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Elle Duncan Defends ESPN in Emotional SportsCenter Farewell

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Elle Duncan went out with a heartfelt sendoff Tuesday, closing the chapter on a decade-long career at ESPN before moving to Netflix’s expanding sports operations. During her final SportsCenter broadcast, Duncan addressed critics of the network in her final sendoff.

Defending the behind-the-scenes workforce that she says forms the true “heartbeat” of the company.

“I see the headlines. Some are earned. Some, I believe are not,” Duncan said. “And anyone in this chair knows that criticism is just part of the job, and you take it. But the faces of this place are not the soul of this place. The soul is the thousands of people who work here. No spotlight, and still all the scrutiny.”

ESPN has not been immune from scrutiny over Duncan’s tenure at the network. Allegations of political bias, conflict of interest, and programming decisions, among other criticisms have been ever present. Duncan, however, urged viewers to recognize the work of editors, producers, directors, and other staff whose efforts largely go unnoticed by the public.

From covering College GameDay to the WNBA Finals, Duncan said the faces viewers see on-air represent only a fraction of the organization.

“People from every background, with every kind of belief, and from every zip code. There is no hidden agenda here, folks. Just the kind that many of you have there at home. To put food on the table, maybe to send your kids to college, do some work that matters. Build a life,” she said.

Duncan has anchored ESPN’s 6pm ET edition of SportsCenter for the past five years. She has emerged as one of the network’s most prominent and versatile voices. In addition to her nightly anchor duties, she’s become a central figure in ESPN’s women’s basketball coverage.

Duncan’s role at Netflix may extend beyond sports. She is expected to have opportunities to work on non-sports content. That fits Netflix’s strategy of elevating recognizable broadcast personalities across multiple verticals.

Toward the end of her farewell, Duncan expressed gratitude to colleagues and peers who helped shape her decade at the network.

“Thank you for the hallway smiles, for the late nights researching, for the very early mornings. For saying my name in rooms that I was not in. Trusting me to toe the line and knowing when not to. For pushing me, holding me accountable, making this place feel as close to home as not-home can be. You made this last decade a gift,” she said.

Christine Williamson is set to take over Duncan’s position on the 6 PM ET SportsCenter, as well as her role as host of the women’s basketball version of College GameDay. Williamson — who originally joined ESPN in 2019 — will begin hosting SportsCenter alongside Kevin Negandhi in January.

Currently, Williamson works as an anchor of the Noon and 2 PM ET editions of SportsCenter. Duncan’s final SportsCenter broadcast is reportedly set for Tuesday, December 16th.

Malika Andrews is reportedly set to replace Duncan on ESPN’s WNBA host.

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NewsNation to Expand Live News Programming with Show Hosted by Jesse Weber

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NewsNation has announced plans to expand its live news programming with a new 11 PM ET show hosted by Jesse Weber.

Weber will examine the day’s news events with a focus on legal affairs, while also welcoming guests during each edition of the new show.

Jesse Weber will continue to contribute to the network as a legal analyst, in addition to hosting the new program at 11 PM ET.

“I’m thrilled to launch this new show on NewsNation, a network dedicated to delivering straightforward, honest journalism for all Americans,” said Weber. “With my background in both law and politics, I’m eager to bring clarity as well as a millennial perspective to the stories that matter most. This is a remarkable opportunity to help create a space where facts lead the way.”

“With these additional hours of live news, we reinforce our commitment to deliver clear, nonpartisan journalism at a time when viewers need it most,” said Nexstar Networks President Sean Compton. “With the frenetic pace of today’s breaking news cycle, expanding our live coverage will ensure our viewers never miss a beat.”

Weber originally joined the network as a legal contributor and guest anchor in March 2023. He previously worked as a legal analyst at Fox News, CNN, HLN, and CBS.

Additionally, NewsNation is expanding live programming on the weekends, too. Morning in America, hosted by Hena Doba, will now begin at 6 AM ET. Meanwhile, NewsNation Live will add another hour of live news on Saturdays, while Batya! — hosted by Batya Ungar-Sargon — will air on Sautrdays at 7 PM ET and receive an encore presentation on Sundays at 11 AM ET.

