Thursday, February 26, 2026

WBD Reports Net Loss For Recent Quarter


Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD), embroiled in a high-stakes bidding war between Netflix and Paramount Skydance, reported a 6% drop in fourth-quarter revenue to $9.46 billion, in line with analyst expectations, as declines in its traditional TV and film businesses offset gains in streaming.

The company posted a net loss of $252 million for the quarter ended December 2025, though adjusted EBITDA came in at $2.22 billion. Investor focus centered on any hints about the ongoing deal talks, as Paramount Skydance recently raised its offer to $31 per share in cash (plus incentives), prompting WBD's board to determine it could reasonably lead to a superior proposal over the existing Netflix merger agreement. 

The board continues to engage with Paramount while the Netflix deal remains in place; Netflix has a window (four business days under terms) to match or revise if a superior offer emerges.

On the positive side, HBO Max (now part of the streaming group) added 3.5 million subscribers in the quarter, lifting the global total to 131.6 million. 

Streaming revenue rose about 5% (or 4% in some reports) to nearly $2.8 billion, fueled by buzzy series including "Heated Rivalry" and "It: Welcome to Derry." However, adjusted earnings for the streaming group dipped 4% to $393 million, partly due to the end of a prior distribution deal.

Traditional segments struggled significantly. The studios group (film and TV) saw adjusted income fall 23% to $728 million, hampered by no major theatrical releases during the holiday period and an 18% revenue slide in television due to content renewal timing—despite the studio having nine No. 1 box-office openers earlier in 2025.The linear networks business (Discovery and TV networks) continued eroding amid broader pay-TV subscriber losses, with revenue down 12% to $4.2 billion and adjusted income plunging 27% to $1.4 billion.

Legacy Media Creating More Drag On Earnings


Legacy media companies like Paramount are increasingly weighed down by their traditional TV businesses, as declining cable revenues and accelerating cord-cutting continue to erode earnings in a shift toward streaming dominance.

In the fourth quarter of 2025 (reported in early 2026), Paramount's TV Media unit—which includes its linear cable networks—saw revenue drop 5% year-over-year to $4.71 billion. The decline stemmed primarily from softer advertising demand (down 10%, partly due to the absence of 2024's political spending and events like the Big Ten championship) and a 7% fall in affiliate revenue from shrinking pay TV subscriber numbers. Despite these pressures, the unit's adjusted operating income before depreciation and amortization (OIBDA) rose 15% to $1.1 billion, thanks to aggressive cost management.

This performance reflects broader industry challenges for legacy media. Cable networks' share of total U.S. TV viewing has plummeted to just 21.2% in January 2026, down sharply from 35.6% in January 2021, according to Nielsen data. Streaming now commands around 47% of viewing time. Cord-cutting continues at a rapid pace, with millions of households abandoning traditional pay-TV packages annually in favor of on-demand streaming services. 

This structural shift has led to falling ratings, reduced subscriber volumes, and migration of advertising dollars to digital platforms offering more targeted reach.

Paramount executives acknowledged the ongoing headwinds, stating they expect some revenue decline in the TV Media unit throughout 2026, "mostly in line with the industry headwinds around pay TV." 

While the company anticipates overall revenue growth of 4% to $30 billion for the full year—driven largely by streaming gains at Paramount+ (which added subscribers and saw 17% revenue growth in Q4)—the legacy cable segment remains a persistent drag. 

Management noted that advertising declines should moderate somewhat compared to 2025, aided by potential political spending cycles, but affiliate revenue pressures from pay-TV subscriber losses are expected to persist.

Overall, these trends highlight a pivotal transition in the media landscape: legacy linear TV operations are becoming a growing liability for earnings, even as companies like Paramount pivot toward streaming to offset the declines and position for future growth.

February Ratings: FOX News Prime-Time Leads CBS


FOX News Channel (FNC) closed February by leading CBS in primetime for the month, according to Nielsen Big Data + Panel. FNC averaged 2.6 million viewers in Monday-Sunday primetime, outpacing CBS (2.4 million viewers), which posted its lowest-rated February since 2000. 

In weekday primetime, FNC drew 3.1 million viewers and 316,000 in the 25-54 demo surpassing CBS’ 2 million viewers and 278,000 in the 25-54 demo, marking the first time this year that FNC has led CBS in both categories. Across total day, FNC delivered 1.7 million viewers, the network’s strongest monthly performance since March 2025. FNC also ranked number one in cable news among Hispanic and upscale viewers throughout primetime. Additionally, FNC accounted for all top 100 cable news telecasts of the month, and every program in its weekday lineup posted its best month since at least September.

