• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers

Apr 23, 2026

The Varsity
John Ourand John Ourand

Welcome back to The Varsity, live from Puck’s airy South Tribeca office. I’m in town to toast a bunch of old friends at tonight’s Cable Hall of Fame dinner.

Before we begin, I want to alert you to some pretty cool changes coming to The Varsity next week. I’ve long been a fanboy of Puck’s very own Eriq Gardner, one of the best legal journalists in the country. And, starting April 27, Eriq will take over The Varsity’s Monday column with his typically brilliant analysis on the intersection of sports and the legal system.

That means yours truly will report and write this private email every Tuesday and Thursday. The Tuesday email will become open to all paid subscribers, and we’re making the Thursday email available exclusively to the Inner Circle, our highest tier of membership that unlocks several perks, including other industry newsletters from Puck authors. Click here to join the Inner Circle or upgrade your account. The genuinely peerless Julia Alexander will continue to contribute to The Varsity, but will also be taking her talents elsewhere across Puck.

🚨 Pod alert: Our guy Marchand is dropping by this weekend, at the tail end of the NFL Draft, to tackle some of the biggest sports media issues, including Mike Tomlin’s move to NBC, Mark Jones’s exit from ESPN, and (obviously) the latest chatter surrounding NFL media rights. Also, I got a ton of great feedback on yesterday’s pod with NBC’s Jon Miller. Click here or here to listen.

As always, this issue was created with contributions from Curtis Rowser.

Also mentioned in this issue: Tina Thornton, Scott O’Neil, Brian Rolapp, Mike Cavanagh, Nick Khan, Oscar De La Hoya, Canelo Álvarez, Terence Crawford, Tony Kornheiser, Hans Schroeder, Jeff Miller, Ted Ullyo, Brendon Plack, Josh Allen, and many more…

 

Player of the Week: Tina Thornton

It’s not every day that a TV commercial grabs my attention. But ESPN’s “On the Clock” spot, hyping its first Super Bowl telecast 10 months from now, did just that—from Greeny booing Roger Goodell to Goodell awkwardly hugging the ESPN app. Big hat-tip to Tina Thornton, ESPN’s executive vice president of creative studio and marketing.

 

Down to the J.V.: Scott O’Neil

Last week, mere hours after Scott O’Neil, LIV Golf’s chief executive, told his staffers that rumors of the tour’s demise were unfounded, the league’s stream from its Mexico City event went dark for nearly three hours. The following day, O’Neil told TNT that LIV had enough funding to last for this year, but that it needs “to work like crazy … to create a business plan to keep us going.” As that comment went viral, TNT took the interview off its site, only to repost it later without that comment. Total amateur hour. Down to the J.V., indeed.

 

The Triple Play

  1. More layoffs: Earlier today, the PGA Tour gave the pink slip to 56 full-time employees, or 4 percent of its staff, and will not fill another 73 open positions, per SBJ’s Josh Carpenter. Another 30 employees took a buyout late last year. In some ways, it’s no surprise: Since joining the Tour last summer, C.E.O. Brian Rolapp has tried to pivot the business, pursuing a strategy that involves culling the number of tournaments and setting up a promotion-relegation system.

    Of course, as Varsity readers know, ESPN also laid off about 30 employees earlier this month, in part because of the pivot from linear television to streaming. Rolapp was faced with a similar scenario as he pushed through changes to the way the Tour approaches the business.
  2. A light at the end of the tunnel: It’s hard to look at Peacock’s $432 million first-quarter loss and think that the streaming service is doing well—especially considering it lost $552 million the previous quarter. But on today’s Q1 earnings call, Comcast co-C.E.O. Mike Cavanagh said that Peacock is “on track to approach profitability for the first time next quarter,” citing its 2 million new subs (it now counts 46 million total) and 70 percent revenue jump in the first quarter. At least on the surface, “Legendary February”—the planetary alignment of the Super Bowl, NBA All-Star Game, and Winter Olympics—seems to have been a success.

