According to The Hollywood Reporter, Sinclair may launch a cable channel to compete with Fox News: Sinclair Laying Groundwork for Fox News Competitor.
It took FNC almost 4 years to challenge let alone beat CNN (The infamous Elian Gonzalez raid and the Election 2000 coverage saw FNC rise to #1).
Tribune will leverage WGN-A, a station that already has wide carriage to create their network. They will bring in a big name, possibly O'Reilly, to headline their prime time coverage. This will immediately draw viewers from Fox and put them WAY ahead of Newsmax, OAN and other potential Fox competitors. It's unlikely that Fox would be unseated from its top rated spot, but it won't help.
Tribune will leverage WGN-A, a station that already has wide carriage to create their network. They will bring in a big name, possibly O'Reilly, to headline their prime time coverage. This will immediately draw viewers from Fox and put them WAY ahead of Newsmax, OAN and other potential Fox competitors. It's unlikely that Fox would be unseated from its top rated spot, but it won't help.
Kushner said the agreement with Sinclair, which owns television stations across the country in many swing states and often packages news for their affiliates to run, gave them more access to Trump and the campaign, according to six people who heard his remarks.
In exchange, Sinclair would broadcast their Trump interviews across the country without commentary, Kushner said. Kushner highlighted that Sinclair, in states like Ohio, reaches a much wider audience — around 250,000 listeners — than networks like CNN, which reach somewhere around 30,000.
“It’s math,” Kushner said according to multiple attendees.
But Sinclair and other networks said such a deal is nothing nefarious or new - just an arrangement for extended sit-down interviews with both candidates, one many campaigns have done in previous years to get around the national media and directly to viewers in key states.
But Jared Kushner mentioned that Sinclair can get more viewers than CNN and others in a 2016 article before the Tribune deal came into play.
What about markets with no Sinclair stations where Sinclair programming (Ring of Honor Wrestling, Full Measure, Comet TV) may air? Would they be persuaded into running their news?
What about markets with no Sinclair stations where Sinclair programming (Ring of Honor Wrestling, Full Measure, Comet TV) may air? Would they be persuaded into running their news?
But However the article failed to mention that Fox News faces a new uncertainty like Sinclair named in various rumors to challenge Fox News over demographics like getting more conservatives to their venue but that's still pending until the Sinclair/Tribune deal is resolved.
Fox News has managed to create a brand that goes beyond personalities. That's unusual.
Sinclair should have a pretty good news division framework in place already, between the national news content they produce and all the local news resources they can pull from.
Sinclair Broadcasting has hired Kaelan Dorr as the company’s new “executive political producer,” who will work alongside the channel’s political guru Boris Epshteyn and his “must run” segment for the channel’s local stations: “Bottom Line With Boris.”
Dorr is a veteran of the Trump administration, first working on the 2016 campaign and then serving in the White House as director of congressional communications for over a year.
“I’m proud to announce I’ve joined Sinclair Broadcast Group as Executive Political Producer!,” said Dorr in a tweet Tuesday, adding that he was “eager to bring my unique experience as a campaign veteran and Trump WH alum to an already stellar group.”
Epshteyn himself is also a veteran of many GOP campaigns including President Trump’s. The Dorr hire signals Sinclair chief David Smith’s desire to mine talent (and perhaps curry favor) from the current administration.
Epshteyn and his political opinion operation within Sinclair came to wide public attention after Deadspin published a lengthy exposé on his segments and other “must run” commentary that Sinclair forced their local station anchors to read in March.
Despite coming in for wide criticism, Epshteyn shot back, in a “Bottom Line With Boris” segment defending his work as clearly marked commentary, as opposed to mainstream media which he said veils opinions as news.
That's the problem. They really don't have a national news department. Most of their stations are affiliates of the big four, so the national news comes from there. They do a few national commentaries that are required to air on the local stations. Their local news departments are about the same as everyone else. There's been talk of using their stations in DC (WJLA and WDCA) to become a base for a national news network, but AFAIK it hasn't happened yet.