Coverage

  • 4 Nations Face-Off: Unveiled (NHL Productions)
  • NFL Game Day All Access: Super Bowl LX (YouTube | NFL Films)
  • Official Film of the 2025 Masters (CBS)
  • Road to the Super Bowl (NBC | NFL Films)
  • UFC The Walk: Topuria vs. Oliveira (UFC)

Outstanding Edited Sports Special

  • E60: Paid to Play (ESPN)
  • The Hall of Fame Knocks Class of 2026 (NFL Network)
  • The Madhouse: NASCAR’s Return (FS1)
  • Not So Fast, My Friend: Lee Corso Special (ESPN)
  • Welcome to the NHL: Meet the Prospects (NHL Productions)

Outstanding Edited Sports Series: Hosted

  • E60 (ESPN)
  • Eli Manning Presents: The Undercovers (Prime Video)
  • NFL Films Presents (FS1)
  • Pablo Torre Finds Out (Meadowlark Media)
  • TNT Sports Conversations (truTV)

Outstanding Esports Championship Coverage

  • Apex Legends Global Series Championship (ESL FACEIT)
  • Call of Duty League Championship Weekend (ESL FACEIT)
  • League of Legends Worlds Final (Riot Games)
  • VALORANT Champions Grand Final (Riot Games)

Outstanding Sports Documentary: Short

  • Final Finishers
  • Home Turn (NASCAR Productions)
  • NFL Explained: Kendrick Lamar Halftime Show
  • NFL Films Presents: The Arctic Challenge
  • The Shuffle (HBO Max)

Outstanding Sports Documentary: Long

  • Butterfly in a Blizzard
  • Champions of the Golden Valley
  • Clemente (History Channel)
  • E60: Southpaw: The Life and Legacy of Jim Abbott (ESPN)
  • Elway (Netflix)
  • Surviving Ohio State (HBO Max)

Outstanding Sports Documentary Series

  • Alex vs. A-Rod (HBO Max)
  • Allen Iverson (Prime Video)
  • America’s Team: The Gambler and His Cowboys (Netflix)
  • Believers: Boston Red Sox (ESPN)
  • Cocaine Quarterback (Prime Video)

Outstanding Sports Documentary Series: Serialized

  • Built in Birmingham (Whisper TV)
  • The Clubhouse: A Year with the Red Sox (Netflix)
  • Formula 1: Drive to Survive (Netflix)
  • Full Court Press (ESPN)
  • Quarterback (Netflix)
  • WWE: Unreal (Netflix)

Outstanding Sports Studio Show: Daily

  • First Things First (FS1)
  • NBA Today (ESPN)
  • NFL Live (ESPN)
  • The Pat McAfee Show (ESPN)
  • SportsCenter (ESPN)

Outstanding Sports Studio Show: Weekly

  • College GameDay (ESPN)
  • Inside the NBA (TNT)
  • Monday Night Countdown (ESPN)
  • The NFL Today (CBS)
  • Thursday Night Football (Prime Video)

Outstanding Sports Personality: Studio Host

  • Rece Davis (ESPN)
  • Rich Eisen (NFL Network)
  • Ernie Johnson (TNT | CBS)
  • Scott Van Pelt (ESPN)
  • Laura Rutledge (ESPN)
  • Kate Scott (CBS | Paramount+)

Outstanding Sports Personality: Studio Analyst

  • Charles Barkley (TNT)
  • Clark Kellogg (CBS | TNT)
  • Mina Kimes (ESPN)
  • Pedro Martinez (TNT)
  • Candace Parker (TNT | tbs)
  • Alex Rodriguez (FOX | FS1)

Outstanding Sports Personality: Play-by-Play

  • Joe Buck (ESPN)
  • Joe Davis (FOX | FS1 | NFL Network)
  • Ian Eagle (CBS | TNT | Netflix | Amazon)
  • Jim Nantz (CBS)
  • Mike Tirico (NBC | Peacock)

Outstanding Sports Personality: Event Analyst

  • Troy Aikman (ESPN)
  • Tom Brady (FOX)
  • Cris Collinsworth (NBC | Peacock)
  • Greg Olsen (FOX | NFL Network)
  • Bill Raftery (CBS | TNT | FOX)

Outstanding Sports Personality: Sideline Reporter

  • Tom Rinaldi (FOX | FS1)
  • Holly Rowe (ESPN)
  • Laura Rutledge (ESPN)
  • Lisa Salters (ESPN)
  • Tracy Wolfson (CBS | TNT)

