• 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
The Varsity
BMW
John Ourand John Ourand
Welcome back to The Varsity, my twice-weekly private email on the tectonic business of sports. I am coming to you from D.C., home of the worst NBA team this millennium. Seriously, The Washington Post ran the numbers and found that the Wizards have the league’s worst winning percentage since Y2K, i.e., January 1, 2000. And all amid likely apocryphal talk that Cooper Flagg might return to Duke next year for his sophomore season. 🚨🚨 Breaking news: ESPN officially opted out of its MLB deal after this season, when it has the right to exercise an exit its contract, per this bombshell report from The Athletic’s Evan Drellich. It’s been headed this way for weeks, as ESPN looked to negotiate a smaller rights fee for its package of games. “In order to best position MLB to optimize our rights going in to our next deal cycle, we believe it is not prudent to devalue our rights with an existing partner,” commissioner Rob Manfred wrote to his owners this afternoon. “To that end, we have been in conversations with several interested parties around these rights over the past several months and expect to have at least two potential options for consideration over the next few weeks.” In the letter, Manfred cited reasons why it makes sense for MLB to move on from ESPN, including the fact that “as of December 2024, ESPN was available in 53.6M homes, down from its peak of over 100M homes in 2011 and 69M homes when we struck the current deal in 2021.” That 53.6 million number is well below the monthly Nielsen estimates, which peg ESPN’s distribution in the mid- to upper-60 million range. Is this all an elaborate, and public—and risky—negotiating tactic? Let’s see what Manfred has up his sleeve… Pod alert: Big East commissioner Val Ackerman is joining the Varsity pod this weekend for a conversation about how her conference is adapting to the many issues facing college sports these days—from N.I.L. and the transfer portal to tournament expansion and conference realignment. Meanwhile, make sure you listen to yesterday’s episode: CNBC’s Alex Sherman and I handicapped the various media rights deals in the offing this year. Alex made some great points about the economics of ESPN’s TGL deal that might inform its negotiating strategy with Marchand’s roller derby league. (It’s not too early for the brandy on the nightstand, Andrew. Thank you in advance…) Let’s get to it…
 

Player of the Week: Gary Bettman

Almost immediately after puck drop at last Saturday’s U.S.-Canada game, viewers learned that the NHL commissioner’s 4 Nations Face-Off tournament was a significant upgrade from the traditional mid-season classic. Three fights in the first nine seconds? ESPN, which carried the whole tournament, was obviously incentivized to market the game throughout the day, but the network also lavished more resources and attention upon it than it would have on a regular game. Every ESPN studio show had a segment on the game—there was P.K. Subban on First Take, a Bettman interview, and a live SportsCenter from the arena. And all of this was juxtaposed with Draymond Green shit-canning the NBA All-Star game live on TNT the following night as Chuck, Ernie, Kenny, and Shaq wore their Gone Fishin’ gear during the broadcast.
 

Down to the J.V.: Adam Silver

The aforementioned juxtaposition between the NHL’s fight night and the NBA’s All-Star Weekend was stark, especially on Saturday, with perennial G-Leaguer Mac McClung winning the dunk contest and Victor Wembanyama and Chris Paul getting disqualified from the Skills Challenge for lamely saving time by not even trying to make baskets. The U.S.-Canada hockey game on ABC attracted more viewers than A.S.W. Saturday night on TNT, 4.4 million to 3.4 million. NBA All-Star Weekend may be good for business, but declining fan interest continues to be a black eye for the league.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
BMW The 7
BMW The 7
The BMW 7 Series pairs undeniable luxury with high performance. Learn more at BMWUSA.com.