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Adam Silver Praises Prime Video’s NBA Coverage Approach

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NBA Commissioner Adam Silver hailed Prime Video’s coverage of the league this season as a standout example of how sports broadcasting can educate and engage fans. Speaking during the network’s pre-game show, Silver highlighted the platform’s ability to go beyond conventional commentary and offer deeper insights into the game.

“As a fan, I think you do a great job educating other fans about the game,” Silver said. “That, I would say, has frustrated me in the past about some coverage when it’s sort of reduced to ‘one side wanted it more’ or ‘this side played harder.’ When you guys are explaining, like, why can’t a guy get a shot off, why is a particular defense working, I think the studio you guys built is off the charts.”

While Silver didn’t expand on exactly what coverage he was speaking of, his comments singled out the integration of technology as a key differentiator for Prime Video. Silver went on to praise the network’s use of on-floor demonstrations and analytical tools, noting that these elements make the broadcast experience more engaging and informative.

“And I think the technology that you’re using—when you guys go out on the floor to demonstrate things—I can say as a fan I love that part of the coverage,” Silver added.

The commissioner’s endorsement is particularly notable given the crowded landscape of NBA media partners. The NBA signed its 11-year media rights deal with Disney, NBC and Amazon Prime Video in July of last year after saying it was not accepting Warner Bros. Discovery’s $1.8 billion per year offer to continue its longtime relationship with the league.

This is Amazon Prime’s first season of broadcasting the NBA under a rights deal reportedly worth $1.93 billion per year.

What stands out is Silver’s comments are a departure from traditional networks who often focus on narrative-driven commentary or highlight-driven recaps. The commissioner pointed to Prime Video’s different approach in interactive graphics, real-time breakdowns, and immersive pre-game programming.

According to Silver, this approach resonates with viewers who want a more nuanced understanding of strategy, player decisions, and game dynamics.

For Prime Video, Silver’s praise provides a timely validation of its NBA coverage strategy, which aims to differentiate itself from conventional broadcasts while appealing to both casual viewers and die-hard fans.

As the NBA season progresses, Silver’s remarks may encourage other networks to adopt similar approaches, blending technology, analysis, and storytelling in ways that enhance the fan experience.

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Salem Radio Network Tabs Scott Jennings, Alex Marlow to Replace Charlie Kirk

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The Scott Jennings Show is seeing an expansion in the Salem Radio Network lineup, replacing The Charlie Kirk Show.

Jennings will now host from 1-3 PM ET in the lineup, growing his show from one hour to two. Previously, The Charlie Kirk Show was heard from 12-2 PM ET in the window. Salem Radio Network shifted affiliates of The Dennis Prager Show to Kirk’s program following Prager’s debilitating injury in November 2024.

The Charlie Kirk Show will remain in place as a podcast on the Salem Podcast Network. Producers Andrew Kolvet and Blake Neff will continue to helm the program in the wake of the host’s September assassination.

“This is an important moment for Salem,” said Salem Media Senior Vice President of Content Phil Boyce. “Salem has earned the trust of conservative audiences for decades, and we don’t take that lightly. Scott Jennings and Alex Marlow each bring a distinct voice, a rare ability to engage audiences, and real seriousness to the conversation. Together, they will carry the Salem legacy forward.”

“First, to my friend Andrew Kolvet and the Turning Point USA team, thank you for your stewardship of Charlie’s radio legacy over these last several months. It has been nothing short of brilliant,” said Jennings. “These are some of the most important hours in talk radio, shaped by voices who didn’t just fill time, but moved the national conversation. I’m grateful to Salem for the trust they’ve placed in me to step into that legacy. Expanding the show gives us the space and time to deliver serious analysis, honest debate, and thoughtful conversations for the audience. Looking forward to more great guests and more common sense for the American people!”