Outstanding Sports Personality: Emerging On-Air Talent

  • Andraya Carter (ESPN)
  • Katie George (ESPN)
  • Jason Kelce (ESPN)
  • Matt Ryan (CBS | Paramount+ | Netflix)
  • Richard Sherman (Prime Video)
  • J.J. Watt (CBS)

Outstanding Sports On-Air Personality in Spanish

  • Andres Cantor (Telemundo | Universo | Peacock)
  • Carolina Guillen (ESPN)
  • Miguel Gurwitz (Telemundo | Universo | Peacock)
  • Fernando Palomo (ESPN)
  • Sammy Sadovnik (MLS Productions)

Outstanding Sports Studio Show in Spanish

  • Ahora o Nunca (ESPN)
  • ESPN FC (ESPN)
  • Futbol Picante (ESPN)
  • Linea de 4 (Univision | TUDN)
  • Premier League Extra (Telemundo | Universo | Peacock)
  • Rumbo al Mundial (Telemundo | Universo | Peacock)

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Ryan Clark Questions Cam Newton’s Loyalty With Stephen A. Smith Following Jason Whitlock Interview

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ESPN NFL analyst Ryan Clark has inserted himself into the ongoing discussion surrounding fellow First Take commentator Cam Newton. The former NFL quarterback is drawing criticism after a recent podcast appearance sparked a public dispute. Newton welcomed Jason Whitlock onto his 4th & 1 podcast for an extended conversation. During the interview, Whitlock directed several pointed remarks at Stephen A. Smith, including questioning aspects of Smith’s personal story.

The comments quickly made their way across social media, prompting a response from Smith. Speaking on his YouTube channel, Smith addressed Newton directly and expressed disappointment in how the interview was handled.

“Cam Newton. Next time, my brother, cause you know I love you. You’re gonna interview somebody and bring me up? Don’t just sit there and let them talk s**t,” Smith said. “Ask questions. If you’re gonna bring me up and you’re somebody that’s in my inner circle, grill them. Don’t just let them talk smack.”

Smith’s remarks highlighted his expectation that Newton, who he considers a professional ally, should have challenged Whitlock’s claims during the interview rather than allowing them to go unchecked. Meanwhile, Ryan Clark also weighed in, offering a similar perspective on social media. Clark pointed to what he views as a lack of loyalty in Newton’s approach.

“If someone shows you love, has you on ‘their’ show twice a week… at least, you don’t bring his known enemy on your show and allow your guest to talk s**t [emoji] about that person,” Clark wrote on X. “That’s not G at all. Loyalty is at a minimum these days.”

As criticism mounted, Newton addressed the situation in a video posted Tuesday on the 4th & 1 YouTube channel. He defended his decision to allow Whitlock to speak freely, emphasizing the importance of open dialogue on his platform.

“You cannot allow people to come on your platform and you control how it goes,” Newton said. “You only can allow them to speak their truth how they know their truth to be.”

Newton also explained that he was not in a position to immediately dispute Whitlock’s claims during the conversation.

“If you don’t know, you can respectfully say, ‘I don’t know if this is true or not,’” he said. “When Stephen A. says, ‘You didn’t hammer down on the question,’ I didn’t know that it was a lie.”

Despite the backlash, Newton indicated he has no plans to apologize publicly for booking Whitlock or for how the interview unfolded. Instead, he appears committed to maintaining an open format that prioritizes guest perspectives, even when those viewpoints generate controversy.

Newton signed a new multi-year agreement with ESPN last summer expanding his role on First Take, the company’s flagship morning debate program.

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Howard Eskin on Retiring Audacy Philadelphia SVP, Market Manager David Yadgaroff: “He Stabbed Me in the Front, Not in the Back”

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The conversation surrounding 94 WIP and Audacy’s Philadelphia leadership is intensifying, as former host Howard Eskin delivered pointed remarks during an appearance on The National Football Show with Dan Sileo.

Eskin addressed the upcoming departure of David Yadgaroff, senior vice president and market manager of Audacy Philadelphia. When asked about his upcoming retirement in May, Eskin immediately cast doubt on the circumstances. He questioned whether the longtime market manager’s exit is truly voluntary, pushing back on the standard explanation often tied to executive retirements.