The Starting Five

  1. CFP problems: It should be easy enough to make some changes to the College Football Playoff, starting with revising the seeding system. The status quo currently favors the lesser power conferences, like the ACC and Big 12, by affording their champions a bye week. And it undercuts the Big Ten and SEC, whose conference champs were pitted against top programs in the second round of the tournament. Nevertheless, SEC and Big Ten officials ran into blockers when they suggested tweaking the seeding system for next season. After all, any change to next year’s format requires unanimity among the conferences, and the two mega-conferences definitely do not have the votes currently in hand. “I do not have the appetite to give up any financial reward that comes with a bye,” Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark was quoted as saying in Ross Dellenger’s excellent Yahoo story on these negotiations. The upshot: The SEC and Big Ten are expected to tough it out next year before taking over the boardroom.
  2. One futile ESPN-MLB idea: A TV news producer emailed me the other day about a point of possible leverage that ESPN may have been able to exploit in its negotiations with MLB. “If ESPN is going to license Fox Sports content for Flagship, doesn’t that alleviate the need for ESPN to pay for MLB games? It also helps keep premium content on the service for the summer.” It’s true that Fox and ESPN did have early talks about the possible mutual benefits of the direct-to-consumer service known as Flagship, talks which led to the creation of Venu, the sports streaming service that shut down in January, months before a planned launch. Speculation that Fox would sell branded content to various streamers picked up again when Venu shut down, only to be quashed—again—two weeks ago, after Lachlan Murdoch said Fox would launch its own service by the end of the year. It’s possible that eventually Fox’s streaming strategy will involve selling its own branded bundles to various streamers, but I’m told that ESPN’s D.T.C. launch this fall won’t include Fox programming. And it’s not likely to include it by next summer either. Meanwhile, ESPN and MLB are in Ben-J.Lo territory.
  3. A streamers’ report card: During a recent appearance on the Varsity podcast, CNBC’s Alex Sherman and I compared the sports strategies of the various streamers, and which of them could be the sleeping giant that changes the landscape for streaming sports. I wondered whether YouTube would increase its footprint in the wake of its NFL Sunday Ticket deal. “I think YouTube is a very plausible bidder for the NFL in five years,” Sherman responded. “In terms of the smaller sports, though, I don't know if YouTube cares. I do think that football is a possibility, not only because YouTube already has Sunday Ticket, but also because NFL games have cultural coinage. They are part of the zeitgeist of American culture. It would make sense to me that if YouTube wants to be the new television—that's what its C.E.O., Neal Mohan, talks about—that live NFL games will be part of the new television.”
  4. MLB’s local streaming push: A full complement of local streams for most MLB teams probably won’t be ready until 2028, when the league will negotiate new deals. But companies like Amazon and ESPN have already expressed interest. This season, baseball fans will get a sense of how that will look. Amazon is streaming FanDuel Sports Network channels via Prime for about $20 per month. Even SportsNet New York, the Mets R.S.N. owned in part by cable companies Charter and Comcast, is launching a direct-to-consumer service through MLB for about $25 per month. The idea of teams streaming games is not new. This season, however, about eight teams will not have streams of live games available to cord-cutters. As consumers become more inured to streaming games, the value of that local streaming package should continue to grow.
  5. Stephen A.’s political future: ESPN’s bombastic, seemingly unstoppable on-air star made a cameo in my partner Peter Hamby’s recent edition of Puck’s top-flight private email on politics, The Best & The Brightest. The polling firm Echelon Insights endeavored to find out who could lead a Democratic presidential ticket in 2028. Herewith… Peter Hamby: Three names came up, none of them actual politicians, or even nominal Democrats: Mark Cuban, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, and ESPN yapper Stephen A. Smith. A few years ago, I would have laughed at these suggestions, but given the rock-bottom state of the Democratic Party, and a new poll I had my hands on, I was in a mood to listen. The arguments in these folks’ favor weren’t complicated: Democrats, the thinking goes, need a loudmouth dude to run against Trump, someone who can throw punches, capture attention, and break through to the kind of voters who don’t follow politics very closely.Stephen A. is not exactly swatting down the recent political buzz coming his way. The extremely noisy sports pundit probably wouldn’t want to walk away from his bonkers new ESPN contract—worth a reported $120 million over six years, or at least in that neighborhood. But he’s made a habit recently of attacking the Democratic Party’s social justice impulses and Trump-induced impotence. “I’m a Democrat’! Smith hollered on his eponymous podcast Tuesday, adding that he was glad Barack Obama deported so many undocumented immigrants. ‘But a moderate! A centrist, leaning left!” Guess who had the highest net favorable rating? Cuban, with 39 percent. Only 26 percent of likely voters had an unfavorable opinion of the celebrity rich guy/prescription drug reformer. He’s less well known than Kamala Harris and other big political names—with 35 percent saying they either had no opinion of Cuban or hadn’t heard of him—but his net favorable rating surpassed both Harris’s and the Democratic Party’s. Echelon also tested Stephen A. Smith, who was also more liked than disliked. Still, a majority of voters either didn’t know about Smith or didn’t have an opinion on him—a dynamic that will surely upset Smith.
And now, the top of the card…
Dude, Where’s My NASCAR? Part II