Meanwhile, Alex Marlow, who serves as the Editor-in-Chief of Breitbart News, will take over the 12-1 PM ET window on Salem Radio Network. Marlow is no stranger to Salem Media. He has hosted a podcast for the company’s podcast network since November 2024.

“Even before I became the first employee of Breitbart News and a mentee of web pioneer Andrew Breitbart, I was a talk radio junkie,” said Marlow. “It has been a constant part of my media diet since I was a teenager and has informed my news judgement as I lead Breitbart’s virtual newsroom. Many of the hosts that have captured my attention and imagination over the decades are or were on the Salem dial. Larry Elder was my first talk radio love, years went by where I didn’t miss a single moment of the Dennis Prager Show, and it was a rare pleasure to be a weekly guest on my friend Charlie Kirk’s show during the last year of his life. I have deep respect for the Salem audience as well as my on-air colleagues both as people and as broadcasters. I can’t wait to get started.”

In a statement, Kolvet shared that they’re honored to continue honoring Kirk’s legacy by the continuation of his show, they’re appreciative of how the network has been “so gracious throughout this process.”

“Salem has been so gracious through this process and even encouraged us to continue broadcasting the show on the Salem Radio Network,” said The Charlie Kirk Show Executive Producer Andrew Kolvet. “While The Charlie Kirk Show team is excited to continue the live show and podcast in other venues, ultimately we agreed that Alex and Scott were the perfect hosts to take over on the radio portion. Both are great friends and extremely talented broadcasters. We are also grateful that Salem Media Reps will continue to represent and sell the time inside the show. While some of the details around how we want to distribute the show will change, our friendship and trust in Salem does not.”

“I want to thank Erika Kirk, Andrew Kolvet, and the entire Turning Point USA team for the strength and dedication they’ve shown,” Boyce said. “Charlie was a once-in-a-generation leader, and the way his team has carried forward his mission speaks volumes.”

The expansion of The Scott Jennings Show will officially take place on Monday, January 2nd.

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CBS News Adding Several New Contributors, Including H.R. McMaster, Elliot Ackerman

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CBS News is set to add a host of new contributors to the network under the direction of new Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss.

According to a report from Puck’s Dylan Byers, the network is adding former National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster, ex-Marine Elliot Ackerman, emerging trends reporter Casey Lewis, and chef/food writer Clare de Boer to its roster of contributors.

McMaster is the most notable name on the list of new contributors. He served as the National Security Advisor during President Donald Trump’s first term in office. He exited the role in March 2018, before officially retiring from the military in May of that year.

H.R. McMaster is no stranger to the media world. Following his military exit, he began hosting a podcast called Today’s Battlegrounds, discussing the intersection of national security and economic prosperity.

The report from Byers indicates that most contributors to CBS News receive a $30,000 payment upfront before receiving $1,000 per appearance on the network.

CBS News has not yet confirmed any of those reports about potential new additions.

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Executive Producer Michael Samtur Announces Exit From Audacy, Infinity Sports Network

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Michael Samtur, the executive producer of The Zach Gelb Show, announced he is leaving Audacy and the Infinity Sports Network after 13 years with the company, confirming his departure in a post shared on LinkedIn.

Samtur’s exit comes as the Infinity Sports Network prepares to cease operations at year’s end. The network is merging with the BetMGM Network. Together, they will form the new Westwood One Sports Network. The new network begins airing programming on December 29.

“After 13 glorious years, my time at CBS Sports Radio/Infinity Sports Network/Audacy is coming to an end,” Samtur wrote. “As many of you know, the Network is ceasing operations at the end of the year.”

Samtur was among the original staffers who helped launch the network. He remained through its final chapter. He highlighted that distinction in his message. “It has been my profound pleasure to be one of the few who launched the network and remained throughout to close it,” he added.

Over more than a decade, Samtur established himself as a trusted and versatile presence behind the scenes, working with a wide range of nationally recognized hosts. He also served as the Executive Producer at WFAN guiding Tiki Barber and Brandon Tierney for nine years.