“Anybody that’s quoted when they leave somewhere that says they’re going to spend more time with their family. They might have a great family, and I’m not questioning their family. They supported their family by being at that place. I hope everybody you know spends has dinner every night of the week together,” said Eskin.

He then shared sharp criticism of his personal experience with Yadgaroff during his time at 94 WIP. Eskin and WIP parted ways after 38 years together in December of 2024 after being were unable to resolve “irreconcilable differences.”

“There was no reason. Zero. They did not have any reason. They said they did, but they didn’t [have a reason] to let me go,” said Eskin. “Did he [Yadgaroff] have my back? No. He stabbed me in the front, not in the back.”

Those comments added a personal dimension to an already active discussion about the station’s direction. Eskin suggested his recent critiques have resonated because both listeners and industry insiders recognize a decline in quality.

“It’s a different time,” Eskin said. “People in the business know it’s not as good. It is what it is. It’s not going to change.”

That sentiment aligns with earlier concerns voiced as well by former morning host Angelo Cataldi. Cataldi has argued that the tone of Philadelphia sports talk has softened, while Eskin has focused more on execution and consistency. In his latest remarks, Eskin questioned whether the current lineup effectively serves the audience. He suggested the station has become more internally focused, rather than prioritizing listeners in the way it once did.

“I don’t think they serve everybody as well. I know they’re in business, and that’s all part of it. We were in business back then too,” said Eskin. “I think they serve themselves.”

He also pointed to a lack of reporting effort as a key issue. Eskin said hosts no longer build the same relationships with players, which limits their ability to provide deeper insight. That approach, he argued, reduces the overall quality of content.

Beyond WIP, Eskin expanded his criticism to the broader radio industry. He cited ongoing financial pressures as a major factor, noting that companies are cutting costs and struggling to retain talent. According to Eskin, a lack of revenue has led to widespread layoffs and diminished loyalty across the business.

“They don’t have the money. He [Yadgaroff] had to fire a lot of people, some justly and some not. The problem with the business is there’s a lack of loyalty in the business,” explained Eskin. “They’re not the only place. It’s happening all over and it’s not over yet. There’s not enough revenue in the business.”

Those concerns tie directly to Audacy’s recent financial challenges. The company restructured through Chapter 11 bankruptcy, a process that reduced debt but also underscored the pressures facing traditional radio operators.

Yadgaroff’s tenure, which spans more than three decades, included guiding the Philadelphia market through both its peak years and more recent industry shifts. His leadership helped maintain WIP’s strong position, even as listening habits evolved. Albeit, Eskin says that 94 WIP ran itself on the programming side without Yadgaroff’s efforts.

As debate continues, one thing remains clear. The voices who helped build WIP’s legacy are not holding back when evaluating its future.

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News Media Reacts to Accusation That Scott Jennings ‘Mocks Trump During Commercial Breaks’ on CNN

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On Monday evening, Miles Taylor appeared on CNN NewsNight alongside Scott Jennings. He says there’s a different side of Jennings behind the scenes.

In a post on social media, Taylor called Scott Jennings “the perfect metaphor for the GOP.”

“A pundit who mocks Trump with us during commercial breaks — but fawns over Trump when the camera is rolling,” said Taylor. “Brave enough to speak out… in the green room.”

That post earned nearly two million views on the X social media platform.

After the accusation, many took to social media to share their reactions. Some argued that Taylor was guilty of breaking an unwritten rule, while others lambasted the assertion by arguing that Jennings has been a staunch supporter of President Trump and was unlikely to be guilty of the accusation.

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Joe Scarborough, Mika Brzezinski Sign Contract Extensions with MS NOW

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The long-running morning duo of Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski isn’t going anywhere. They’ve signed multi-year contract extensions with MS NOW.

On Wednesday morning, they revealed that they have inked a new deal to remain with MS NOW through 2029, where they’ve been for nearly two decades.

The news of a contract extension for the Morning Joe hosts comes a week after MS NOW unveiled a new programming lineup that included the show shrinking by one hour. A new show, hosted by Stephanie Ruhle, will take the final hour of the show and run from 9 AM-11 AM ET.

 “Mika and I are excited to be staying with our Morning Joe family and friends who have been watching regularly for almost 20 years,” Joe Scarborough said to Axios, who first reported the extension.

The MS NOW morning show debuted in 2007, with the trio of Joe Scarborough, Mika Brzezinski, and Willie Geist still intact on the show.