Dude, Where’s My NASCAR? Part II

This year, NASCAR spread its races across five different media companies—everyone from Amazon Prime to The CW—testing fans’ loyalty, financial fitness, and scheduling awareness. After the grumbling stops, is it time to ask when enough is enough?
John Ourand John Ourand
For the past decade, NASCAR Cup Series races have been relatively easy to find: Fox carried the first half of the season, NBC carried the second. But a couple of years ago, as NASCAR executives started negotiating new media rights, they discovered what other sports leagues had already figured out—spreading your schedule across as many platforms as possible was the surest way to increase value. NASCAR’s new, much sweeter rights deals kicked off with last weekend’s Daytona 500. The seven-year pacts are worth a total of $1.1 billion annually, up from about $800 million, and now involve five media companies. Fox still carries the opening races, NBC still carries the later ones. In between, Amazon Prime and Warner Bros. Discovery will carry five races apiece. Adding further diffusion, NASCAR sold the rights to its second-tier Xfinity Series to a fifth media company: Nexstar’s The CW. Months ago, in Dude, Where’s My Nascar (Part I), president Steve Phelps defended this paradigm by pointing to progenitors in other sports. Predictably, the grumbling started as soon as these deals saw daylight, drawing the same complaints soccer and tennis and baseball fans have been making for years: it’s become too expensive to sign up for all the services that carry a sport, and too difficult to figure out where to find a given event. In fact, just about every major sport is carried on a wide array of channels, streamers, and bundle variations these days. This won’t last forever, of course. Media executives often talk about the “great rebundling,” when several of the streaming services merge, offering fans fewer options to find their games, but also fewer vendors to pay to see them. But while these complaints have grown louder as sports migrate to new platforms, there’s some evidence that hardcore fans are following their favorite sports to different platforms. Paramount and NBC executives, for example, consistently say their biggest subscriber boosts come from NFL and international soccer games, suggesting that sports fan completists are still happy to pay to never miss a game or match. Unfortunately, not everyone can be the NFL or the Premier League.

The Fans Will Follow

NASCAR executives were conscious of these complaints as they negotiated the new deals. But they were also confident that the sport’s fervent fan base would follow the races wherever they happened to wind up, mostly because they’d done it before. Their old deals with Fox and NBC had included races airing on channels like FS1 and USA. “Our fan base was accustomed to some channel hopping,” said Brian Herbst, NASCAR’s C.R.O. and executive vice president of media, echoing Phelps’ comments to me months ago. The league believes that the races will be even easier to find this time around because they follow a set schedule, even if they appear on different networks: Thursdays are for Duel races, Fridays for Truck races, Saturdays for Xfinity races, and Sundays for Cup races.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
BMW The 7
BMW The 7
The BMW 7 Series pairs undeniable luxury with high performance. Learn more at BMWUSA.com.
Unlike the NFL, which may have a Monday night game on ESPN and maybe a game the following Wednesday on Netflix and then another Thursday one on Amazon, NASCAR has more week-to-week continuity and fewer switches. “It's easier for us to say, ‘You’re going from the Fox portion of the season into the Amazon and the TNT portion, and then the NBC portion,’” said Herbst. “We have an advantage in terms of setting up the weekend, one weekend after the next, from February to November, versus trying to understand where a game may be based on the partner kind of jumping around different channels or digital platforms.” Of course, NASCAR also has loads of promotional and marketing campaigns designed to let fans know where to find the races. And the mediacos will promote each others’ races, similar to the way the networks treat the NFL and Big Ten and NBA Playoffs. “When you see Amazon get closer to their launch window, which is Memorial Day, you’ll see a heavy marketing push and promotional campaign from Amazon in April and May, which will include third-party spend,” said Herbst. That’s similar to The CW’s approach during Daytona, when it pushed a tune-in marketing campaign across its 200-plus affiliates. “They certainly spent to make sure that our fan base and our viewers were conditioned to the fact that the Xfinity series will be on CW,” Herbst said. Perhaps it’s no surprise, then, that the 1.8 million viewers who tuned into The CW’s first race last weekend comprised the Xfinity series’ largest audience in two years. Interestingly, the 6.8 million viewers who tuned into Fox’s coverage of Daytona bested both the NBA All-Star Game and the NHL’s 4 Nations Face-Off. It was NASCAR’s biggest audience in two years. And if anyone still needs reminding, the fan base is broader than you think. When Phelps was on the Varsity podcast back in November, he said he expected that the number of NASCAR fans who subscribe to Amazon Prime would grow considerably as it began carrying races. “That universe is, right now, actually higher in terms of a subscriber base than the cable universe,” he said. “Do I think our fans will find it? I am confident that they will.”
 

From the Cheap Seats

On the Varsity pod with Alex Sherman: “You brought up a great point about YouTube being a sleeping giant for NFL rights. I think many in the sports media have just gifted [the NFL to Netflix] incrementality, but Google has scale and money, too. With the NFL having seven international games in 2025, it would appear there’s enough to go around to satisfy the Peacock and ESPN+ streaming exclusive games, four NFL Network games, leaving one game that could be available to a YouTube or Netflix as a test before the NFL’s next round of bids. I had always considered Apple a sleeping giant, given the Apple Music relationship, but the scale discussion you had with Alex has walked me off of that ledge.” —A Varsity subscriber  On placing Grant Hill on the Mount Rushmore of former NBA players who went on to succeed in business alongside Shaq, Magic, Junior Bridgeman, and Michael Jordan: “Naming a five-person Mount Rushmore is surely the writers’ equivalent of a modern All-Star event: extra flash to cover the intentional lack of effort, so no one gets hurt.” —A Varsity subscriber [Ed. note: It was Marchand’s idea!] On NASCAR ratings: The CW ratings increase last season was for the second-tier Xfinity Series (which is now exclusively on CW). I’m curious to see how the Cup ratings fare with so many fewer races on broadcast TV (just eight points races on Fox and NBC, compared to 20 last season). —A local-news executive producer
 