Most recently, Samtur served as executive producer of The Zach Gelb Show. He played a central role in shaping the program’s sound. He also guided its editorial structure and booking strategy. Under his leadership, the show grew into a nationally distributed program. He also emphasized the evolution of his role as the sports media landscape changed. Highlighting his work in social media as a key area of growth. He also cited digital content and emerging technology. These areas have been central to recent developments.

“Over the past few years, I’ve prided myself on mastering the various social media platforms, video/image editing, and now, AI to create unique content that has garnered tens of millions of views,” he wrote.

With the change from the Infinity Sports Network to Westwood One Sports, Samtur is among many of the currently established hosts and staff that won’t be making the move. Earlier this week, Gelb revealed that The Zach Gelb Show will end on Friday afternoon, as he will not be included in the new Westwood One Sports network lineup.

In closing, Samtur expressed gratitude to the colleagues and contributors who helped define the network’s legacy.

“Thank you to all the great producers, hosts, and incredible guests we’ve had over the past decade and a half. You have helped make the network one of the preeminent national sports networks in radio history,” he said

Currently, Westwood One Sports has yet to announce who will host the 12-3 PM ET timeslot when the network launches in less than two weeks.

Currently, the lineup consists of:6-9 AM ET: Drake C. Toll
9 AM-12 PM ET: You Better You Bet with Nick Kostos
12-3 PM ET: TBD
3-6 PM ET: The Jim Rome Show
6-11 PM ET: Bet MGM Tonight with Brad Evans and Pat Boyle

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Warner Bros. Discovery Rejects Paramount’s Hostile Bid

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The board of Warner Bros. Discovery has formally rejected a $30-per-share hostile tender offer led by David Ellison’s Paramount Skydance, reaffirming its support for the company’s previously announced merger agreement with Netflix and signaling little appetite to revisit negotiations with Paramount-backed bidders.

In a filing and statement to shareholders, WBD’s board said the Ellison-led proposal undervalues the company and introduces what it described as “numerous significant risks and costs,” calling the offer inferior to the Netflix transaction in both certainty and overall value.

“Following a careful evaluation of Paramount’s recently launched tender offer, the Board concluded that the offer’s value is inadequate, with significant risks and costs imposed on our shareholders,” board chair Samuel A. Di Piazza, Jr. said in a letter obtained by The Hollywood Reporter. “This offer once again fails to address key concerns that we have consistently communicated to Paramount throughout our extensive engagement and review of their six previous proposals.”

The rejection was widely anticipated. The tender offer mirrored a proposal Paramount submitted on December 4. That proposal came shortly before WBD agreed to merge with Netflix. At the time, WBD raised concerns about the financing structure. It also cited regulatory risk. The company questioned the durability of financial backstops tied to the offer.

Chief among those concerns was the role of Oracle founder Larry Ellison. His revocable trust was cited as a key financial backstop. WBD said the trust does not provide sufficient certainty. Its assets and liabilities are not publicly disclosed. The trust can also be altered at any time.

The board also pointed to risks tied to foreign sovereign wealth participation in the bid consortium, including $10 billion from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, $7 billion from Abu Dhabi, and $7 billion from the Qatar Investment Authority.

Earlier versions of the Paramount-led bid included financing from Tencent. That $1 billion contribution was later removed. The decision followed regulatory and geopolitical concerns. Jared Kushner’s Affinity Partners had also pledged $200 million. The firm has since exited the consortium. Its departure further weakened the proposal in the eyes of WBD’s board.

From a regulatory standpoint, WBD said it does not believe there is a meaningful distinction between the Netflix transaction and the Paramount-led offer, countering claims that the latter would face fewer antitrust hurdles.

The board also took issue with Paramount’s legal posture.

In its filing, WBD referenced a December 3 letter from Paramount’s attorneys at Quinn Emanuel, describing it as adversarial and counterproductive. According to WBD, representatives from PSKY’s legal and financial advisors later indicated the letter “should not have been sent” and characterized it as “not helpful” and a “mistake.”