“We are about to celebrate 20 years of ‘Morning Joe’ — Joe and Mika have created something that cannot be replicated,” MS NOW President Rebecca Kutler told Axios. “As we build towards the 2026 midterms and 2028 presidential election, Morning Joe will continue to be a singular destination for presidents and newsmakers from all political parties.”

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Robert Griffin III: Dan Orlovsky’s CAA Ties Makes His Ty Simpson Opinion Questionable

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FOX Sports college football analyst Robert Griffin III is weighing in on the growing debate surrounding ESPN NFL analyst Dan Orlovsky’s evaluation of Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson, and his response is adding fuel to an already active pre-draft conversation.

Orlovsky recently made headlines by calling Simpson the top quarterback in this year’s NFL draft class during an appearance on ESPN’s Get Up. The take surprised many, as Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza has widely been projected as the top overall pick. Orlovsky defended his stance by pointing to Simpson’s ability to deliver in high-pressure moments and carry his team.

Soon after, questions surfaced regarding a potential conflict of interest. Both Orlovsky and Simpson are represented by Creative Artists Agency (CAA), leading some to question whether that connection influenced the evaluation. Orlovsky denied those claims on The Pat McAfee Show, saying he was not asked to promote Simpson and had no ulterior motive

Griffin, however, took issue with both the evaluation and the process behind it.

“Everybody is entitled to feel how they feel and have an opinion on who they think the best quarterback is and how they rank them,” Griffin said on social media. “But when you go about it in a way that’s discrediting Fernando Mendoza… It’s worse than stepping out of the back of the end zone.”

Griffin’s criticism did not stop at the comparison between quarterbacks. He also addressed how analysts approach film study during the draft process, suggesting that intent can shape conclusions.

“Watching the film is essential to evaluating people in the draft process,” he said. “But when you go into the film trying to find something, you end up finding things that lead you down a dangerous path.”

That point led directly into Griffin’s broader concern about perception and credibility. While he did not directly accuse Orlovsky of bias, he acknowledged why others have raised questions given the shared representation.

“Film watching is important, and all the top analysts do it,” Griffin added. “But you can’t go into watching that film trying to find something to say to sound interesting on TV. That is why people are saying Dan Orlovsky might be doing something. Because him and Ty Simpson are represented by the same agency, CAA. Whether you do that to be true or not. The bottom line is, it looks like that way”

Griffin emphasized that whether the connection is meaningful or not, the optics matter.

“The things that he is saying as to why he’s ranking Ty Simpson over Fernando Mendoza. Everyone who has watched the tape and the games and didn’t go into it trying to find something says it doesn’t make sense,” said Griffin.

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Gamut Podcast Network Expands 312 Sports With New ‘Off The Ivy’ Chicago Cubs Podcast

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Hubbard Radio is expanding its podcast portfolio with a new daily show centered on one of Major League Baseball’s most recognizable franchises. Gamut, the company’s podcast network, announced the launch of Off the Ivy: A Chicago Cubs Podcast.

The show debuts today, just ahead of Opening Day. It will be distributed on YouTube and all major podcast platforms.

The addition strengthens Gamut’s 312 Sports network, which focuses on Chicago-based teams and storylines. The lineup already includes Dan Bernstein Unfiltered, Forward Progress: A Chicago Bears Podcast, and Organizations Win Championships, which covers the Chicago Bulls. With another team-specific program, the network continues to expand its reach across the city’s sports landscape.

“This isn’t just another recap show,” said John Goforth, head of the Gamut Podcast Network. “Chicago fans don’t think about their teams in a vacuum, and we’re not going to talk about them that way either. Off the Ivy is about what it all means.”

Off the Ivy will feature a trio of familiar voices in Chicago media. Dan Bernstein, Matt Abbatacola and Cody Delmendo will host the show. Together, they aim to provide daily insight that moves beyond game recaps and surface-level discussion.

Instead of focusing strictly on scores and highlights, the program will explore broader themes tied to the Cubs. That includes roster construction, clubhouse dynamics and long-term expectations for the franchise. The hosts will also examine how daily results connect to postseason aspirations.

Hubbard Chicago Market President Keith Lawless said the launch reflects the company’s continued investment in local content. He pointed to the Cubs’ deep connection with the city as a key factor in building out the network.

“Chicago is one of the most passionate sports markets in the country, and the Cubs are a cornerstone of that identity,” Lawless said. “With Off the Ivy, we’re continuing to invest in premium, locally relevant content that reflects the voice of our fans.”

Bernstein emphasized that today’s audience is looking for deeper analysis and context. He said the show will focus on explaining trends and decisions, rather than simply reacting to them.

“Cubs fans don’t just want highlights — they want answers,” Bernstein said. “Why things are happening, what it says about the team, and whether it’s actually building toward something real.”

New episodes of Off the Ivy will be released each weekday. In addition to standard podcast platforms, the show will have a presence on YouTube to reach a broader digital audience. Listeners can find more details and additional programming through the 312 Sports platform, as Hubbard Radio continues to build a year-round destination for Chicago sports coverage.

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Michael Kay Opens Up on ESPN New York Changes, MLB’s Fragmented Future and Yankees Opening Day on Netflix

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The Major League Baseball season has finally arrived as the New York Yankees kick off the 2026 regular season this evening against the San Francisco Giants. This year, the pageantry of the first baseball game of the season will be broadcast to a national audience on Netflix as part of a three-year media rights deal signed last November. For Yankees fans, that means the voice of Michael Kay will not be on the telecast for a second straight season.

“Last year I missed Opening Day with ESPN taking the game and Joe Buck on the call. That was odd. But the thing that saved it for me was that I got a chance to sit in the stands with my son,” says Kay. “ My family is coming up to San Francisco. We’re going to get another opportunity to sit in the stands for the game.”

Tonight, Kay enters his 35th season on the call for New York Yankees baseball. Over the past three decades, he has guided the Yankee faithful through the ups and downs of every season, along with a number of World Series championships. Kay is living out his childhood dream as the voice of his hometown team.

Now, with another Opening Day arriving, Kay believes the sport is in a great position coming off a record-setting World Baseball Classic. However, the sport continues to face several challenges, including the ongoing fragmentation of how fans watch games.

MLB Fragmentation

Several Major League Baseball teams moved this offseason from a traditional regional sports network model to in-house production without a traditional platform for distribution. As a result, many fans are anxious and somewhat confused about where to watch their teams entering the season.

“The fragmentation is concerning. Especially for older fans. Baseball should not forget that a big part of their audience are older fans,” notes Kay. “They either don’t have the money for the streaming service, or can’t navigate it. There has to be a way to make it easier… I’m a capitalist, and I know that they’re trying to make as much money as they can. But you also have to serve your customers too.”

Major League Baseball opens this season with three new media rights deals, including Netflix, NBC Sports, and a revamped ESPN package. Kay is especially interested in how NBC Sports will present baseball for the first time since the turn of the century.

“NBC is taking a great step by hiring Jason Benetti. Also, I think it’s smart to have the analysts be local guys,” said Kay. “That’s one of the things I’ve always pushed for. People think it’s selfish. But when a team makes the post season, there should be an option for local audio with the home team announcers. This way you can still get the ratings, but with the hometown call.”

Change At ESPN New York

Kay doesn’t just serve as the hometown voice of the New York Yankees. Since 2001, he has also been an original member of the roster at ESPN New York. For 19 years, Kay attempted what many consider impossible. He hosted an afternoon drive talk show while serving as the local voice for a Major League Baseball team.

In late 2024, Kay decided a change was needed. He announced he would move The Michael Kay Show back to a midday time slot for the first time since 2005. With the move, Kay became the program’s lone host, departing from co-hosts Don La Greca and Peter Rosenberg.

“I feel more pressure doing this show than I did the last ten years of our show in the afternoons. We never had a hiccup, because we knew when each other was going to talk,” explained Kay. “The first week of the show, people were still finding it. The calls were not abundant, and I started to panic. Even though two hours is not a long talk radio show. If you don’t have calls or a co-host, talking for two hours can be a bear.”

Now in a solo hosting role, Kay treats his callers as co-hosts. The more interaction, the less pressure. He notes that his prep approach has changed with the new format and timeslot. He now tends to overprepare in case conversations with the audience slow. Without a true second or third voice to lean on, Kay still finds challenges in determining what resonates with listeners.

“The hardest thing is to be funny alone, because there’s no audience that you can hear,” said Kay. “When Peter [Rosenberg] or Don [La Greca] are sitting next to me. They validate whether it’s funny or not based on their reactions. Now, it’s really difficult… A team show, there’s so much dialogue. Now, you have to guard against pontificating.”