Notably, February marked historic lows for CBS. The network averaged just 2.4 million viewers in primetime, notching its lowest February performance of the 21st century. In his second month as anchor, CBS Evening News fell to its weakest February this century, delivering 4.4 million viewers and 538,000 in the 25-54 demo. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (262,000 A25-54) and CBS Mornings (1.8 million viewers; 263,000 A25-54) also posted their lowest February performance on record. ABC likewise recorded its lowest February primetime demo performance of the century, averaging 488,000 in A25-54.

The network’s nightly newscast Special Report with Bret Baier (weeknights, 6 PM/ET) averaged over 3.1 million viewers and 289,000 in the 25-54 demo, continuing to close the gap with the broadcast competition with its most-watched month since March 2025 with total viewers. In February, Special Report led the first month of Tony Dokoupil’s CBS Evening News in 14 top markets across the country including New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta and Washington DC. The show also beat ABC’s World News Tonight in four markets including New Orleans, Jacksonville, Florida, Memphis, Tennessee and St. Louis.


As the number one show on television at 5 PM/ET, The Five secured over four million viewers and 337,000 in the 25-54 demo in February, surpassing ABC’s 911 Nashville (3.8 million viewers) and NBC’s Happy’s Place (3.5 million viewers). This marked the first month since March 2025 that The Five eclipsed four million viewers for a month. At 8 PM/ET Jesse Watters Primetime led all of primetime with 3,437,000 viewers and 329,000 in the 25-54 demo, outpacing ABC’s 20/20 (3,412,000 viewers).

FNC’s hit late-night program Gutfeld! continued its dominance across all of late-night television, securing over 3 million viewers and 347,000 in the 25-54 demo. Gutfeld! once again outperformed every broadcast and cable late-night competitor, outpacing ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel Live! (2.1 million viewers; 315,000 A25-54), CBS’s The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (2 million viewers; 262,000 A25-54) and NBC’s The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon (1.3 million viewers; 259,000 A25-54).

Ratings Graphics Courtesy of RoadMN


FNC’s Hannity remained dominant at 9 PM/ET with 2.9 million viewers and 286,000 in the 25-54 demo. Additionally, The Ingraham Angle (weeknights, 7 PM/ET) posted 2.9 million viewers and 284,000 in the 25-54 demo, with Laura Ingraham continuing her reign as the most-watched woman in all of cable news. At 11 PM/ET, FOX News @ Night with Trace Gallagher led the time slot with 1.8 million viewers.

FNC’s signature morning show FOX & Friends (weekdays, 6-9 AM/ET) finished the month with 1.4 million viewers and remained the number one cable news program in the mornings with both categories for the 60th consecutive month in the 25-54 demo, beating CNN and MS Now combined in viewers, per usual. As CBS Mornings shrunk to historic lows, FOX & Friends led the show in 20 major markets throughout February including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Boston and Washington DC. FOX & Friends also topped ABC’s Good Morning America in 14 markets including Washington DC, Baltimore, New Orleans and Tampa Bay, Florida and defeated NBC’s The Today Show in four markets including Atlanta, Jacksonville, Florida, Charlotte, North Carolina and Tulsa, Oklahoma during February.

FOX Business Network Dominates CNBC


FOX Business Network (FBN) dominated CNBC across business day and market hours in February 2026, according to Nielsen Media Research Big Data + Panel. Led by FBN’s market open and close programs, Varney & Co. and Kudlow placed as the top two business programs in television for the 48th and 53rd consecutive months, respectively.

Setting ten straight months outranking CNBC in business day (262,000) and market hours (259,000) viewers, FBN beat the competition with 13% and 9% wins, separately. In total day viewers, FBN garnered 155,000 viewers.


The three-hour market opener Varney & Co. (9 AM-12 PM/ET) marked four years as the top business program in television securing a 27% win (318,000 viewers) and 48th consecutive monthly sweep of CNBC’s Squawk on the Street. Meanwhile, Larry Kudlow’s eponymous Kudlow (4 PM/ET) was the second most-watched business program in television with 285,000 viewers, delivering a whopping 45% advantage over CNBC’s Closing Bell and 53rd straight monthly win.

