Tuesday, June 30, 2026

As The Dust Settles: Industry Thoughts About iHM Layoffs Abound


iHeartMedia executed significant layoffs (~dozens to ~100 positions) last week, primarily targeting on-air talent, program directors, and programming staff across 30+ markets. Some stations lost most or all local voices. This is part of a $50 million annualized cost-saving restructuring (part of $150 million total) focused on tech-driven programming efficiencies, following earlier cuts.

Company Rationale: Leverage new technology capabilities for centralized, data-driven content; address soft ad markets; return broadcast operations to growth.

Key Reactions:

🔎Lance Venta (founder/publisher of RadioInsight, long-time industry analyst):  Venta has been among the most vocal and detailed commentators. He described the ongoing cuts as likely to “go down as the worst layoff round in radio history when all is done,” noting the sheer volume of names (especially veteran talent) and the impact on stations being “completely gutted.” 

Comcast Splits: What Wall Street Thinks


Financial analysts have largely welcomed Comcast’s June 29, 2026, announcement to spin off NBCUniversal (including Universal Pictures, NBC, Telemundo, Peacock, theme parks, and Bravo) and Sky into a separate publicly traded company via a tax-free spinoff expected to close in about a year. 

Shareholders will own stakes in both the new “pure-play” media/entertainment company and the remaining Comcast focused on broadband, wireless, and connectivity.

The move follows the earlier separation of cable networks into Versant and is widely viewed as ending years of “conglomerate discount” stemming from limited synergies between the high-margin, cash-generative connectivity business and the more challenged media operations facing streaming competition and industry consolidation. Comcast shares surged sharply (reports of 20%+ premarket gains) on the news, reflecting strong investor approval.

EchoStar Plans To File Chapter 11 Bankruptcvy


Dish DBS, the EchoStar subsidiary that owns Dish Network, Boost Mobile, and Sling TV, is expected to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection this week.

The filing is imminent after the company hired law firms to advise on and prepare the case, according to a report Monday. Chapter 11 would allow Dish DBS to reorganize its debts while continuing day-to-day operations, a common path for large telecommunications and media companies facing heavy debt loads.

TV Ratings: FIFA Setting Records


The 2026 FIFA World Cup, co-hosted by Canada, Mexico, and the United States (June 11–July 19), has delivered record-breaking television viewership across major markets, especially in North America. The expanded 48-team format, home-soil advantage for host nations, and strong performances have driven massive audiences on linear TV, cable, and streaming platforms like Fox, FS1, Telemundo, Peacock, and Tubi.

Key U.S. Highlights
  • USMNT opener vs. Paraguay (June 12): ~18 million viewers on Fox/FS1/Tubi (English-language record for any World Cup match). Peaked at ~18.9–21.5 million. Combined English + Spanish (Telemundo): ~24.9–27.5 million total, one of the most-watched U.S. soccer broadcasts ever.
  • Group stage averages: Fox/FS1 matches averaged ~5.9–6 million viewers (up 128% from 2022). Telemundo averaged ~5.5–7.5 million (up over 200% in early matches).
  • Other strong U.S. matches: USMNT vs. Australia (~14.8–16.2 million on Fox). Non-USMNT games like Mexico opener also drew big numbers.

St. Louis Radio: Audacy Sells Cluster to Hoffmann Media Group


Audacy Media announced Monday it has agreed to sell its entire St. Louis cluster of radio stations to Hoffmann Media Group, a move that transfers ownership of the market’s iconic outlets — including the legendary KMOX — to a local media powerhouse already controlling the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

The deal, subject to FCC approval with terms undisclosed, includes:
  • News/Talk KMOX (1120 AM/104.1 FM), known as “The Voice of St. Louis” since 1925
  • Hot AC Y98 (KYKY)
  • Adult Contemporary 102.5 KEZK
  • Adult R&B 96.3 WFUN-FM
  • Conservative Talk 97.1 KFTK-FM
  • Hip Hop Hot 98.7
These stations have long formed the backbone of local broadcasting, airing Cardinals games, election coverage, pop hits, and community news.

Good Morning Radio: Check The Pulse For Tuesday, June30


Radio Broadcasting

St. Louis Sell-Off: Audacy Media announced Monday it has agreed to sell its entire St. Louis cluster of radio stations to Hoffmann Media Group, a move that transfers ownership of the market’s iconic outlets — including the legendary KMOX — to a local media powerhouse already controlling the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

iHM Feedback: iHeartMedia executed significant layoffs (~dozens to ~100 positions) last week, primarily targeting on-air talent, program directors, and programming staff across 30+ markets. Some stations lost most or all local voices. This is part of a $50 million annualized cost-saving restructuring (part of $150 million total) focused on tech-driven programming efficiencies, following earlier cuts.

Valued Time: Afternoons are emerging as radio’s most valuable daypart, according to Crowd React Media’s State of the Media 2026 report.

PM Drive Is Radio's Most Valuable Time Period


Afternoons are emerging as radio’s most valuable daypart, according to Crowd React Media’s State of the Media 2026 report.