With the rejection now official, the burden shifts to Paramount and its partners. They must convince WBD shareholders to tender shares at the offered price. Alternatively, they must submit a materially improved bid. For now, WBD’s board remains firmly aligned behind the Netflix deal. The board frames it as the most compelling path forward. It also supports the company’s long-term strategic vision.

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’Twas the Night Before Christmas in Radio Land

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’Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the dial,
The cluster was quiet, if only a while.
The studios were thinning, the margins were tight,
But the future of audio was already flickering with light.

Dereg was a rumor that danced in the air,
A whisper that ownership rules might repair.
For CEOs prayed to the FCC throne,
“Please let us buy more or unload what we own.”

On Cumulus, On Audacy, On Beasley, stay strong!
Shareholders asking, “How long… yes, how long?”
If caps start to change and limits unwind,
Whole markets could trade in a day if inclined.

The measurement wars left the industry worn,
With ratings contested and loyalties torn.
“Give us new metrics!” the programmers pled,
“Give us more data, we want that instead.”

And callout once ruled with a phone and a scale,
Hooks rated by panels that tired and grew stale.
Familiarity, passion, a web link in hand,
A moment in time few could truly command.
But fans now reveal what they love every day,
In skips and in saves, in what loops when they play.
They share it, they post it, they argue, they shout,
Leaving trails AI now reads better than any callout.

Meanwhile Super Hi-Fi kept rising in flight,
Its intelligent playlists sounding eerily right.
More stations signed on, looking under the hood—
“Wait… this sounds BETTER than humans? How is it so good?”

The smartest stations soon won’t just automate sound,
They’ll automate presence when no one’s around.
Each request line answered, each comment replied,
AI agents working both streams and the sides.
Not to fake connection, but scale what’s sincere,
To make every listener feel someone’s near.
Restoring the feeling of always being on the line,
Is how small teams grow without adding a dime.

And On The Sly, with sound that stirred every scene,
Turned audio to emotion in ways seldom seen.
From drone-lit skies for Blackpink, Coachella nights wide,
They scored moments so massive the silence replied.
Not chasing the spotlight, but shaping the air,
Where memories are formed the moment you’re there.
In a world chasing visuals, they proved this is why:
Sound moves us like nothing else — and that’s On The Sly.

Elsewhere stood Dave Bethel, a voice built to lead,
Turning jingling craft into brand-level need.
At TM Studios, sound carried weight,
Not just keys or notes, but how brands communicate.
From booth to the feed, his presence was clear:
He won’t just help brands, he’ll become one next year.

And Mix Group kept winning without much debate,
While others went quiet, still stuck in one state.
With market walls fading and borders all gone,
What Jason was building just kept marching on.
He works with the operators, big and the small,
Across every format that reaches them all.
When stations need sound that can travel and stick,
They know where to go. The answer is Mix.

And as budgets grew leaner in each radio zone,
More bosses announced, “You can voice-track from home.”
Studios went dark; the halls lost their sound,
As talent logged in with no need to be around—
No rent… no utilities… no parking rate,
Just send in your breaks, and please don’t be late.

And whispers grew louder in money-tight rooms,
Of barter expanding to stave off the gloom.
Not just prep or services stations once knew,
But systems and software and streaming costs too.
Automation, music, engineering on call,
Even freelancers paid not with cash, but with spots after all.
Electricity, offices, coffee on tap—
A short-term solution masking a long-term trap.
For more barter means more commercials to run,
And audiences scatter when the breaks still aren’t done.
When listeners leave, the inventory falls,
And barter collapses beneath its own walls.

Select stations were still selling for scraps in the snow,
As valuations continued their troubling low.
An FM in Tampa for less than your home,
AMs abandoned like forgotten chrome.

Some licenses were lingering, worth less than they cost,
A balance-sheet burden, a signal half-lost.
A dollar would do, or a handshake instead,
When silence made more sense than living in red.

Podcasting groaned with metrics askew,
“Downloads? Impressions? What counts as a view?”
Advertisers sighed, creators lost sleep—
One standard for all felt impossibly steep.

