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Will Sinclair Challenge Fox News?

If they decide to do something more with Circa, I think it will be more Sinclair's answer to Newsy, rather than a full-on Fox News competitor.

They seem to be tip-toeing into this thing, with a hire here and there. Buying all these stations is pushing them billions of dollars in debt. National news is another big money pit. Not sure where they think the profit will come from.
 
I can't see Sinclair or anyone else try to compete with FOX, CNN, msnbc/nbc. You would have to spend several millions for a startup and most likely will have losses for 10 years or more. Even if you could land a Bill Oreilly you still have to program the other 23 hours of the day. Newsmax, cbsn and more so the digital operations like newsy aren't really competitors to the "big 3," they just pick up the scraps.
 
They really only need to cover prime time, with perhaps a national newscast and updates during the day. They can leverage just about all of this with their existing infrastructure and broadcast it on WGN-A.
 
They really only need to cover prime time, with perhaps a national newscast and updates during the day. They can leverage just about all of this with their existing infrastructure and broadcast it on WGN-A.

Some observers see them selling their radio stations and concentrating on TV, but I don't. I think talk radio is an easier and potentially bigger market for them than a news TV network or service. Fox uses it for brand reinforcement.
 
I can't see Sinclair or anyone else try to compete with FOX, CNN, msnbc/nbc. You would have to spend several millions for a startup and most likely will have losses for 10 years or more. Even if you could land a Bill Oreilly you still have to program the other 23 hours of the day. Newsmax, cbsn and more so the digital operations like newsy aren't really competitors to the "big 3," they just pick up the scraps.

In the case of CBSN that News outlet is easily promoted in cities where CBS O&O's and CW Affiliates owned by CBS air national news segments from CBS N in their local newscasts to expand their audiences. In the Case of NewsmaxTV they have no Local TV affiliates to promote their content they are dependent on Internet TV distribution like Pluto TV, Playstation Vue and others to promote their content.

In the Case of ABC News Live they have the Disney Owned stations to promote their outlet via the ABC News app.
 
In the Case of ABC News Live they have the Disney Owned stations to promote their outlet via the ABC News app.

But the CBS and ABC TV networks reach more people than their O&O stations. If that's what Sinclair wants to do, they could simply form another TV network, affiliate a bunch of indie stations, and then they wouldn't have to spend the money owning stations.
 
But the CBS and ABC TV networks reach more people than their O&O stations. If that's what Sinclair wants to do, they could simply form another TV network, affiliate a bunch of indie stations, and then they wouldn't have to spend the money owning stations.

Well everything you said is right though but David D. Smith's advisors and PR People argued that they can reach more people in a battleground state with their local stations than the current Cable News talk channels though to Jared Kushner like the CNN 30k viewers vs 250k Sinclair viewers in Ohio example. This is David D. Smith's justification of owning more TV stations than all the Network O&O's combined.

The issue here is that this rumored Sinclair News/Talk outlet is running at the same time as the Sinclair/Tribune deal is pending.

You have KTLA going to be the West Coast Flagship station of Sinclair plus WGN and WPIX going to associated companies related to Sinclair like Cunningham, Deerfield and WGN Inc.

Also the persistent questions of how many Trump Voters will leave Fox News for Sinclair and others have been around since Roger Ailes got removed.
 
Well everything you said is right though but David D. Smith's advisors and PR People argued that they can reach more people in a battleground state with their local stations than the current Cable News talk channels though to Jared Kushner like the CNN 30k viewers vs 250k Sinclair viewers in Ohio example.

Jared Kushner doesn't understand media. He's comparing the lowest rated news channel with top rated network affiliates. Simply putting political news on broadcast won't get better results. If it did, Fox News would run Hannity on their local stations. They don't for a reason.
 
Jared Kushner doesn't understand media. He's comparing the lowest rated news channel with top rated network affiliates. Simply putting political news on broadcast won't get better results. If it did, Fox News would run Hannity on their local stations. They don't for a reason.

True if KTVU Fox 2 and Fox11 KTTV aired Hannity then the Fox O&O division would have faced lower ratings or a boycott threat.
But in the Case of Fox O&O's they argued that the NFC Football Audience was the justification for converting a contract Fox Station under Cox like KTVU into a Fox O&O was because of revenue from the 49ers.
 
Jared Kushner doesn't understand media. He's comparing the lowest rated news channel with top rated network affiliates. Simply putting political news on broadcast won't get better results. If it did, Fox News would run Hannity on their local stations. They don't for a reason.