The research shows the share of Americans naming afternoons as their primary radio listening time has risen steadily since 2024, while morning drive has declined. One in three U.S. adults now say most of their radio listening occurs in the afternoon — a 21% increase over the past three years. By contrast, the portion identifying morning as their main listening period has dropped 12 percentage points, with four in ten Americans still listening then.

“Afternoon is radio’s rising daypart,” the report states. Although the overall afternoon audience is slightly smaller, those who remain are significantly more committed. “The afternoon drive audience is getting smaller in raw numbers but more committed — cume is down slightly while primary daypart designation is up,” it notes. “The people who are there in the afternoon are really there.”

Listening while working rose from 21% to 30% this year, and listening during exercise increased from 25% to 31%. “The commute and the gym are back as radio contexts,” the report says.

Radio’s stability stands out

Unlike social media, streaming, and podcasts — which have experienced “habit softening” — radio has maintained strong engagement. Weekly reach edged up to 76% of U.S. adults from 75% last year, with listening session lengths holding steady: roughly 40% of listeners spend 30 to 60 minutes per session for the third straight year.

NYC Radio: Kayla Thomas Added At iHM's Z100


iHeartMedia Top 40 WHTZ (Z100)/New York has announced the addition of Kayla Thomas to nights. Starting July 27, the 2026 Gracie Award winner and Ink Magazine “30 Under 30 Radio Superstar” will host nights from 6-10 p.m., bringing her authenticity, warmth and dedication to empowering the next generation to the Z100 audience.

Kayla Thomas
Thomas has built a standout career in radio and entertainment, rising from an internship in Roanoke, Virginia, to becoming one of the industry’s most recognizable voices. In Trenton, she hosted PopCrush Nights, helping grow it into the nation’s top syndicated CHR nighttime program with more than 50 affiliates. Since 2022, Kayla has been the late-night host on iHeartRadio’s KIIS-FM in Los Angeles.

“I’m thrilled to join Z100 as the new night personality. Being on Z100 has been a dream of mine since I started on the radio,” said Thomas. “I’m incredibly grateful to Thea Mitchem and Mark Adams for believing in me and this opportunity. As someone who grew up on the East Coast, coming home makes this moment even more special, and I can’t wait to connect with listeners every night and be part of what makes Z100 so iconic.”

NYC Radio: WWNN Adds News Anchor Stacy Lyn


Red Apple Audio Networks’ Worldwide News Network (WWNN) continues its rapid expansion with the addition of respected broadcast news veteran and former CBS Radio News anchor Stacy Lyn. Just five weeks after its launch, the 24/7 live network radio news service is assembling one of the most experienced and recognizable teams in network radio, delivering breaking news, hard facts, and credible reporting to affiliates nationwide, with plans for worldwide distribution.

An award-winning national news anchor and correspondent, Lyn brings more than three decades of broadcast journalism experience, including coverage of the White House, Congress, national elections, and major breaking news events. Her distinguished career includes reporting and anchoring roles in major markets and on national platforms, earning her numerous industry honors, including an Edward R. Murrow Award for Overall Excellence, a Gracie Award, an Associated Press Award for Outstanding Newscast, and more.

Mike Golic Sr. and Mike Golic Jr. return to ESPN Radio to host The Golics


ESPN Radio's new weekday lineup debuts Monday, August 3, highlighted by the return of Mike Golic Sr. and Mike Golic Jr., who will co-host The Golics, a new morning show from 10 a.m.–noon ET. As part of a new multi-year agreement, the father-son duo reunite with ESPN after helping shape the network's audio, television and digital coverage for decades.

The show will also be simulcast live on the ESPN App, with each episode available on major podcast platforms following its live broadcast. In addition to hosting The Golics, both will make appearances on shows across ESPN platforms.

The Golics follow UnSportsmanLike (6-10 a.m.) while Matt & Myron hosted by Matt Jones and Myron Medcalf, moves from its longtime weekend home to weekdays, airing from 3-5 p.m. The show has become a staple of ESPN Radio's Sunday schedule over the past eight years and will now bring its insightful analysis and fan-first approach to weekday afternoons. Matt & Myron will also simulcast on the ESPN App and following the show available across major podcast platforms.

Retro Comfy Shows Rule At Streamers

Streaming platforms are leaning heavily on back-catalog classics to retain viewers in 2026, as nostalgia-driven Retro Revival trends dominate entertainment consumption.

According to a new Luminate report, older titles from library catalogs—rather than fresh originals—are driving the majority of viewing hours on every major streaming service except Netflix in Q1 2026. 
Comfort shows such as Friends and Suits continue to serve as key retention anchors.


Netflix remains the outlier, with original and licensed content nearly matching catalog performance. The company has invested $135 billion in content over the past decade, while competitors have scaled back. Even so, Netflix’s output has grown less original overall, mirroring a broader industry shift toward proven, older material.

Radio History: June 30



Santos Ortega
➦In 1899...Early radio actor Santos Ortega was born in New York City.   In the early 30’s he served as foil for Frank Crumit and Julia Sanderson, ‘The Singing Sweethearts of the Air,’ and starred in Bulldog Drummond (1942-43), The Adventures of Nero Wolfe (1943–1944) and The Adventures of Charlie Chan (1947-48).