And podcasters began noticing what some in radio forgot:
Towers still matter, whether streamed or not.
So creators with followings started to buy,
Old signals reborn with a digital why.
Radio as amplifier, not center stage,
A megaphone married to a personal age.
The dial didn’t die, it just changed who was loud,
As podcasts walked in and claimed part of the crowd.

And whispers grew louder in meetings on high:
“How much more could EMF purchase… and why?”
Their checkbook still open, their appetite wide,
Snapping up signals to promote Jesus with pride.

And across the Atlantic came rumors that stirred—
“Will Global arrive here?”—a question inferred.
For if London’s big titan decided to try,
They’d buy up a company and make U.S. brands fly.
Their imaging, their promo, their world-building flair—
Some stations would soar just by having them there.

But nothing divided the halls of radio
Quite like the rise of the AI voice show.
Some stations embraced it for nights and for fills,
While others declared it the gravest of ills.
Some groups proclaimed with a chest-thumping grin:
“We promise you humans! No robots within!”
While others, less vocal and strapped for a shift,
Let synthetic announcers quietly drift.

And debt—oh the debt—kept circling the sleigh,
Restructures and swaps carried companies away.
Clusters went quiet, new owners stepped in,
Old logos came down with a hesitant grin.

Yet through all the chaos, one truth held its place:
Audio still thrives when it speaks with a face.

And talent kept shifting like snow in the breeze,
Bootleg Kev kept ascending with effortless ease.
From LA to worldwide, hip-hop took note,
A hungry new voice with a champion’s throat.

And Bru kept proving the mic wasn’t the end,
But the launchpad for worlds radio hadn’t yet planned.
On-air was the doorway, not all he could be,
With screens and spotlights waiting patiently.
Acting. Modeling. Game shows in view.
A face that connects before formats do.
The smart ones all see it, the rest will too late:
By 2026, there’s far more on Bru’s plate.

Greg Beharrell, once rock radio’s delight,
A master of pauses, of timing just right.
Steven Wright calm with a Hedberg-like bend,
A punchline that lands when you least can defend.
His humor ran quiet, then spread through the land,
From rock into formats no one had planned.
AC? Country? The labels all blur,
When the brand isn’t loud, but unmistakably pure.

And Woody kept proving, from LA to beyond,
That consistency builds what flash never bonds.
A show built on truth, not tricks or disguise,
That scaled without losing its soul in the rise.

Bobby Bones, ever busy, forever in flight,
Picked up more shows because the content is right.
From Nashville to network, his empire grew,
The BobbyCast landing on Netflix too.

And one reshuffle—oh, NYC beware—
Was happening quietly up in Times Square.
For HOT 97, stripped down to the bone,
Left legends realizing, “Let’s build what we own.”

For listeners seek stories, connection, insight—
A voice they can trust on a cold winter night.
So here’s to the dreamers, disruptors, and pros,
The stations, the streamers, the rivals, the flows.

May 2026 bring reinvention in sight—
Happy listening to all, and to all a good night.

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Howard Stern Has Signed His Last Contract with SiriusXM

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Howard Stern signing another contract extension with SiriusXM feels familiar, comforting, and a little surreal.

Familiar because this cycle has repeated for nearly two decades.

Comforting because Stern’s presence still signals stability for the company.

Surreal because this one almost certainly feels like the last time we’ll write this headline.

That isn’t a knock on Stern’s legacy or relevance. It’s an acknowledgment of reality. Stern himself nearly retired earlier this year. When someone openly admits they were that close to walking away, it’s hard to imagine a sudden creative rebirth that leads to another extension three years from now.

Time has a way of clarifying these moments. Stern will be in his mid-70s when this deal expires. The grind of live radio, even in its modern form, does not get easier. It gets heavier, quieter, and less urgent.

Stern has always been fueled by doubt. Critics questioning his relevance pushed him during terrestrial radio’s peak. Naysayers doubting his SiriusXM move sharpened his edge in the early satellite years. Rumors of his demise have long served as rocket fuel.

That kind of motivation doesn’t appear on demand. You can’t manufacture existential pressure every few years and expect it to hit the same way. At some point, the noise fades. Comfort replaces conflict.

Howard Stern today is not chasing the industry. He is standing apart from it. That separation has value, but it also limits urgency. The hunger that once defined him doesn’t need to return for this deal to work. It would likely need to return for another one to make sense.

This extension feels more like closure than continuation. It rewards loyalty on both sides. It protects SiriusXM’s most iconic brand. It gives Stern the space to work on his own terms without committing to an open-ended future.

The media landscape has already changed dramatically since his last contract. Podcasts have professionalized. YouTube has matured. Streaming platforms are now fighting the same attention wars radio once owned outright. None of that slows down over the next three years.

By 2028, the ecosystem will look even more fractured. Distribution will matter less than community. Live appointment listening will be rarer. Personalities will still win, but the infrastructure around them will be leaner and less forgiving.

That reality complicates another deal. SiriusXM will be making different bets by then. Howard Stern will be weighing different priorities. Nostalgia alone won’t bridge that gap.

This isn’t about decline. It’s about timing. Every great run eventually reaches a point where continuing feels optional instead of necessary. Stern appears to be there now.

There’s also peace in that. Few broadcasters ever get to choose their ending. Fewer still do it while remaining highly compensated and culturally relevant. Stern has earned that privilege.

If this is indeed his final contract, it shouldn’t be viewed as a loss. It should be recognized as a rare, deliberate transition. Stern isn’t being pushed out. He’s easing off the accelerator.

That’s a powerful position to be in. It’s also one that doesn’t demand another extension. It simply asks for a strong finish.

How Adam Lefkoe’s Versatility Gives TNT Sports A College Football Playoff Edge

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For one to be considered versatile, they must obtain skills through many different functions. In sports media, those experiences can range from on-air to off-air roles. With technology constantly evolving across every sector of the industry, it is key for anyone to be as versatile as possible for retention and longevity. When Adam Lefkoe pursued his career in sports media following his studies at Syracuse University, he was taught to embrace versatility in every aspect of his work.

“I think I’m the most versatile sports broadcaster right now. Just because of doing everything I’ve been asked to do,” said Lefkoe as he prepares for this weekend’s College Football Playoff first-round coverage on TNT Sports.

The 38-year-old host earned a multi-year contract extension earlier this year because of that versatility. He has hosted a wide range of sports coverage for the network since joining just over a decade ago. From college basketball to the network’s first coverage of Roland-Garros earlier this year, Lefkoe has crafted his own lane and led the network by never saying no to any opportunity.

“Working under timelines and doing what I’ve done makes you a better storyteller. It also makes you a better teammate,” explained Lefkoe. “It’s all very surreal, to be honest. I appreciate that they [TNT Sports] have let me grow, and I appreciate the fact that they have trusted me. The grass is usually greener. People look outside to find someone to handle all these duties. To let me build up to this, it’s a special relationship.”

Pressures of the Playoff

This is the second year TNT Sports is presenting opening-round games for the College Football Playoff. The broadcasts are part of a five-year sublicense agreement with ESPN. Next year, the network will add quarterfinal and semifinal matchups, in addition to first-round coverage. Lefkoe approaches this year’s coverage with a focus on execution. He is building on the experiences of last year’s debut while shaping expectations for the future.

“In terms of the studio shows that are housed in studios, I think ours was the most fun, most entertaining, and the best, if I’m being real with you,” noted Lefkoe of his work covering the Big 12 for TNT Sports with Takeo Spikes, Victor Cruz, and Champ Bailey.

While the foursome handled typical week-to-week coverage, including pregame, halftime, and postgame segments, the College Football Playoff coverage will differ. Lefkoe and his crew will host a one-hour postgame show following the conclusion of James Madison University taking on Oregon, with the broadcast originating live from Eugene, Oregon.

“It’s magic, man,” explained Lefkoe. “There’s a pulse. You get into television for the moments when you sit down and get a little nervous. A live audience takes it to that level. If all the Ducks’ fans are going crazy behind us, that will be a crazy atmosphere.”

