CNN

CNN.com will soon charge for its content

CNN is set to join the ranks of publications like The New Yorker and The Wall Street Journal by introducing a subscription paywall for some of its digital content starting next month. This move comes as the media giant seeks to diversify its revenue streams amid a decline in traditional cable TV viewership.

According to The New York Times, CNN will implement a “metered” paywall in early October, limiting frequent readers to a certain number of free articles before requiring a paid subscription for continued access. While the exact subscription price remains undisclosed, sources suggest it will initially be “an inexpensive offering to gauge customer demand.”

This shift follows CNN’s earlier experiment with a “registration wall,” prompting readers to provide their email address to access certain articles. The paywall initiative was hinted at in July during a company restructuring, with CNN Chairman Mark Thompson outlining plans to establish a digital subscription business with the goal of generating “more than a billion dollars in revenue.”

As one of the most visited news website in the US, attracting over 440 million visits per month, CNN’s foray into subscription models could significantly impact the digital media landscape. The success of this venture will likely depend on striking a balance between attracting paying subscribers and maintaining its wide online reach.

This move reflects a broader trend in the media industry, with many publications adopting subscription models to navigate the challenges posed by evolving consumer habits and declining advertising revenue. Whether CNN’s gamble will pay off remains to be seen, but it signifies a significant step in the company’s strategy to adapt and thrive in the digital age.

Via: Cord Cutters News

CNN to pull back on original series, films, and more

Variety is reporting that according to an internal memo, the new heads of CNN are planning to cut back on original series and films starting in 2023 to focus on more news and current events.

According to the article:

CNN is pulling back on production of the original series and films that have been a staple of its programming over the past decade. Series like Borudain’s “Parts Unknown” Tucci’s “Searching for Italy” and W. Kamau Bell’s “United Shades of America” have proven valuable in helping CNN broaden its aperture and were a pillar of the network under its previous leader, Jeff Zucker.

CNN will air six of its original content in 2023.  Stating again from the article:

CNN will air six of its original series and six CNN Films in 2023, Licht said, but the executive who oversees that area of the network’s programming, Amy Entelis, is being tasked with finding new ways to “approach longform content in house,” Licht said. “My goal is to find a model that will enable us to bring our audiences this type of programming with greater flexibility,” Licht said. Entelis was one of three longtime CNN executives asked to help run the network after the abrupt exit of Zucker, who left CNN after revelations of a relationship he had with Allison Gollust, then CNN’s chief marketing officer.

It looks like the powers that be at Warner Bros./Discovery are trying to bring CNN back to its roots.  Only time will tell if this will work or not.

CNN’s first chief news anchor dies at the age of 82

Bernard Shaw, the venerable TV news anchor who helped turn CNN into a powerhouse, has died. He was 82.

Shaw died Wednesday from pneumonia not related to COVID-19, his family said.

Based in Washington D.C. when CNN launched, Shaw, known as Bernie to friends and colleagues, was the cable news channel’s lead anchor for two decades until his retirement in 2001.

During his tenure, Shaw anchored major breaking news events, like the attempted assassination of President Reagan in 1981, the Tiananmen Square student revolt in 1988 and every presidential election.

Via: The Hollywood Reporter

CNN Staff Brace for Change as Chris Licht Era Takes Shape

[The Hollywood Reporter]: On Friday morning, CNN CEO Chris Licht addressed the decision to cancel the Sunday show Reliable Sources, and told staff on the news channel’s 9 a.m. editorial call that there will be more changes to come.

“I want to acknowledge that this is a time of significant change, and I know that many of you are unsettled,” Licht said, according to multiple people on the call. “There will be more changes, and you might not understand it or like it.”

CNN’s decision to cancel Brian Stelter’s show brought renewed anxiety to the halls of 30 Hudson Yards, according to multiple CNN staffers.

While Licht has made it clear since he began that there would be changes coming to CNN’s lineup, and not just to its streaming strategy, those plans “hadn’t really sunk in yet,” said one of the staffers.