Maria Bartiromo’s pre-market program, Mornings with Maria (6-9 AM/ET) reached 10 back-to-back months as the dominant pre-market show on television with 127,000 viewers, continuing its advantage over Squawk Box. Meanwhile, The Big Money Show (12-2 PM/ET) saw 231,000 viewers, Making Money with Charles Payne (2 PM/ET) nabbed 209,000 viewers and Liz Claman’s The Claman Countdown (3 PM/ET) notched 215,000 viewers.


FBN’s post-market program The Evening Edit (5 PM/ET; 211,000 viewers) saw a 15% advantage over its competition Fast Money, while The Bottom Line (6 PM/ET; 178,000 viewers) saw a 14% advantage over CNBC’s marquee program Mad Money with Jim Cramer. Both program's double-digit wins marked their 24th consecutive monthly victory.

On Fridays, Maria Bartiromo’s Wall Street (Fridays, 7-7:30 PM/ET) saw 103,000 viewers with a 36% advantage over CNBC’s Shark Tank. During the second half of the 7 PM/ET hour, Barron’s Roundtable (Fridays, 7:30-8 PM/ET) delivered 84,000 viewers, continuing its reign over CNBC’s Shark Tank for the second month straight.

FCC Chair Brendan Carr Aggressively Defends His Leadership


FCC Chairman Brendan Carr sharply defended his aggressive leadership and regulatory approach toward broadcasters, declaring that the mainstream news media is "drastically out of touch with where the American people are."

Carr made the comments during a roughly 20-minute interview Wednesday at Semafor’s “Restoring Trust in Media” summit in Washington, D.C., an event focused on rebuilding credibility in an industry facing record-low public trust levels. 

Interviewer Ben Smith, Semafor's editor in chief, pressed Carr on criticism from former Reagan-era FCC Chairman Mark Fowler, who accused Carr of weaponizing the agency's public-interest rules as a "made-to-order jawboning instrument" against media companies. "This isn’t Ronald Reagan’s FCC," Carr replied. "I think that’s a good thing."

Much of the discussion featured Carr's broad attacks on mainstream outlets. He devoted over two minutes to criticizing publications such as The Washington Post and Time magazine, networks including ABC News, and journalists like Jim Acosta and Don Lemon, accusing them of dishonest reporting.


Carr argued that restoring trust requires greater honesty from journalists. He praised Zeteo founder Mehdi Hasan for openly disclosing his political views on President Donald Trump, saying it allows audiences to "factor that in" when reading or watching. He contrasted this with what he called decades of journalists "pissing on your leg and telling you that they’re weathermen."

Smith called the extended critique "a great monologue" and "impressive."Carr offered rare praise for David Ellison's leadership at Paramount and CBS News, months after Ellison's bid to acquire the company involved FCC oversight, saying he appreciates their experimentation with new formats. "They’re trying different stuff," Carr said. "What do you guys have to lose?"

Weekly TV Ratings: Olympics Powered NBC During Primetime


The week of February 16, 2026 was dominated by the 2026 Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics coverage on NBC and associated networks (including USA Network for some events), which significantly impacted primetime ratings across broadcast and cable. NBC's primetime Olympics broadcasts averaged around 1.0-1.3 in the key 18-49 demographic on various nights, with total viewers often in the 7-10 million range for prime events, making it the top performer overall. 

This was part of NBCUniversal's "Legendary February" lineup, contributing to high overall viewership for the Games (the most-watched Winter Olympics since 2014).

Ratings Graphics Courtesy of RoadMN


Regular scripted programming on the major broadcast networks was limited or preempted on several nights due to Olympics coverage, leading many networks (especially CBS) to air repeats or lower-rated originals.

NBC Sports Considers Tweaking SNF Line-Up


NBC is planning a significant revamp of its Football Night in America pregame show ahead of Sunday Night Football, with Hall of Fame coach Tony Dungy likely out as a regular contributor after 17 seasons.

According to reporting from The Athletic's Andrew Marchand, Dungy is one of the first casualties in what is expected to be a "new-look" program. His contract, along with several other studio analysts', expired following NBC's Super Bowl 60 coverage, giving the network room to reshape the ensemble.