    In a report this morning, Craig Moffett lent credence to Cavanagh’s prediction, writing: “Comcast’s history with Peacock has been that subscribers added during the Olympics and other big tentpole events have tended to stick around. It is, in other words, a strategy that seems to be working.” The report continued: “Peacock is obviously still subscale. Assuming regulatory approval of Paramount’s WBD acquisition, WBD is now off the table as a partner. As we noted last quarter, there may be no obvious partners left. As we’ve noted in the past, however, M&A is not the only way to achieve scale. Distribution partnerships are another, and arguably a better solution.”
  3. Capitol Hill’s main event: Do you need another example of just how popular the sports business is in Washington these days? Just yesterday, a Senate Commerce subcommittee held a hearing on the future of boxing with WWE’s Nick Khan and former boxer Oscar De La Hoya, featuring sharp exchanges (at least by D.C. standards) in which the two sparred over the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, which purports to get rid of all the fragmentation in boxing. De La Hoya testified that such a centralized system “would put corporate profits first, fighters second.”

    For his part, Khan bashed the current boxing system, referencing the Canelo Álvarez–Terence Crawford fight last September. As you recall, just two months after beating Álvarez, Crawford was stripped of his super middleweight title because he didn’t pay around $300,000 in sanctioning fees to the WBC. “It would be like if Major League Baseball went to the Dodgers after they beat the Blue Jays and said, ‘We’re going to take this title away from you because you didn’t pay us money,’” Khan said. “They are terrible for the sport. They have ruined the sport.”

Now, let’s go to the Capitol…

Goodell’s Washington Ground Game

Goodell’s Washington Ground Game

The feds have been breathing down the NFL’s neck all year, and a quartet of league executives made the pilgrimage to D.C. last week to plead their case.

John Ourand John Ourand

This morning, I swung by Tony Kornheiser’s podcast to discuss the migration of sports to streaming—a longstanding pet peeve for the PTI host, who finds new media both too confusing and too cumbersome. “It’s another example of where I am left behind, and I have to sit in a corner and eat pudding,” the 77-year-old bemoaned on the show.

Kornheiser’s complaints might seem retrograde to younger, tech-savvy Varsity readers, but they also aren’t new. Fans had been beefing with the atomization of sports long before the F.C.C. opened an inquiry into the NFL’s media rights strategy back in February, or the Justice Department’s investigation, several weeks later, into whether the league has committed antitrust violations. In both public pronouncements and private conversations, regulators and lawmakers have set their sights on the NFL in particular, which has been looking to reopen its media contracts and potentially sell more game rights to streaming companies.

After spending weeks hearing all that noise, a quartet of top NFL executives—Hans Schroeder, Jeff Miller, Ted Ullyot, and Brendon Plack—traveled to D.C. last week to communicate their message to lawmakers: The league’s media strategy has been rooted in broadcast from the beginning. Despite some packages of games likely headed to streaming services, the league’s fealty to the airwaves is not about to change. “There’s not a single sports league, or even a broader media property, that does anything close to what we do to distribute our content through broadcast,” Schroeder told me a couple of days after his meeting with F.C.C. staff.

In their conversation with the feds, the NFL execs pulled out the stats that you all know by heart: Every single NFL game, including the ones sold to Amazon, Netflix, and YouTube, is available on local broadcast stations in the home markets, they noted; plus, 87 percent of NFL games are distributed on broadcast. “That’s been a core of our distribution strategy for a very, very, very long time,” Schroeder told me. Beyond the numbers, the quartet came armed with other talking points, nodding to the fact that even though the NFL Draft had been exclusive to ESPN—a cable channel—for decades, the league pushed to expand its reach to broadcast nearly a decade ago. “We saw an opportunity to distribute even more broadly, and we put it on Fox [in 2018],” Schroeder said. “Now, we’ve been distributing it on ABC as well.”

Another example they used highlighted how local broadcast stations already are a big part of the league’s media strategy. “To use Wyoming as an example, maybe those stations would get a lot of Broncos games,” Schroeder told me. “But now, because there’s a lot of interest in Josh Allen, who went to the University of Wyoming, maybe they’ll get more Bills games. That’s a great example of the depth, thoughtfulness, and focus that we have both at a national broadcast network level and a local affiliate level.”

The Streaming Creep

And yet, demur as they might, it’s also undeniable that streaming has become a big part of the league’s media strategy. Amazon first started carrying Thursday Night Football all the way back in 2017, and picked up its exclusive rights in 2022. Meanwhile, Netflix, YouTube, and Yahoo have all carried NFL games, and the league is close to completing a deal to sell a five-game package next season to YouTube. Moreover, as the NFL is considering renewing its media rights deals, it’s used the threat from streamers as a way to get traditional broadcast to increase their bids.