Everyone knew that Licht needed to find a new 9 p.m. anchor to replace Chris Cuomo, who was fired last December. And Licht promised at Warner Bros. Discovery’s upfront in May that he wanted to “reimagine” CNN’s morning show, promising to be a “disruptor” to the time period. Whether that reimagining includes New Day anchors John Berman and Brianna Keilar is unclear for now, but few inside CNN expect them to remain on that show long-term.

He shifted Chris Wallace to HBO Max and CNN Sunday evenings, with plans to add a 60 Minutes-esque longform series highlighting CNN’s journalism. And he announced new hires on new beats, like “guns in America,” and tweaked the guidelines around the use of the phrase “Breaking News.”

But no one really expected Sunday nights, weekday mornings and 9 p.m. to be the only places where Licht would seek change. And the Sunday morning shake-up, with other Sunday changes expected to follow, is emblematic of that point of view.

To that end, a few media insiders polled by THR predict that while the Reliable Sources decision will not be the end of the changes at CNN, no one seems to think it portends large-scale layoffs that other divisions of Warner Bros. Discovery are expected to face in the coming weeks.

Instead, individual shows (and, as with Reliable, some of their staff) may be sent packing.

“I think people are legitimately sad that Brian is leaving — he was a big presence at the network — but understand that Chris has to put his stamp on the network,” one person familiar with the thinking inside CNN said.

On Friday’s call, Licht praised Stelter and his work, and criticized media reporters speculating about CNN’s programming plans, adding that no one outside the company knows them.

“Give it a minute, see how things develop, and then have feedback,” he said.

He also condemned the leak of Reliable’s cancelation, calling it “gross and inhumane,” and telling staff that the announcement was supposed to happen later in the week.

The latest changes follow what had been a tough introduction to the channel for Licht, with the news that CNN would be shutting down its CNN+ streaming service after less than a month. The decision to shut down CNN+ — and lay off 239 employees, according to records with the New York State Department of Labor — was made at a corporate level. But it was Licht who had to deliver the bad news on April 21.

He also made it clear to staff, however, that a hiring freeze that had been in place was lifting. And that while CNN+ was not a good fit strategically, CNN itself was a critical part of the company. As gutting as the shutdown of CNN+ was for staff, it also reassured them that, while there would surely be changes ahead, the larger boat would not be rocked — at least for the time being.

The latest moves, however, suggest that the boat is beginning to sway.

Meanwhile, Licht has tapped his former CBS This Morning deputy Ryan Kadro (who went on to lead the show after Licht’s departure) to serve in a new role as senior vp content strategy and development, a source confirms to The Hollywood Reporter. Reporting to Amy Entelis and slated to start next week, Kadro will be helping to develop new programming and content for CNN, a task that is expected to include brainstorming ideas for the new morning show and for 9 p.m.

Licht himself earned a reputation for managing talent and generating new ways of thinking for TV news programming. “He has a knack for putting people together, for spotting talent,” CBS Mornings anchor Gayle King told THR after Licht’s hiring, comments that were echoed by Morning Joe’s Joe Scarborough. Now, he and Kadro will be putting those skills to use in trying to figure out where CNN goes from here.

But Kadro is the exception. Some insiders were surprised that Licht kept almost all of former CNN president Jeff Zucker’s top deputies, including the triumvirate of Entelis, Michael Bass and Ken Jautz, who led CNN on an interim basis.

The subtle changes at the executive level, combined with the limited tweaks to on-air programming, had led some staff to think that CNN’s future would bear a close resemblance to its status quo. But the move to cancel Reliableunderscored that change is coming.

That being said, CNN staffers should be prepared for those changes to come at a trickle.

“You heard me say in my first town hall that I am going to make decisions slower than some would like,” Licht wrote in a June memo to staff. “I know this organization has been through tremendous change over the last four months, which is why I am approaching this process slowly and thoughtfully as we look at all parts of the operation. We will realign where it makes sense to best serve our people and the business.”

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