Key elements of the potential overhaul include:
  • Slimming down the large cast (which has featured up to 10 contributors in recent years).
  • Taking the entire pregame show fully on the road to the site of each Sunday night game, rather than the current studio-heavy format.
Dungy, who joined NBC in 2009 after his successful coaching career (including a Super Bowl win with the Indianapolis Colts), has not been fully informed of the decision yet. There's a small chance NBC could reverse course or offer him a reduced "emeritus" role, similar to past arrangements with broadcasters like Bob Costas or Al Michaels.

No other specific departures or additions have been confirmed, though speculation has included potential interest in figures like former Steelers coach Mike Tomlin for a future spot. On-air talent such as Mike Tirico (play-by-play) and Cris Collinsworth (analyst) are expected to remain in the game booth.

The changes aim to refresh the highest-rated Sunday pregame show, which benefits from its lead-in to NBC's primetime NFL matchup. Final decisions are still pending, with more updates likely in the coming months ahead of the 2026 NFL season.

The Audio Battleground: The Car Dashboard


The car's dashboard is emerging as the next major battleground for audio and media consumption, according to a new analysis published at TVREV.com.

"The Dashboard Is The Next Media Battleground" argues that connected car screens represent one of the largest untapped distribution opportunities for media companies, streamers, broadcasters, and audio platforms in the coming decade.

Modern vehicles now feature large, always-connected central displays that integrate streaming services (like Spotify, Apple Music, podcasts, and YouTube), navigation, and vehicle controls. Yet the current in-car experience frustrates drivers: clunky menus slow audio switching (a safety risk), users rarely want to hunt for specific apps, and native systems feel outdated compared to Apple CarPlay or Android Auto, which dominate because they mirror familiar phone interfaces more seamlessly.

The core opportunity lies in transforming the dashboard from a mere "digital shelf" of apps into a true content stage—a primary, low-distraction hub for audio during commutes and drives. This remains one of the last major frontiers for capturing listening time after phones, smart speakers, and earbuds. 

Winners will deliver intuitive, voice-first, context-aware, and predictive experiences powered by AI (e.g., anticipating content based on time, location, traffic, habits, or mood).The competition pits:
  • Big Tech players (Apple and Google via CarPlay/Android Auto),
  • Streaming giants (Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube Music, Apple Music),
  • Traditional radio and broadcasters,
  • Automakers' infotainment teams (Tesla, Rivian, newer GM and Ford systems)

Good Morning! Time to Check The Pulse for Thursday, February 26


Radio Broadcasting

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr Defends His Leadership:  Brendan Carr, as FCC Chairman, has been actively defending his aggressive leadership approach amid criticism. In recent appearances and statements, he pushed back against claims of overreach, declaring "This isn’t Ronald Reagan’s FCC" and emphasizing a shift toward deregulation, national security priorities, and public interest obligations aligned with broader administration goals.

He has faced scrutiny over initiatives like the "Pledge America Campaign" (launched earlier in February), which urges broadcasters (including radio) to voluntarily air "patriotic, pro-America content" to support the nation's 250th anniversary celebrations on July 4, 2026. Carr ties this to broadcasters' existing public service duties, but critics (including Democratic FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez) argue it represents government pressure on content and erodes independence/First Amendment principles.

Carr has also defended the FCC against accusations of censorship or bias in enforcement (e.g., equal-time rules affecting TV but with radio implications in broader media policy debates), while highlighting 2025 as a "banger" year of deregulation and previewing more in 2026. These actions continue to spark debate in broadcasting circles about the FCC's role in content and speech.

Media Industry

Nexstar Media Group Continues Layoffs Ahead of TEGNA Merger: Nexstar laid off prominent on-air talent, including longtime KTLA anchors Glen Walker and Lu Parker, meteorologist Mark Kriski in Los Angeles, and staff at WPIX in New York (following earlier cuts at WGN-TV in Chicago). These reductions, affecting about a dozen on-air roles in major markets, are tied to cost-cutting as Nexstar pursues its $6.2 billion acquisition of TEGNA. SAG-AFTRA has condemned the moves as evidence of harmful media consolidation, arguing that the deal (pending FCC approval) prioritizes savings over local journalism amid declining traditional TV ad revenue and viewer shifts to streaming. READ MORE

Streaming and CTV Advertising Growth Accelerates:  U.S. connected TV (CTV) ad spend is projected to rise about 14% year-over-year in 2026, surpassing $37 billion, as brands pivot from linear TV to targeted streaming platforms. Agencies like Clicta Digital launched new OTT/CTV services to capitalize on this surge, highlighting measurable performance gains. Broader trends show sports viewing on streamers up significantly (e.g., Prime Video leading), with Netflix positioned to capture around 10% of CTV ad dollars as buyers increase investments.