Despite the pressure and challenges of the new daypart and format, Kay continues to be recognized as one of the top voices in sports radio. The Michael Kay Show ranked fourth in the 2025 Barrett Media major market midday show rankings—an honor Kay has earned many times before, but never as a solo host.

“I was pleasantly surprised when I saw it because I think it took some people to get used to me being alone and in a new timeslot,” said Kay. “It felt really nice. I’m proud of the show. It’s been an incredible amount of fun. More than I thought it would be. That was quite an honor.”

While the recognition from the industry carries significant pride, the move to the new timeslot also holds personal meaning for Kay.

“It might have saved me some years on my life,” explained Kay when reflecting on how the first year of the new timeslot balanced with his duties with the Yankees. “I loved working with Don [La Greca] and Peter [Rosenberg], but as I was getting older that was and unbelievable challenge to do both as I was for so long.”

Kay said he reached a point where he could no longer continue the afternoon drive routine. He shared his concerns with management at Good Karma Brands, which operates ESPN New York. That conversation led to the idea of a two-hour solo show in an earlier timeslot.

“They [Good Karma Brands] made it so easy for me. They’ve been so great and supportive. Once I started doing it, I love it. It changed my life,” explained Kay.

Fully invested in the concept, Kay signed a multi-year extension as part of the move to middays. When announcing the extension and schedule change in December 2024, he felt the show’s final stretch in afternoons was handled properly in both timing and execution.

Fighting For Don La Greca

Even a year later, the legacy of The Michael Kay Show continues to be debated across media circles. Recently, Don La Greca admitted to former WFAN host Brandon Tierney that he wished he had fought harder to have his name included in the program’s branding.

“I knew Don [La Greca] wanted his name on the show, and I totally understood it. He was as much a part of the show’s success as I was,” said Kay. “I wish he would have fought harder too.”

Kay said he supported La Greca behind the scenes by approaching station management about adding his name. However, management resisted due to the show’s marketing ties to Kay’s Yankees affiliation.

“They kept fighting me on it. I said this is not my fight. If Don [La Greca] had said he was going to leave, maybe that would have moved the needle a bit,” explained Kay. “They were telling him different stuff than they were telling me. At one point, they told Don that I didn’t want the name change. Which is completely untrue… I knew it bothered Don, but it was Don’s hill to die on.”

Kay remains close with La Greca and was excited to see his former co-host named the television play-by-play voice of the New Jersey Devils last summer.

“Once it happened, I believe I was one of the first people that he told. I kind of got emotional because I realize what it’s like to broadcast your childhood team and live your dream,” noted Kay. “We hugged in the studio, and I was so happy for him.”

Hope Springs Excitement

Now, another season arrives for Michael Kay and Yankees fans across the country. As the game takes center stage tonight in San Francisco, Kay will spend another Opening Day not behind the microphone, but among the fans—a rare pause for a voice synonymous with Yankees baseball.

In a sport and industry navigating sweeping change—from streaming deals to shifting timeslots—Kay remains a steady voice connecting generations of fans to the game across New York City.

Now entering year two of a life-changing professional shift, Kay is more energized than ever for the season ahead, with a renewed appreciation for the opportunity.

“The balance between life and work has never ever been better. I have zero complaints,” said Kay. “At this point, and it could change. I could see myself doing this for a long time… I’m really enjoying it.”

Whether he’s calling a pivotal October moment, navigating the evolving sports media landscape, or fielding calls as a solo host, Kay continues to bring fans together.

Opening Day will look different. The booth may sound different. The way fans find the game will continue to change. But the essence of baseball hasn’t—and neither has Michael Kay.

Whether he’s behind the mic or in the stands, he remains part of the rhythm of the sport, proving that even in a time of change, some voices never lose their place in the game.

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WFAN’s Gregg Giannotti, Brandon Tierney Feud Shows Why Sports Radio Should Embrace Noise Over Silence

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The New York City sports radio scene has had an interesting couple of days to start the week leading into another MLB season beginning today. What began with a simple gesture of entertainment has blossomed into a viral and heated back-and-forth between WFAN talent and former WFAN personalities.

I’ve written many times on this site that sports radio needs moments like what we’ve been seeing from WFAN’s Gregg Giannotti and former WFAN host Brandon Tierney. Sports radio beef always spikes interest. Controversy sells better than ice cream on a hot summer day. Eyeballs and ears await the next jab, right cross, or uppercut, pushing forward the storyline of a battle between two talents.

For the silence others choose to live by, there is plenty to learn from the past two days of back-and-forth involving WFAN. When opportunity presented itself, every party dove in, and everyone struck gold.

Let’s start at the beginning with Giannotti pranking Brandon Tierney over a year ago by acting as a caller into his show. Is this the first time a fellow talent has called into a teammate’s program to pull a fast one? Of course not. However, in watching Tierney’s response to the question asked by Evan Roberts last Friday, you can tell he had been harboring feelings about it for some time.

The question is why? If the rapport between the talent was as tight as everyone was led to believe, why not address it between the two of you? Sure, WFAN is built around a Howard Stern model where everything becomes content. That doesn’t mean it can’t be addressed off-air and squashed.

That answer by Tierney this past Friday, as a former WFAN talent, created an opportunity for Giannotti and WFAN. Needless to say, everything that has transpired since has been gold.

It’s not often that sports radio stations or talent trend online. Usually, it happens when events like the past two days involving WFAN and Tierney occur, or when breaking news hits. Yet, if you look at Google Trends, which tracks search history in real time, you’ll see spikes in searches for “Gregg Giannotti,” “WFAN,” and “Brandon Tierney.”

If the goal in the attention economy is to capture as much attention as possible, then credit goes to WFAN, Giannotti, and Tierney. Sex sells, and controversy always wins.

Last week, when a very similar situation arose involving Sportsradio 94 WIP, I wrote that silence from those being criticized missed an opportunity to tell their story and rebut their critics. It’s not rocket science. It’s about controlling the narrative and using the moment to lift all boats, including your own.

Instead, I received feedback from many asking why they should give oxygen to those on smaller platforms who no longer matter to the greater good of the listener.

Sports radio is a passion-fueled format where listeners connect with personalities more than in any other format. That connection, whether the personality is currently on the station or not, never wavers. I can’t tell you how many times, even after his death, listeners of WDAE in Tampa Bay have asked me about Steve “Big Dog” Duemig.

Personalities leave lasting impressions and connect in ways few others can.

But silence on the matter persists. In contrast, did WFAN benefit from the past couple of days? Absolutely, especially when you consider how many people sought out content involving the parties.

Did Gregg Giannotti benefit? If I were in Ryan Hurley’s shoes, I’d be looking forward to reviewing Media Monitors on Sunday afternoon, likely with a cigar and a glass of my favorite cocktail. If Giannotti’s rant drove added listening from people waiting for his next words, that’s a win for WFAN. They didn’t need to embrace the controversy on social media because they didn’t have to.

Did Brandon Tierney benefit? If you trust data from Social Blade, which tracks YouTube performance for individual channels. Tierney gained more than 200 subscribers in the past two days alone. On Tuesday, he generated over 42,000 views on his channel—his best day in weeks—which also led to some nice “earnings,” according to the tracking site.

Will this back-and-forth continue through the end of the week? Probably not. But what better way to ramp up listening and interest in the light days leading up to Opening Day for Major League Baseball in a hot MLB market?

And that’s really the point.

Moments like this aren’t accidents—they’re opportunities. In a media landscape where attention is fragmented, loyalty is fleeting, and competition extends far beyond the station across town. You don’t win by playing it safe.

You win by being heard, by being felt, and sometimes by being uncomfortable.

Silence might protect you in the short term, but it rarely builds an audience in the long term.

What WFAN and the personalities involved showed over the past few days is that controversy, when rooted in authenticity, doesn’t damage the product—it energizes it. It gives listeners a reason to tune in, pick a side, and become part of the conversation.

That’s the currency of sports radio. Not perfection. Not politeness. Connection.

And connection isn’t built in the quiet.

For every programmer or host who believes ignoring criticism is the high road, it’s worth asking: high road to where? Because while you’re staying above the fray, someone else is owning the moment—and the audience that comes with it.

Sports radio has always thrived at the intersection of opinion, personality, and tension. That hasn’t changed. If anything, it matters more now than ever.

So the next time controversy knocks, don’t turn the lights off and pretend you’re not home.

Open the door.

Because in this business, the stations and talent willing to lean into the noise are usually the ones heard the loudest. Job well done.

Barrett Media produces daily content on the music, news, and sports media industries. Sign up for our newsletters to stay updated and get the latest information right in your inbox.

Women’s History Month: Why Greta Van Susteren Believes a ‘Facts Only’ Approach is the Secret to Thriving Across Every Network

In honor of Women’s History Month, Barrett Media is sitting down for conversations with some of the most respected women in the industry, including Newsmax’s Greta Van Susteren.

“I’m sort of an accidental anchor,” she remarked.

After finishing law school and starting her own practice with a friend, Van Susteren was asked to do courthouse commentary. “Anyone could do courthouse commentary and be a lawyer and just explain what an opening statement is,” she said. “Then after that, William Kenny Smith’s trial went gavel to gavel at CNN. So CNN called me up to do the gavel to gavel.”

Van Susteren was teaching as an adjunct professor at Georgetown and thought the CNN gig would be over in roughly two weeks. “Well, that was 30 years ago,” she joked.

So a two-week gig turned into an entirely new career path. Van Susteren has spanned the media’s political spectrum from CNN to Fox News, MSNBC, and now Newsmax. The secret to this wide-ranging success: just provide the facts.

“I grew up trying cases and in the courtroom, [and there] you can only do facts. The only opinion you can provide in the courtroom is that a witness is allowed to give an opinion — whether someone looks drunk or not, oddly enough.” She added, “I’m very fact-driven. If you look at my shows through all the networks I’ve [been at], I can get Republicans and Democrats on every single network I’m on, regardless of what the network is perceived to be.”

She also noted that aside from her CNN shows, all the other networks gave her show a similar name. “On the Record, For the Record, The Record. I’ve used the same sort of names.” It goes to her point — she’ll cover politics, but she is not taking a political side. Instead, she’s presenting the facts, and she sometimes does it with the help of artificial intelligence.

“You know, [AI] depends on who’s using it and how you use it. I use it as a research tool. I don’t use it to write anything for me.” She noted AI has gotten some facts about her wrong. “I looked it up once and said, ‘How did Greta Van Susteren do in high school?’ And it said I was great. Well, I’ve got to tell you, that was a failing on the part of AI.”

“Frankly, with AI I use about three different ones — Perplexity, Grok, ChatGPT — and I compare and contrast them. I don’t rely on one of them, because I’ve seen too many things that are inconsistent.” She noted, “AI can be a wonderful tool, but it can also be frightening — because it’s so possible to poison people.”

To young journalists who are truly searching for the pursuit of truth, Van Susteren can be considered an icon, but it’s a label not on her own personal radar. “I don’t have that sense of, like, I’m an icon. I have a sense that this is my job, but my rest of my life is so regular.” She added, “People aren’t driving me around in cars, unless it happens to be an Uber or something. My perception is so vastly different. I just happen to have a ringside seat on the most interesting things that happen in our lives.”

She later noted, “I don’t feel, quote, iconic at all. I feel lucky, but not iconic. I don’t have that sense of me, and it sort of surprises me when I hear that. And I think I’m a survivor.”

“I work very hard, I study hard, and I show up for my show. I get up in the morning early and I’m studying. And I read everything in sight. I read so much more beyond what the average person would do.”

She gave an example: “Recently, we had a guest who was going to be talking about the war. It would have been enough just to have his name and the fact that he was going to be covering the war. But I dug deeper and found out that when he was in high school, he went to school in Tehran. So I dig a little deeper. I’m curious.”

For those looking to follow in Van Susteren’s footsteps, she suggests, “Obviously, they need to distinguish themselves.” She proceeded by saying, “I’ll tell you what I think is a mistake. People want to be anchors. Anchors, for the most part, are in studios. What you really want to be is a reporter. I’ve been fortunate enough to be an anchor-reporter, because a reporter gets out and investigates and learns things. And I think if you want to be an anchor, spend 10 or 15 years as a reporter so that you build up a portfolio of experience.”

Imparting words of wisdom she received from Ted Turner and Larry King, Van Susteren attested, “Ted Turner said, ‘The news is the star.’ And he was really right. That taught me that you are there to deliver the news. It’s not about you.” She went on to say, “Something else that Larry King told me: ‘Don’t talk too much.’ The reason he told me that is he said people may be interested in you in the first four or five, six, seven, eight nights. But after that, they’re going to get bored with you. They tune in to watch your guest and hear what your guest has to say.”

Barrett Media produces daily content on the music, news, and sports media industries. Sign up for our newsletters to stay updated and get the latest information right in your inbox.