Perhaps his most notable radio role was Commissioner Weston on The Shadow. Ortega was heard in the daytime radio serials Valiant Lady and Perry Mason, and lent his remarkable range of voice characterizations to other radio dramas such as Inner Sanctum, The Mysterious Traveler, Suspense, Casey Crime Photographer, The Eternal Light, The Columbia Workshop, The Big Story, You Are There, and X Minus One. For 20 years he played Grandpa on CBS-TV’s As the World Turns.

He died April 10 1976 at age 76.

➦In 1913...Harry Wismer born (Died – December 4, 1967). He was a sportscaster and the charter owner of the New York Titans franchise in the American Football League (AFL).

Wismer played college football at both the University of Florida and Michigan State College, his playing career ending at the latter school when he damaged a knee severely during a game against the University of Michigan. He then began broadcasting Michigan State sports on MSC's radio station WKAR. In 1934, he was hired as the public-address announcer for the Detroit Lions. The Lions were in their first season in Detroit and were owned by George A. "Dick" Richards, who also owned Detroit radio station WJR. Wismer soon began doing a ten-minute daily radio show covering the Lions in addition to his PA duties, while continuing as a student at Michigan State.

After the 1936 season, Wismer was encouraged by Richards to abandon his studies and come to work for WJR on a full-time basis as the station's sports director. Among Wismer's WJR duties was serving as play-by-play announcer for the station's Lions broadcasts. He stayed until 1941 when he was hired by the NBC Blue Network, the predecessor to ABC. During the 1940s Wismer was named Sportscaster of the Year three years running by Sporting News magazine.

Wismer achieved the height of his fame as the voice of the Washington Redskins. His first game for the Redskins was a most inauspicious one in December 1940, their 73–0 loss to the Chicago Bears' great "Monsters of the Midway" team in the 1940 championship game. At one point Wismer was a 25% owner of the club as well, with the majority of the stock being retained by founding owner George Preston Marshall. However, the relationship between the two had greatly degenerated by the mid-1950s over several issues, not the least of which was Marshall's steadfast refusal to sign any black players. The relationship dissolved in claims, counterclaims, and litigation, and Marshall then set out to destroy Wismer's future as a broadcaster, with some success. Wismer was also involved for a time in the broadcasting of Notre Dame football.

He died Dec 3 1967 of a cracked skull suffered in a drunken fall the day previous, at age 54.

➦In 1921…RCA, the Radio Corporation of America, was formed.  RCA was the dominant electronics and communications firm in the United States for over five decades. RCA was at the forefront of the mushrooming radio industry in the early 1920s, as a major manufacturer of radio receivers, and the exclusive manufacturer of the first superheterodyne models. RCA also created the first American radio network, the National Broadcasting Company (NBC).

Monday, June 29, 2026

Comcast to Spin Off NBCUniversal


Comcast shares surged 9.91% in early trading after the company announced plans for a tax-free spinoff of its NBCUniversal and Sky media assets, creating a standalone media company and separating it from its core broadband and cable operations amid rising competition.

The cable and entertainment giant, owner of “Saturday Night Live,” “Law & Order,” Bravo, Universal studios, Peacock, and theme parks, aims to complete the separation within the next year. Mike Cavanagh, currently Comcast’s co-CEO, will lead the new pure-play NBCUniversal, while former CFO Michael Angelakis will return to head the remaining Comcast connectivity business.

Comcast Chairman and co-CEO Brian Roberts said the move positions both companies for greater focus and agility. “This is not about separating what we have built together, it’s about positioning two exceptional businesses to move forward with greater focus, agility and the ability to fully capitalize on opportunities ahead,” Roberts stated.

Radio Remains Top News Source for 28% of Americans


A new YouGov survey finds that 28% of U.S. adults turned to radio for news in the past month, making it the most-used platform among a wide range of options.

The poll, conducted May 25–26 among 2,102 U.S. adult citizens, shows radio usage down just 1 percentage point from June 2025. However, the survey’s ±2.9-point margin of error means the change is statistically insignificant.

Radio outpaced every other format:
  • Podcasts: 21%
  • Email newsletters: 20%
  • Online news aggregators: 18%
  • Video platforms: 15%
  • Print newspapers: 14%
  • Magazines: 10%
  • Blogs: 9%
  • AI chatbots: 6%
Usage varies sharply by demographics. College-educated adults reached for radio news at 36%, compared with 24% of those without a degree. Among income groups, 39% of adults earning $100,000+ used radio, versus 22% of those earning under $50,000. Adults 65 and older led at 34%, while 18-to-29-year-olds were lowest at 17%.

SpaceX Successfully Launches SiriusXM’s Most Powerful Satellite


A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket successfully launched SiriusXM’s most powerful satellite to date into geosynchronous transfer orbit late Sunday night, boosting the satellite radio giant’s coverage and capacity across North America and the Caribbean.

The two-stage rocket lifted off precisely at 10:25 p.m. EDT, from Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. The SXM-11 satellite separated from the upper stage as planned, marking another flawless mission for SpaceX’s workhorse booster.