U-S News

U.S.-Iran Nuclear Talks Resume in Geneva Amid Heightened Tensions:  The third round of indirect negotiations between the United States and Iran kicked off in Geneva, focusing on limiting Iran's nuclear program in exchange for potential sanctions relief. These talks occur against the backdrop of a significant U.S. military buildup in the Middle East, including deployments of F-22 jets and warships to pressure Tehran. The Trump administration imposed new sanctions on Iran just ahead of the meetings. A recent AP-NORC poll shows that most Americans (around 61%) view Iran as an enemy and express high concern about its nuclear ambitions, but only about 3 in 10 trust President Trump's judgment on using military force abroad.

MN Medicaid Payments Stopped: The administration announced it is pausing more than $250 million in Medicaid payments to Minnesota, citing widespread fraud. Vice President JD Vance highlighted the move, but Minnesota officials and critics described it as political retribution against a Democratic-led state. This fits into broader scrutiny of federal funding in certain states.

WaPo Top Editor Talks About 'Human Cost' of Lay-Offs


Washington Post executive editor Matt Murray acknowledged the severe “human cost” of this month’s mass layoffs of more than 300 staffers but defended them as essential to stabilize the newspaper, position it for growth, and achieve long-term financial health.

Speaking Wednesday at Semafor’s “Restoring Trust in Media” summit in Washington, D.C., Murray said owner Jeff Bezos remains fully “committed to a long-term future for the Post.” He described Bezos as a believer in “fair news” and making information accessible to average people, not just elite audiences, emphasizing relevance and liveliness in readers’ daily lives.


The remarks came as Murray and interim CEO Jeff D’Onofrio work to steady the organization after the deep cuts and the abrupt exit of former CEO Will Lewis shortly after the layoffs were announced. Lewis’s departure followed his appearance at a pre-Super Bowl event in California, far from the D.C. newsroom.

Murray kicked off the summit, which features other media leaders including Axel Springer CEO Mathias Döpfner, “Meet the Press” moderator Kristen Welker, Substack co-founder Hamish McKenzie, and Knight Foundation CEO Maribel Pérez Wadsworth, amid broader industry struggles with declining public trust.

Fox News Amierca's First Choice For Watching SOTU


FOX News Media’s coverage of President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address on Tuesday, February 24th was the highest-rated in television with an audience of 11.5 million viewers and 2.1 million in A25-54 demo across FOX News Channel, FOX Network and FOX Business Network according to panel preliminary data from Nielsen Media Research. 

Co-anchored by Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum, FNC’s programming surrounding the address that began at 9 PM/ET delivered 9.1 million viewers and 1.5 million in the 25-54 demo, topping broadcast networks ABC, NBC and CBS in viewers head-to-head and all cable networks across the board. The network also drew the largest audience during the democratic response, averaging 4.7 million viewers and 796,000 in A25-54.

Throughout the address, FNC held 67% of the cable news audience share in viewers and 60% in the A25-54 demo as MS Now (2.4 million P2+; 323,000 25-54) and CNN (2.2 million P2+; 655,000 A25-54). According to Nielsen MRI Fusion, FNC has the most politically diverse audience in cable news, attracting more Democrats and Independents than any other network in the category.


The special live edition of Hannity, following the democratic response at 11 PM/ET, delivered 3 million viewers and 516,000 in A25-54, easily besting the competition. FNC was number one in primetime television from 8-11 PM/ET with 7.5 million viewers and 1.2 million in A25-54, its highest rated primetime in nearly a year. Additionally, the network delivered its highest-rated total day in nearly a year with 3 million viewers and 415,000 A25-54.

Ratings Graphics Courtesy of RoadMN

FOX News Digital saw 2.6 million livestream views with an average minute audience of 252,000 from 9-11 PM/ET. On YouTube, FOX News commanded 12 million views yesterday, making it first in YouTube Video Views among the news competitive set, according to Emplifi. FOX News made social media history with its most viewed State of the Union day on social media ever, posting 85.5 million social media video views across Facebook, X, Instagram and TikTok. FOX News was number one in total social engagement among the news competitive set, with 7 million social interactions on Facebook, X, Instagram and TikTok, according to Emplifi & Comscore Social.