The league dismissed the idea that the five-game package currently on the market is an example of the migration of games to streaming, given that those games were never on broadcast anyway. ESPN carried four of them on its cable channel and one on its streaming service for the past couple of years. When the NFL completed its deal to take a 10 percent stake in ESPN, the rights to those games reverted to the league. “Wherever those games end up, they will have even more distribution than they’ve had over the past three or four years,” Schroeder told me.

That’s another aspect of the league’s pitch to regulators: The streaming services that have carried NFL games are widely distributed. “Our fans are already spending a lot of time there,” Schroeder said. In fact, a deck the NFL executives used during their F.C.C. meeting showed that there’s more overall video consumption on digital platforms than on linear TV. “When you look at those percentages, and then at our model, it’s pretty stark,” Schroeder added. “We’re distributing games on broadcast, which is a good model that works for us. But those percentages also paint a picture of why we feel we want to be on these other platforms.”

 

From the Cheap Seats…

On the NFL’s potential five-game deal with YouTube: “If this deal goes through and the games stay in front of YouTube’s paywall, it will prove that the NFL doesn’t believe its own spin. If the league truly believed in the legality of its pay TV deals, it certainly could have got more from a paywalled streamer. The NFL has to know it’s holding a losing hand.” —A media executive

On D.C.’s interest in the NFL: “Re: the recent Puck story headlined Trump’s Anti-NFL Crusade. For the love of God, it’s not Trump. You know exactly who it is.” —A sports business executive

On MLB’s NBC deal: “Your podcast interview with Jon Miller was riveting. The part when Miller talked about MLB sacrificing revenue for reach really resonated with me. It’s good to know the long-term health of the game is part of the conversation at that level.” —A media executive

 

Have a great weekend. See you Monday,

John

Impolitic with John Heilemann

Join Puck’s chief political columnist, John Heilemann, as he roams the corridors of power and influence in America on this twice-weekly interview show, taking you beyond the headlines with the people who shape our culture: icons and up-and-comers, incumbents and insurgents, moguls and machers in the overlapping worlds of politics, entertainment, tech, business, sports, media, and beyond. The conversations are rich and revealing, unrehearsed and unexpected… and reliably impolitic. A Puck-Audacy joint, new episodes drop every Wednesday and Friday.

What I'm Hearing

An essential, insider-friendly Hollywood tip sheet from Matthew Belloni, who spent 14 years in the trenches at The Hollywood Reporter and five before that practicing entertainment law. What I’m Hearing also features veteran Hollywood journalist Kim Masters, as well as a special companion email from Eriq Gardner, focused on entertainment law, and weekly box office analysis from Scott Mendelson.

Stories
Bari’s Trump Dinner Party

Bari’s Trump Dinner Party

DYLAN BYERS

Kris Jenner Facelift-gate

Kris Jenner Facelift-gate

RACHEL STRUGATZ

Senator Banks Unplugged

Senator Banks Unplugged

LEIGH ANN CALDWELL

Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news.

You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with {{customer.email}}. To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.

 

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St., New York, NY 10006

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Sports

conor McGregor
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
Searching for Conor McGregor
The UFC is at the beginning of a seven-year, $7.7 billion media deal, the envy of every other emerging sports outfit in the world, and about to reach the ultimate mark of Trump II cultural dominance with a much-hyped fight card on the White House lawn. So where are all its new stars?
Burke Magnus
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
The Magnus Carta
ESPN’s indomitable content chief, Burke Magnus, on losing talent to the NBA sidelines, the heat around the NHL, and what he learns from the way his kids watch sports.
College Football, Alabama, Georgia
Eriq Gardner • April 24, 2026
The Anti-Netflix Amendment
Tucked inside Congress’s latest college sports proposal is a provocative idea: Some games may simply be too important to disappear behind a paywall.