Have a great weekend. See you Monday, John
Dry Powder
Unique and privileged insight into the private conversations taking place inside boardrooms and corner offices up and down Wall Street, relayed by best-selling author, journalist, and former M&A senior banker William D. Cohan.
The Grill Room
Finally, a media podcast about what’s actually happening in the media—not the oversanitized, legal-and-standards-approved version you read online. Join Dylan Byers, Puck’s veteran media reporter, as he sits down with TV personalities, moguls, pundits, and industry executives for raw, honest, sometimes salacious conversations about the business of media and its biggest egos. New episodes publish every Tuesday and Friday.
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 . 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

Michael Jordan
John Ourand • February 21, 2025
Sports Docs’ Drive to Survive
Since their pandemic-era Last Dance peak, sports documentaries have become harder and harder to get greenlit—even at Netflix. Superstars and monoculture nostalgia plays can still find a home, but the bar has been raised while the payouts have fallen. So what’s a sports doc producer to do?
Christian Genetski
John Ourand • February 21, 2025
Sports Betting Enters Its World Cup Era
FanDuel president Christian Genetski is only six weeks into his newly expanded role running the company, but he’s got plenty of thoughts about the state of the sports-betting business—from FanDuel’s move into prediction markets to the Sorsby headache and why this year’s World Cup is like March Madness on steroids.
james dolan knicks nba parade 2026
Eriq Gardner • February 21, 2025
Midnight in the Garden
An apparently massive cybersecurity breach at Madison Square Garden was all but lost in the chatter surrounding the Knicks’ NBA Finals win. But as the confetti is swept up and the offseason begins, here come the inevitable lawsuits.


Ar'Darius Washington of the Baltimore Ravens and Drake Maye of the New England Patriots
John Ourand • February 21, 2025
YouTube’s Skinny Sports Rights Diet
For a while, it seemed as though YouTube was coming to eat everyone’s lunch in the sports media business. But after its recent miss on a suite of NFL games, many media insiders are wondering how much the Google guys really want to be in on the actual game action—and if they need the league at all.
Jim Dolan
John Ourand • February 21, 2025
Zen Garden
After decades of dysfunction, the Knicks won their first title since 1973 thanks to Jim Dolan, of all people, finally trusting the right basketball specialists and resisting the mistakes that defined the previous 25 years. Mike Breen, the voice of the team, and clutch ESPN analyst Brian Windhorst break it down.
Aaron Rodgers
Eriq Gardner • February 21, 2025
Five Hard Truths About NFL Inflation
As Congress tries to prevent streamers from taking NFL market share, they’ve increasingly homed in on the anachronistic Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961, which includes the antitrust exemption that allows the league’s teams to collectively market their games. But as the recent House Judiciary Committee hearing made clear, no one knows what they are talking about.


Rupert Murdoch tom brady nfl
John Ourand • February 21, 2025
Can Fox Avoid the Skipper Tax?
As the NFL continues to draw congressional heat, it’s growing increasingly tired with Rupert Murdoch for instigating the fuss. With the league’s coveted antitrust exemption theoretically in the crosshairs, might Fox have bitten the hand that feeds it?


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

nfl ravens bills
John Ourand • February 21, 2025
YouTube’s NFL Discipline & NFL Partner Math
Rich Greenfield, the LightShed partner and sports guru, weighs in on the looming NFL rights renegotiation bonanza: who wins, who blinks first, and why the league still has all the leverage in the post-cord-cutting era.
Brendan Sorsby
Eriq Gardner • February 21, 2025
Could Brendan Sorsby End the NCAA’s “Pay-for-Play” Era?
The University of Cincinnati is suing to collect $1 million in N.I.L. damages after Sorsby defected to Texas Tech—a ticking time bomb case that could imperil player contracts across all of college sports.
conor McGregor
John Ourand • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
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.
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

Ronda Rousey
John Ourand • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
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.
Carlos Alcaraz Tennis
Eriq Gardner • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
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 • February 21, 2025
More Netflix-NFL Footsie & Deal Extensionitis
News and notes on the latest machinations surrounding the NFL’s highly coveted, obscenely expensive rights packages.


  • 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