Data from Nielsen Media Research: 9:15 – 11 PM/ET
  1. FNC – 9.1 million viewers; 1,465,000 A25-54
  2. ABC – 5.1 million viewers; 1,221,000 A25-54
  3. NBC – 3.6 million viewers; 1,019,000 A25-54
  4. CBS – 3.3 million viewers; 815,000 A25-54
  5. MS Now – 2.4 million viewers; 323,000 A25-54
  6. CNN – 2.2 million viewers; 655,000 A25-54
  7. FOX – 2,1 million viewers; 560,000 A25-54
  8. FBN – 269,000 viewers; 73,000 A25-54

Source: Nielsen. Live+SD. 2-24-26 ratings data. Average audience for cable news networks Monday-Sunday based on Total Day and Prime (6a-6a, 8P-11P), P2+, P25-54, P18-49. Cable News/Broadcast Program averages exclude repeats and include the corresponding program name.

Day 3: More January 2026 PPMs Released From Nielsen


Nielsen again has released more results for markets with January PPMs

MIAMI:  An Easy Win


Cox Media Group's Easy 93.1 (WFEZ) remains dominant in the Miami-Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood market, holding the No. 1 spot for persons 6+ for the third consecutive Nielsen Audio January 2026 PPM survey with a slight uptick from 7.4 to 7.5 share.

Hot 105 (WHQT), the Cox Media Urban AC, stayed strong at No. 2 (6.6 to 6.7). Amor 107.5 (WAMR), TelevisaUnivision's Spanish Hot AC, jumped to No. 3 with its strongest performance since March (5.0 to 6.0). 102.7 The Beach (WMXJ), Audacy's Classic Hits, rebounded to No. 4 (4.6 to 5.4), while Zeta 92.3 (WCMQ), SBS Spanish Contemporary, climbed to No. 5 with its best book in over a year (4.4 to 5.0), including a 0.5 share gain from online listening.Lite FM (WLYF), Audacy's AC, fell three spots to No. 6 with its lowest share in a year (5.6 to 4.9). Magic 93.9 (WMIA), iHeartMedia's Spanish Adult Hits, slipped to No. 7 (4.8 to 4.2).WFEZ continued as the market's cume leader despite a minor 0.5% dip (750,500 to 746,900), while overall market listening declined 0.6%.


In the key 25-54 demographic, WFEZ extended its unbroken streak of No. 1 finishes with its highest share since August. WLYF surged to No. 2 but trailed by more than two shares. WHQT edged to No. 3 with a small dip, WMXJ vaulted from No. 10 to No. 4 on its rebound, Power 96 (WPOW), Audacy's Classic Hip Hop, fell to No. 5 after giving back last book's gains, and WMIA dropped from No. 2 to tie at No. 7 with rising WCMQ (from No. 13).


SEATTLE:  The News Is all Over Town

University of Washington News/Talk KUOW (94.9) reclaimed the No. 1 position in the Seattle-Tacoma market for persons 6+ in the January 2026 Nielsen Audio PPM survey, rising from 9.4 to 9.7 share. This marks KUOW's 13th win in the last 14 books, building a comfortable four-share lead.Crista Ministries Christian AC KCMS (Spirit 105.3), one of the holiday-format stations, climbed to No. 2 despite dropping from its Christmas-boosted 7.0 to 5.7—its strongest non-holiday share in over a year.

iHeartMedia Classic Hits KJEB (95.7 The Jet) rebounded sharply from a down book, jumping from No. 5 to No. 3 (4.1 to 5.5). Hubbard AC KRWM (Warm 106.9), the other all-Christmas outlet, tumbled from No. 1 to No. 4 with a steep decline (11.1 to 5.3).Bonneville Sports KIRO-AM (Seattle Sports 710) surged to No. 5 (3.8 to 5.1), fueled by Seahawks playoff success. Audacy Active Rock KISW (The Rock) edged down to No. 6 (5.2 to 5.0).Despite a 32.8% share drop, KRWM retained the market's top cume (963,800 to 648,000), while overall market listening rose 0.6%.



In the key 25-54 demographic, Friends of KEXP Alternative KEXP achieved its largest share in over a year to claim No. 1, moving up from No. 3. KISW returned to No. 2 but posted its smallest share since July, trailing the leader by nearly two shares. KUOW advanced to No. 3 with a modest gain, while KJEB halted a four-book slide by leaping from No. 10 to No. 4. KCMS rose to No. 5 with its highest 25-54 mark in over a year. Audacy Alternative KNDD (107.7 The End) fell to No. 7, and KRWM dropped from No. 1 to No. 8.

ABC News Continues To Dominate Broadcast Evening Newscasts


The week of February 16, 2026 saw the following average ratings for the major broadcast evening newscasts, per Nielsen Live+Same Day Big Data + Panel ratings:
  • ABC World News Tonight with David Muir: 8.867 million total viewers, 1.138 million Adults 25-54, 843,000 Adults 18-49.  This placed it as the #1 newscast across broadcast and cable (excluding sports) for the second straight week. It more than doubled CBS's performance in total viewers (+113%) and key demos, while maintaining a strong lead overall. Notably, on Monday, February 16, it outperformed NBC's primetime Winter Olympics coverage that night in total viewers.
  • NBC Nightly News with Tom Llamas: 7.595 million total viewers, 1.180 million Adults 25-54, 872,000 Adults 18-49. NBC won the key Adults 25-54 and 18-49 demographics for the week (edging ABC in both), benefiting from Olympic-related interest, though it trailed ABC in total viewers.
  • CBS Evening News with Tony Dokoupil: 4.168 million total viewers, 475,000 Adults 25-54, 350,000 Adults 18-49.
This remained in a distant third place, with ABC more than doubling its audience across categories.This period coincided with the 2026 Winter Olympics (Milano Cortina), which influenced viewership patterns—ABC continued its streak of winning Olympic weeks in total viewers, while NBC gained ground in the advertiser-coveted younger demos.

Paramount Skydance Reports Net Loss


Paramount Skydance reported a widened net loss of $573 million in its fiscal fourth quarter ended December 31, 2025—the first full quarter since the Skydance merger closed—despite modest overall revenue growth of 2% to $8.15 billion.

The increased loss, up from $224 million in the year-ago period, stemmed largely from ongoing challenges in the legacy linear TV business, including a 5% revenue decline in TV Media to about $4.7 billion, driven by 10% drops in advertising and 7% in distribution revenues. This offset gains elsewhere, leading to an operating loss of $339 million (versus a prior-year profit) and a per-share loss of 52 cents.

Streaming showed clear improvement: Paramount+ added subscribers to reach 79 million (excluding free trials), fueling 17% growth in Paramount+ revenue and contributing to a 10% rise in direct-to-consumer (DTC) revenue to $2.21 billion. 

Nexstar Downsizing Includes L-A, NYC Markets


Nexstar Media Group, the owner of numerous local TV stations including KTLA in Los Angeles, carried out significant on-air layoffs Wednesday, affecting veteran personalities at KTLA and other major market outlets as part of cost-cutting efforts tied to its proposed merger with Tegna.

At KTLA, longtime morning meteorologist Mark Kriski (a fixture since 1991 and an eight-time Emmy winner), midday anchors Glen Walker (since 2010) and Lu Parker (since 2015), weathercaster Kacey Montoya, and reporter Ellina Abovian were among those laid off. 

Reports indicate about a dozen on-air staff were impacted at KTLA alone. Similar cuts hit other Nexstar stations in recent days:
  • WGN-TV in Chicago saw around 10 layoffs, including on-air talent, with eight SAG-AFTRA members affected.
  • WPIX in New York also lost about a dozen on-air workers.
These reductions follow Nexstar's pattern of trimming staff across its portfolio of local stations (which include affiliates of major networks like ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC) amid debt pressures and preparations for the Tegna merger. 

Union SAG-AFTRA condemned the moves as eroding local news resources and failing to prioritize public interest, highlighting broader concerns about media consolidation's impact on journalism.

Nexstar has not detailed the full scope or commented specifically on individual personnel decisions, but the layoffs represent one of the latest waves in ongoing challenges facing local broadcast TV.

FCC Wants Your Thoughts On Sports Streaming


The FCC has launched a public inquiry into the growing shift of live sports programming from free, over-the-air broadcast television to subscription-based streaming services, seeking comments from the public on how this trend affects consumers, broadcasters, and access to local news.

Announced Wednesday, by FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, the inquiry highlights concerns over marketplace fragmentation, where fans increasingly need multiple paid subscriptions, potentially costing over $1,500 annually for full NFL coverage in some estimates, to watch games that once aired freely on broadcast TV. 

The comment period runs through March 27, 2026, with reply comments due by April 13.

Natasha Verma of FOX 5 to Host BFOA Gala



The Broadcasters Foundation of America (BFOA), the charity that provides financial aid to broadcasters in critical need from illness or disaster, has announced Natasha Verma of FOX 5, as the host of this year’s BFOA Gala and Fundraiser, which takes place on Monday, March 9, at the Plaza Hotel in New York City.

Verma is the co-anchor of “The 5 O’clock News,” “The 6 O’clock News,” and the “The 10 O’clock News” on WNYW FOX 5. She joined FOX 5 in 2022 from KUSA in Denver, where she was a weekday morning anchor. Earlier in her career, Verma worked as a reporter and anchor for NBC10 in Boston and WBBH in Fort Myers, FL. She began her career as a reporter for News12 The Bronx, New York.

“Verma brings a vibrancy and excitement to our evening,” stated Tim McCarthy, President of the Broadcasters Foundation. “The Annual Gala is our biggest fundraiser, and the money is needed more than ever. The number of requests for aid goes up every year. That means more broadcasters than ever before are aware of our mission and we must answer their cry for help.”

Natasha Verma
A cancer survivor, Verma understands first-hand the difficulties – physical, mental, and financial – that can add to the struggle of fighting off a debilitating disease.

“I’m happy to host this major fundraising event for the only charity that helps so many in our business,” said Verma. “Anyone can be impacted by a life-altering disease or disaster, and the Broadcasters Foundation must always be there to help.”

As previously announced, this year’s BFOA Gala will also honor VERSANT CEO and Former Chair of NBCUniversal Media Group Mark Lazarus with the Golden Mic Award, Judge Judy Sheindlin with the Edward F. McLaughlin Lifetime Achievement Award, Stephen A. Smith with the inaugural Broadcast Personality of the Year Award, and Ernest A. Liebre with the Philip J. Lombardo Spirit Award.

To purchase tickets to the Broadcasters Foundation Gala, please click here

For more information about the Broadcasters Foundation, including how to apply for aid or make a donation, visit www.broadcastersfoundation.org, or contact 212-373-8250 or info@thebfoa.org.

Radio History: Feb 26


➦In 1919...Mason Adams born (Died - April 26, 2005 at age 86). He was a character actor and voice-over artist.

Adams was heard on many radio programs during Radio's Golden Age. A notable recurring role was that of Pepper Young in Pepper Young's Family, which aired from 1947 to 1959. He also portrayed the deadly Nazi Atom Man in a classic 1945 serial on the radio version of The Adventures of Superman.

Mason Adams
Adams is perhaps most famous for his role as Managing Editor Charlie Hume in the television series Lou Grant, which aired from 1977 to 1982.

During the 1960s, he was ubiquitous as a voiceover actor in television commercials for foods and household products, most notably for Chiffon margarine and Crest toothpaste ("Helps stop cavities before they start"). He also did the vocal part of the television commercials for Smucker's preserves ("With a name like Smucker's, it has to be good!"), a role he resumed in his later years. Beginning in the 1980s, Adams provided the voiceover for Cadbury Creme eggs, which were advertised on television with Adams' catchy slogan, "Nobunny knows Easter better than him [the Cadbury Bunny]."

In addition, Adams was the narrator for Kix commercials in the 1990s as well as a few Dentyne commercials and a few Swanson commercials. He was also the announcer for a 1992 WCBS-TV news promo, as well as a 1986 Lysol commercial. In the early 1990s, he narrated The Discovery Channel series on milestones of aviation called "Frontiers of Flight". In one of the early episodes of Sesame Street, he voiced a cartoon featuring a "jazzy" triangle and a "square" square. He voiced those two, as well as being the narrator, with jazz music in the background.

➦In 1932...Singer Johnny Cash Born (Died September 12, 2003 at age 71).  He is one of the best-selling music artists of all time, having sold more than 90 million records worldwide.  Although primarily remembered as a country music icon, his genre-spanning songs and sound embraced rock and roll, rockabilly, blues, folk, and gospel. This crossover appeal won Cash the rare honor of being inducted into the Country Music, Rock and Roll, and Gospel Music Halls of Fame.

➦In 1951...WMCA-FM changed call letters to WHOM-FM in NYC