THE DAILY NEWSLETTER - TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2022

Media Winners & Losers

MEDIA WINNER:
David Zaslav

Few executives have been treated to as much fawning coverage as David Zaslav, the new CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, who has started meeting with employees of CNN and HBO in New York and D.C. this week.

The merger that closed on Friday brought WarnerMedia (HBO, CNN, TBS, TNT, Cartoon Network, and the Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, CA with its iconic logo water tower) and Discovery (Discovery Channel, Food Network, HGTV, Animal Planet, Science Channel, and TLC, and its own streaming service, Discovery+) all under the same corporate umbrella

Monday was the first day of Warner Bros. Discovery’s official existence, now trading on the NASDAQ index as “WBD.” Combined, the new company has roughly 36,000 employees and a big slice of both the entertainment and news industries.

Zaslav, at the helm of that new empire, has been the subject of glowing reporting.

“Hollywood is about to get a jolt of emotional intelligence,” CNBC extolled in a piece that included a series of generous quotes from Zaslav’s pals, including Lloyd Blankfein and Graydon Carter.

The CNBC story — it’s worth a read — mapped out Zaslav’s impressive career and how he rose to the top of the news and entertainment businesses, and what that means for the companies he now oversees.

He’s “a smooth operator with sharp people skills,” gushed Axios.

Zaslav has a lot on his plate. As all these reports have noted, the new company has roughly $55 billion in debt. And while Mediaite reported he spent Monday reassuring CNN talent and praising their Ukraine coverage, reports about the woes of CNN+ (see Loser column) will certainly attract the attention of the famously frugal executive.

Oh, and while we’re at it, we would be remiss not to mention Zaslav’s handsome pay package as the new emperor of news and Hollywood: $246 million per year.

MEDIA LOSER:
CNN+

CNN’s recently launched streaming service, CNN+, is already under fire for lackluster growth, according to a new Axios report out Tuesday.

Axios’ Sarah Fischer reports that CNN’s initially planned investment in the streaming service of $1 billion in its first four years is likely to be cut by the hundreds of millions “in response to a low adoption rate.”

CNN+’s distribution has been under scrutiny since its launch on March 29th. Insider reported on the streamer’s “small” impact on the CNN app’s overall downloads – CNN+ is wrapped up in the CNN app.

“Sensor Tower estimates that CNN app installs grew 33% to 70,000 in CNN+’s first six days compared to the prior six-day period,” notes an Insider report from last week, which argued CNN+ has “come out of the gate with more of a whimper than a bang.”

The streamer’s prospects may be looking up, however, as CNN+ was finally added to Roku on Monday – one of the country’s largest smart TV platforms.

“To date, around $300 million has been spent on the subscription service, which includes a sizable marketing investment,” notes Fischer of CNN’s investment in the streamer, $100 million of which was reportedly spent on a major ad blitz.

Fischer details the expectations of the streamer, writing that execs "originally expected to bring in around 2 million subscribers " in the first year. She adds that with the expected cut in funding, that will likely to be revised down.

A CNN spokesperson told Mediaite, “We continue to be happy with the launch and its progress after only two weeks.”

However, CNBC cited anonymous sources to report this morning that "fewer than 10,000 people are using CNN+ on a daily basis two weeks into its existence, according to people familiar with the matter."

That shocking number puts the Axios report in stark perspective. Even for such a new service, it would understatement to say the start has been inauspicious. It has been downright grim.

The A-Block

Brooklyn

On Tuesday morning, a man on the NYC subway put on a gas mask, tossed a gas canister, and opened fire. At the time of this newsletter, it is reported that ten people were shot in the attack, five of whom remain in critical but stable condition. Although it was initially reported that there may have been undetonated explosive devices on the scene, police have since stated no devices were found. A manhunt is underway for the suspect, but no one has been arrested yet.

Footage posted on social media and aired by cable news networks showed the graphic carnage that resulted from the scene of the attack.

On Fox News, anchor Bill Hemmer braced viewers before rolling footage from the Brooklyn subway platform that showed commuters huddled around a wounded man and blood streaked on the platform.

“Now we’re gonna roll this video,” Hemmer said in the video above. “And to our viewers at home, we haven’t seen it yet, so word of caution here. We’re not quite sure what we’ll see. Whether or not it’s graphic or it’s okay to watch. So go ahead and roll it and let’s watch together.”

On MSNBC, Jose Diaz-Balart warned viewers before showing graphic footage of the aftermath of the attack.

“We have this just into MSNBC. We have new video of the immediate aftermath of the shooting at the train station in Brooklyn, New York,” the anchor said. “I want to warn you, the video you are about to see is graphic. You see there people on the floor. They’re clearly injured."

Photos aired by CNN showed blood on the platform of the subway at the 36th Street Station on the Fourth Avenue line that serves the N, R, and D lines in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn.

“These are the first still photographs we have from inside that 36th Street Brooklyn station,” CNN anchor Jim Sciutto said, apologizing for showing the images “so early in the morning.”

One video shared on social media by New York Post deputy police bureau chief Craig McCarthy showed commuters pouring out of a smoke-filled train onto the platform. One of the commuters appeared to be wounded.

Find their coverage, social media's, and ours here.


🇺🇦 FOR LATEST UKRAINE COVERAGE CLICK HERE


In Other News...

RNC Gets Ridiculed for Bizarre Attack on Joe Biden's Joke to Jewish ATF Nominee

Jim Cramer Sounds Optimistic Note Amid Brutal Economic Numbers: We May Have Hit 'Peak Inflation'

Maddow Announces She's Scaling Back to Mondays Only on MSNBC

Psaki Objects When Fox News Reporter Says 'So You're Wanting Republicans To Go To You' On Immigration Reform

Must See Clip

Weird Saudi TV Parody of President Biden

A state-run television station in Saudi Arabia mocked President Joe Biden as a sleepy dotard in a comedy skit depicting him and Vice President Kamala Harris.

The skit aired on a station owned by the Middle East Broadcasting Center, or MBC, which is a conglomerate owned by Saudi Arabia’s government.

It's ... weird. Kinda funny? But the real reveal is how many of our popular culture tropes and jokes made it into the parody, including Biden being forgetful, Harris being the real power, and so on. Copycat propaganda?

Still, it's a unique experience if not unique jokes.

Links We Like

Let’s Go Brandon Crypto Lawsuit Has Trumpworld Influencers Running for the Hills
- Noah Kirsch & Zachary Petrizzo, Daily Beast
Botched Rescue: How Nicholas Kristof Lost Race For Governor Before It Even Began
- Olivia Nuzzi, Intelligencer
Twitter Grapples With an Elon Musk Problem
- Mike Isaac & Kate Conger, New York Times
John Oliver Blackmails Congress With Their Own Digital Data
- Ky Henderson, Rolling Stone
‘Full Steam Ahead’: Kasie Hunt Opens Up About the Launch of Her CNN+ Show
 
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