Tony Petitti, Greg Sankey
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
Sankey Is From Mars, Petitti Is From Venus
The commissioners of college sports’ two biggest conferences have thrown a stray shot or two at each other this spring over the College Football Playoff. But as just about everyone acknowledges, they both know they’ll have to be much more aligned to tackle the myriad issues they face.
UFC
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
The Optimist’s Case for the UFC and F1 Megadeals
Wolfe Research analyst Peter Supino offers up his candid thoughts and surprising bull case for Paramount’s UFC deal and F1’s partnership with Apple—and why the mega-trend media universe keeps gravitating toward superstars.
Ronda Rousey
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
Netflix’s 17 Seconds in Heaven
Obviously, the short-lived Rousey–Carano title fight wasn’t the ideal scenario for Netflix’s M.M.A. debut. But it also wasn’t a refutation of the streamer’s “eventized” sports content strategy.


Super Bowl
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
How Much Is Too Much for a Super Bowl Commercial?
Horizon Media’s Adam Schwartz on the amplifying value of a Super Bowl ad, MLB’s events strategy, and why the 30-second spot is still the backbone of television advertising.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Sports

Carlos Alcaraz Tennis
Eriq Gardner • April 24, 2026
Real Court Drama
The French Open is underway, but the real action this week may be in a New York courtroom 3,500 miles away, where an upstart players union is making noise about the sport’s alleged anti-competitive, pay-suppressing practices.
Gianni Infantino
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
Here’s Gianni…
The World Cup’s descent on North America has been greeted by the typical grab bag of micro-scandals and preemptive complaints. In their private group chats, though, top industry executives don’t really care—they’ve seen this film before, and they’re convinced they are about to make stacks of cash.
Pickleball
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
Private Equity, Everywhere, All at Once
SC Holdings’ Jason Stein on the private-equity money gusher flooding the sports world, the commercialization of the NCAA, and why he (and LeBron and Draymond and K.D.) are still bullish on pickleball.


College Football
Eriq Gardner • April 24, 2026
The Private Equity End Zone
The future of the N.I.L. gold rush may hinge on a looming federal court fight over whether the College Sports Commission can police what is increasingly becoming a leveraged media-rights marketplace.
NFL
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
More Netflix-NFL Footsie & Deal Extensionitis
News and notes on the latest machinations surrounding the NFL’s highly coveted, obscenely expensive rights packages.
Paul Rabil
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
The Lax Gospel of Paul
A candid conversation with Paul Rabil about how his buzzy 8-year-old Premier Lacrosse League is accelerating growth and preparing for LA28.


Terry Rozier
Eriq Gardner • April 24, 2026
Is Insider Sports Betting a Federal Crime?
For the first time ever, the government has filed fraud charges over insider trading on a prediction market. Could athletes, coaches, and trainers be next?
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Sports

Lionel Messi
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
Soccer’s Next Don
With commissioner Don Garber’s quarter-century-plus tenure coming to an end next year (or sooner!), MLS has contracted executive headhunters to embark on a sprawling replacement search. A few well-known names have emerged as early targets—but with big-growth ambitions, they’d better get it right.
nfl rams falcons tackle
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
The NFL’s September Surprise
A revelatory conversation with analyst Mike Morris about the myriad questions swirling around the NFL’s looming, blockbuster rights negotiations.
WWE WrestleMania
Eriq Gardner • April 24, 2026
A $957 Million WWE Title Fight
The pro wrestling outfit is flying high thanks to a slew of new deals and WrestleMania’s recent ESPN debut. But an imminent trial will question whether Vince McMahon undersold the value of the company ahead of the TKO merger that made it all possible.


Roger Goodell donald trump
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
Goodell’s Washington Ground Game
The feds have been breathing down the NFL’s neck all year, and a quartet of league executives made the pilgrimage to D.C. last week to plead their case.
Jon Miller
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
NBC’s Miller Time
An exclusive conversation with NBC Sports’s Jon Miller about the network’s recent multibillion-dollar sports rights investments, the stunning durability of broadcast television, competing with trillion-dollar streaming giants, and plenty more.
NFL
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
How Much Trouble Is the NFL In, Really?
The league’s recent push to sign new rights deals with its media partners and ongoing relationship with the streamers has opened it up to a wave of regulatory inquiry. But is any of the scrutiny more than just a headache?


liv golf john rahm
John Ourand • April 24, 2026
LIV & Let Die… Again
How much longer is Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund willing to continue pumping billions into its quixotic bet on LIV Golf, as the Iran war dislocates sporting events like Formula One and Fanatics flag football?


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover