OpenAI plans to announce its artificial intelligence-powered search product on Monday, according to two sources familiar with the matter, raising the stakes in its competition with search king Google. The announcement date, though subject to change, has not been previously reported. Bloomberg and the Information have reported that Microsoft-backed OpenAI is working on a search product to potentially compete with Alphabet’s Google and with Perplexity, a well-funded AI search startup.
Vice Media said Thursday it will create a joint venture with Nashville-based Savage Ventures to relaunch its digital properties, including Vice.com, Munchies, Motherboard and Noisey. The deal will see Savage Ventures investing “tens of millions of dollars” into the joint venture, a Vice spokesperson said.
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore on Thursday signed a privacy law that imposes tough new restrictions on online data collection and ad targeting. Major ad industry groups had urged Moore to veto the measure, which the groups said includes “the most onerous and restrictive approach to data privacy in the United States to date.”
KXAS Dallas-Fort Worth and WTVF Nashville have won 2024 Peabody Awards. Given out by the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, 34 winners were named. They represent “the most compelling and empowering stories released in broadcasting and streaming media” in 2023.
Scripps Q1 Station Revenue Climbs 13%
The increase to $353 million was driven by increased political advertising and distribution revenue. For the company as a whole, total Q1 revenue was $561 million, a decrease of 6.4%, or $33.7 million.
Dow Climbs 331, Nasdaq Adds 44, S&P Rises 26
Wall Street rose Thursday to pull the S&P 500 back within 1% of its record. A report showing a pickup in layoffs helped to support the market.
Tegna moves him from GM of WOI-KCWI Des Moines, Iowa, to oversee its Texas CBS-Quest duopoly.
Today, the National Association of Broadcasters Leadership Foundation (NABLF) announced a partnership with the Foundation For A Bright Future (FABF), a nonprofit dedicated to supporting underprivileged and underrepresented children. NAB […]
The company has hired Moelis as its investment banker and has identified more than 60 stations in various regions of the U.S. that it would be willing to sell, said people familiar with the matter who asked not to be named because the discussions are private. Sinclair owns or operates 185 TV stations in 86 markets. The stations are a mix of Fox, NBC, ABC, CBS and CW affiliates. If sold together, their average revenue for 2023 and 2024 is an estimated $1.56 billion, the people said. Sinclair is willing to sell all or some of the stations, which are in top markets like Minneapolis; Portland, Ore.; Pittsburgh; Austin, Texas and Fresno, Calif., among others.
The Spanish-language broadcaster unveils a lineup that includes a sequel to El Senor de los Cielos and two new unscripted series alongside returning favorites.
The Nexstar CEO tells analysts: “If I had to bet, I would bet the company will be larger three years from now than it is today. What acquisition will lead to that in combination with organic growth? I can’t really say. But I’m excited to run out those ground balls and find out.” What it won’t include is streaming, he added: “The main reason we’re not in streaming is because we just don’t think it’s a good business.”
The multiyear agreement also includes launch of two additional cable networks and continued carriage of AMG’s KITV and KIKU Honolulu.
Overall, revenue of $9.958 billion was down from the year before and shy of Wall Street expectations, of over $10 billion. Ditto with net loss per share of 40 cents. TV numbers felt the impact of strikes with fewer episodes delivered. Streaming was a bright spot, where WBD added 2 million subs to 99.6 million and had a profit of $86 million, up from $50 million the year before. Revenue firmed, including a 70% jump in ad sales.
Nexstar’s Q1 Net Revenue Rises 2.1%
The total of $1.284 billion was attributed to increased distribution revenue and higher political revenue of $39 million.
CBS and other well-known properties would be sold if Sony and Apollo were able to buy Paramount. But the new owners would keep the movie studio.
Political And Distribution Money Push Sinclair
In discussing Q1 performance, Lucy Rutishauser, Sinclair’s CFO, reported that “as compared to last year, consolidated media revenues increased to $792 million during the quarter, primarily on the higher political revenues and an increase in distribution revenue.” CEO Chris Ripley highlighted the company’s Broadspan, which is offering a new content distribution service that combines OTT and OTA distribution of live streaming events.
Dow Rises 172, Nasdaq Slips 30, S&P Finishes Flat
Wall Street’s lull stretched to a second day as indexes finish mixed Wednesday.
Gray Television announced Wednesday that its board of directors has authorized a quarterly cash dividend of $0.08 per share of its common stock and Class A common stock. The dividend is […]
Sinclair 1Q Revenue Rises 3%
The increase to $798 million was driven by the Local Media segment, which grew to $792 million from $766 million in the same quarter a year ago as well as higher distribution revenue.
Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has ordered his lieutenants to find additional opportunities for cost-cutting in order to hit financial targets for the next couple years, people with knowledge of the matter said. They include the possibility of more layoffs at the company, which has eliminated more than 2,000 positions over the past year, said the people, who asked not to be identified. The streaming operation alone could bear hundreds of millions of dollars in budget cuts, mostly in marketing and technology, the people said.
Political, Sports And Premion Have Tegna Fired Up
Dave Lougee, president-CEO, said Tegna stations cover six of the seven swing states that are likely to impact the presidential race. In addition, the company is starting to capture political dollars beyond its stations’ footprint through Premion, the company’s connected TV ad platform.
EchoStar lost about 348,000 net pay TV subscribers in the first quarter, compared with a drop of 552,000 in the year-ago period, the company said on Wednesday. The company disclosed in a regulatory filing on Wednesday that it lost around 135,000 net Sling TV subscribers in the latest quarter, compared with a year-ago loss of 234,000. It ended March with 1.92 million Sling TV subs.
As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly integrated into advertising, Meta is introducing new ways marketers can use generative AI (GAI) to focus less on “mundane tasks” and more on creative strategy. At a press event on Tuesday, the tech giant announced the rollout of full image and text generation. For the first time, advertisers will be able to create full image variations based on their original ad creative with text overlay capabilities that generate new backgrounds around product images and alter images to better fit multiple surfaces.
If upfront advertisers are looking for reach, Nexstar Media Group believes its base of local stations gives it a unique way to achieve that goal. Michael Strober, Nexstar chief revenue officer, says that even advertisers interested in the sports programming that Nexstar has added to The CW Network, can benefit from a national-local approach. “If you care about college football, we have ACC football and you can buy that on The CW,” Strober said. “Then you can extend that reach across all of the Nexstar affiliates on ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox, who all carry college football every week,” he said.
Murdoch Bullish On Sports JV, Tubi, Political Spend
Talking with analysts, the Fox CEO described the still-unnamed joint venture with Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery that’s now in beta as “an incredibly exciting product.” The company’s operating results showed a decline in revenue from last year’s third quarter, but affiliate fees rose, from about $1.86 billion in last year’s comparable quarter to $1.94 billion.
Fox Swings To Quarterly Profit Despite Slump In Ad Revenue
Fox Corp. said it swung to a profit in its fiscal third quarter despite slumps in advertising revenue, largely due to the absence of charges associated with a massive legal setback tied to Fox News Channel and a boost in affiliate fees. The owner of Fox News Channel and the Fox broadcasting network said overall revenue fell to about $3.45 billion, compared to approximately $4.08 billion in the year-earlier period.