The goal remains the same in approach, albeit just for a postgame program. Preparation is key, with solid production that leaps off the screen. The hope is to replicate the approach and viewing experience from the network’s highly praised Roland-Garros coverage earlier this year, which Lefkoe believes could set a new standard for College Football Playoff coverage.

“The tennis analysts at Roland-Garros had not experienced the TNT way of doing things. Which is Adam goes to the meeting, you don’t… I think they all had experiences elsewhere of rehearsals. We made it more of a natural conversation,” Lefkoe compared, reflecting on his experience at the French Open earlier this year and applying it to this weekend. “TNT was the first broadcaster for that sport [tennis] in over a decade, and people said that was refreshing. If we can do that with college football, I think we’re on the right track.”

Changes At TNT Sports

Lefkoe relies on his versatility and careful control of inputs. He applies strategy in preparing for every sport he is assigned to host. Earlier this year, through his experience at Roland-Garros, he learned that curiosity builds connections with the audience. Asking questions, rather than trying to prove yourself, allows the analyst to shine.

“The main thing was to enter with curiosity. Do not enter trying to prove yourself. Instead of having mindless conversations in the green room, I was asking questions non-stop,” said Lefkoe. “My goal is to keep being curious. Sometimes people get callous and have covered a sport for so long that they believe they are the arbiter of it. I feel as if I’m always the guest and make good dinner conversation.”

This year is different for TNT Sports, as the NBA is no longer part of the network for the first time in over two decades. With the league’s exit, Lefkoe lost the opportunity to continue hosting his Tuesday night NBA coverage.

He says he misses the NBA on TNT but still has affection for the sport. However, the departure of the league opened new possibilities for Lefkoe to break away from being known as “the NBA guy” on the network. More importantly, his focus shifted to the talented staff surrounding him.

“We were all worried about people behind the scenes if they’d lose their job. What TNT Sports has that I’ve seen through the eyes of other talent that have worked in other places is a vibe,” explained Lefkoe. “What happens behind the scenes completely impacts what you see on camera. We were just worried that we were losing people we really cared about.”

While not everyone behind the scenes was retained, Lefkoe was happy to see many colleagues he valued remain with the network in the same or different capacities. With Inside the NBA now airing on ESPN but still being produced in TNT Sports studios in Atlanta, Lefkoe remains ready in case his number is called.

“I believe I’ve been told that,” explained Lefkoe when asked if he would fill in for Ernie Johnson if he missed an airing of Inside the NBA. “If he [Ernie Johnson] had one of his grandchildren’s graduations or something like that where he needed to go, I’m going to get that call.”

A Try Anything Mindset to Success

Remaining versatile continues to be a key part of Lefkoe’s role at TNT Sports as he finds new ways to build relationships with sports fans. Even though he has become the face guiding the network’s sports coverage, he remains tied to his digital media roots through his partnership with Shaquille O’Neal.

For the past two years, Lefkoe and O’Neal have co-hosted the highly successful The Big Podcast with Shaq. They dive into any topic, expanding their reach and connection with the audience. When O’Neal asked Lefkoe to join the podcast, it was an opportunity he couldn’t pass up.

“Just don’t stop,” explained Lefkoe, emphasizing his commitment to growth. “When it comes to being versatile in doing different sports, why say no?”

Balancing opportunities is a daily challenge Lefkoe welcomes. Being passed up for multiple opportunities in his career taught him to persevere, take ownership of every request, ask thorough questions, and remain curious.

Building versatility into a sports media career is a goal many aspire to.

“Put yourself in those uncomfortable situations. Don’t be afraid of looking stupid, and stay curious,” said Lefkoe. “If you’re willing to listen and learn, then you can grow. If you think you know it all and feel the need to show people, they’re going to go, ‘this guy stinks.’ The journey and being open prepares you for anything.”

As the College Football Playoff approaches this weekend, Adam Lefkoe is set to once again demonstrate the value of his versatility.

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