Jared Kushner bought up at that time that they could get more viewers if Trump and the campaign got interviewed by local stations vs the cable news nets. Living in a larger market battle ground state every time Trump would visit all four stations would interview him(none of these stations are owned by Sinclair), and would be the lead story for all stations. Contrast to Hillary she hardly gave local interviews, at least here. It made Jim Acosta and CNN's media reporters mad that Trump would ignoring them but it appears it work for him. Remember more people watch local tv news than cable news.
 
Remember more people watch local tv news than cable news.

But they don't watch local news for national politics. There's a reason they don't watch cable news...so if you just take that content and put it on local stations, it will get the same reaction. Brief interviews with a national candidate when he's in town is different from non-stop national pundits bashing Democrats. They'll put up with a two minute insert. But if you replace the shows they like with national politics, it becomes a very different station.
 
But they don't watch local news for national politics. There's a reason they don't watch cable news...so if you just take that content and put it on local stations, it will get the same reaction. Brief interviews with a national candidate when he's in town is different from non-stop national pundits bashing Democrats. They'll put up with a two minute insert. But if you replace the shows they like with national politics, it becomes a very different station.

True and also Local News in most cases doing the "you got 22 Minutes We give you the world" mantra but with pictures. Topics tend to be crime, disasters, Weather, sports and politics at city hall, county hall and state capitol with brief interviews.
 
But they don't watch local news for national politics. There's a reason they don't watch cable news...so if you just take that content and put it on local stations, it will get the same reaction. Brief interviews with a national candidate when he's in town is different from non-stop national pundits bashing Democrats. They'll put up with a two minute insert. But if you replace the shows they like with national politics, it becomes a very different station.

My post had to more with the Jared Kushner comment, Trump did more interviews with reporters to local stations and less with national outlets like cnn, that made cnn upset. The campaign very likely talked to all large stations groups like Sinclair to set up interviews for local stations. Obviously, Kushner and Trump or any other political figure have no control on how often commentators are used onair or what they say.

It sounds like Sinclair is looking at everything for WGNA so don't necessarily believe it will become a news/talk channel. News has very high startup cost and with Big bang reruns on tbs having some of the highest cable ratings i wouldn't be surprised if they kind of go in that direction.
 
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They really only need to cover prime time, with perhaps a national newscast and updates during the day. They can leverage just about all of this with their existing infrastructure and broadcast it on WGN-A.

https://www.fiercecable.com/video/n...sion-for-nationally-distributed-news-platform

Here is another argument that one of the Sinclair management officials that sparked this discussion of the rumored news platform. This is one of the reasons why Sinclair keeps being mentioned as a competitor to Fox News Channel.
 
Not really related to Sinclair starting a competitive network to Fox News.


But Still there's been lots of name dropping going on ever since the Sinclair/Tribune talks plus the rumored Sinclair Network that's allegedly going to go after Fox News for pro-GOP audiences came into play. But its gotta be Sinclair's way of making a splash in Los Angeles and New York though given that KTLA and WPIX are proposed to be the largest stations owned by Sinclair when the Tribune deal is cleared.
 
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opini...s-becoming-truest-heir-roger-ailes-ncna881146

An Editorial on Sinclair by Nicole Hemmer and yes its the Roger Ailes comparisons on Sinlclair.

This April, a reporter for a Sinclair-owned TV station revealed that she was fired for refusing to add conservative talking-points to a climate change story. This followed weeks of controversy, including revelations that the media giant had forced local news anchors to read identical scripts denouncing, in Trump-like fashion, “fake” news.

More recently, in a speech this May, Hillary Clinton specifically called out Sinclair (alongside Fox News) for "delivering propaganda."

Sinclair Broadcasting Group, the largest owner of local television stations in America, is still not a household name like, for example, Fox News. Yet it may be the truest heir to former Fox News chairman and CEO Roger Ailes’s original vision of conservative news programming. Long before cable news, Ailes — who died in 2017 — had been dreaming up ways to inject local news programs with a conservative spin.

Many Americans are only now discovering Sinclair Broadcasting’s conservative politics, and few may know which stations the company actually owns. Because Sinclair is now trying to buy Tribune Broadcasting, though, it is ever more likely to be their local station.

Millions more Americans tune into local news than national news — and trust local news far more. Local stations are also rarely tarred with an ideological brush — unlike Fox News, which is known for its conservative bent.

If the Federal Communications Commission approves Sinclair’s expansion plan, it would own TV stations able to reach around 70 percent of U.S. households. (The FCC appears unlikely to block the deal.) That’s an astounding market share, and the reason Sinclair Broadcasting may well end up being more powerful than Fox.
 
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