Warner Bros Discovery to Launch CNN Max News Streaming Service in US on September 28

Warner Bros. Discovery said on Thursday it was launching a round-the-clock news streaming service, CNN Max, in the United States on September 27.

CNN Max will leverage the news network’s global reporting resources, and will also offer new original programs, such as “CNN Newsroom with Jim Acosta, Rahel Solomon, Amara Walker and Fredricka Whitfield.”

It also will seek to capitalize on the immediacy of breaking news and analysis, differentiating CNN Max from the short-lived CNN+ streaming service, which launched in March 2022 and featured lifestyle programs.

CNN’s parent, Warner Bros. Discovery, has been working to increase how much time subscribers spend on its Max streaming service, augmenting its HBO scripted series with Discovery‘s reality shows to keep viewers watching.

Breaking news and analysis would further expand Max’s programming, even as it allows CNN to reach a younger streaming audience.

CNN’s ratings have been sagging, even as the company attempts to attract more Republican viewers. Its profit fell beneath $1 billion (nearly Rs. 8,250 crore) in 2022 and is expected to be modestly higher this year than last, at $938.6 million (nearly Rs. 7,750 crore), according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Those estimates are for the CNN networks that operate in the United States, including CNN en Español and CNN International.

During June, CNN’s audience lagged behind Fox and MSNBC in prime time and across the total day, according to data from Nielsen.

The CNN Originals hub that is part of the Max service will be renamed CNN Max, and US subscribers will have access to live news as well as to the existing original series such as Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown and Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy.

© Thomson Reuters 2023


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Warner Bros Discovery Said to Be Planning to Add CNN Live Programming to Max Later This Year

Warner Bros. Discovery is planning to add live programming from CNN to the Max streaming service later this year, according to people familiar with the matter, betting that news can help attract subscribers.

CNN’s owner has already decided to add live news to the service outside the US, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing nonpublic information. 

Putting news on Max in the US could be complicated. Pay-TV providers like Comcast and DirecTV typically pay for the right to offer cable channels to their subscribers and are sensitive about efforts by media companies to offer the same programming online.

Warner Bros. Discovery executives are weighing different approaches to offering live CNN programming on Max in the US, including some that don’t require renegotiating deals with TV providers, one person said.

In recent weeks, the team at Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming operation has started work on technical issues related to airing live news on Max, the people said. 

Warner Bros. Discovery introduced Max last month and has pitched the service to consumers as a combination of reality programming from Discovery and scripted shows and blockbuster movies from HBO Max. Chief Executive Officer David Zaslav has said he’ll have more to say about news and sports in the fall. 

News and sports don’t currently play a big role on Max, nor did they feature prominently on HBO Max, the prior version of the service. CNN has a few programs on Max, including shows hosted by Chris Wallace and Anderson Cooper. But those aren’t live. 

While sports have been a major part of the programming lineup at Paramount+ and Peacock, two rival streaming services, it’s less clear what role news will play in the competition. Netflix funds hundreds of documentaries, but has said it isn’t in the news business. Amazon.com and Apple don’t operate large video news services, while Paramount Global, Comcast and Walt Disney Co. have largely kept their news programming separate from their entertainment streaming services.

CNN, one of the largest news organizations in the world, has struggled to find its footing in the streaming era. Last year, the company shut down the CNN+ streaming service just a few weeks after its launch. The network is also seeking leadership stability. Earlier this month, CEO Chris Licht stepped down after a brief and tumultuous tenure at the network. 

While CNN is widely distributed on satellite and cable-TV systems globally, having its live programming appear on Max could provide a significant boost to the network’s audience.

CNN’s subscribers have fallen to 70 million this year from 85 million in 2020, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. At the end of March, Warner Bros. Discovery had about 100 million streaming subscribers between HBO, HBO Max and Discovery+.

© 2023 Bloomberg L.P.


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Don Lemon returning to CNN show Wednesday after ‘frank’ talk with boss

CNN anchor Don Lemon will be back on the air Wednesday morning and will undergo “formal training” after his return over sexist comments he made last week, according to multiple reports.

The development was shared with staff in a Monday night memo from CNN boss Chris Licht, who said he had a “frank and meaningful conversation” with Lemon, who’s been absent as co-host of “CNN This Morning” since last Friday.

A day earlier, Lemon controversially remarked on air that 51-year-old GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley “isn’t in her prime.”

Lemon’s comments drew immediate blowback and he didn’t appear on the show with co-hosts Kaitlan Collins and Poppy Harlow Friday or Monday, but will be back Wednesday, per the internal memo viewed by the Wall Street Journal.


CNN boss Chris Licht said he and Don Lemon had a “frank and meaningful conversation” about the remarks toward Haley.
Getty Images for CNN

Licht said in the memo Lemon will “participate in formal training,” after he’s back, according to the newspaper.

“I sat down with Don and had a frank and meaningful conversation. He has agreed to participate in formal training, as well as continuing to listen and learn. We take this situation very seriously,” Licht said in the memo obtained by Fox News Digital. 


Don Lemon will return to CNN television Wednesday morning following his brief hiatus.
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“It is important to me that CNN balances accountability with a fostering a culture in which people can own, learn and grow from their mistakes. To that end, Don will return to CNN This Morning on Wednesday,” Licht additionally said, according to Fox News.

Lemon’s comments came after he responded to Haley’s call for mental competency tests for politicians older than 75 during her presidential kickoff last Wednesday.

“This whole talk about age makes me uncomfortable,” Lemon said. “I think it’s the wrong road to go down. She says people, you know, politicians are suddenly not in their prime. Nikki Haley isn’t in her prime, sorry — when a woman is considered to be in her prime in her 20s and 30s and maybe 40s.”


Don Lemon made a brief comment about Nikki Haley’s proposal on politicians older than 75 needing to take competency tests.
CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Imag

Lemon apologized later that day on Twitter, and then to CNN staff on a call Friday. On that same call, Licht called Lemon’s statements “unacceptable.”

A CNN spokesperson told the New York Times Monday night that “the company has a number of resources and Don is committed to our recommendation.”

The spokesperson did not say more because it is a personnel matter.

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CNN begins slashing workers as Chris Licht cuts costs: report

CNN began a long-expected round of layoffs on Wednesday as president Chris Licht and other executives at WarnerBros. Discovery trim costs at the struggling cable news network.

Licht informed CNN employees of the cuts in a memo and acknowledged “it will be a difficult time for everyone” at the company.

“It is incredibly hard to say goodbye to any one member of the CNN team, much less many. I recently described this process as a gut punch, because I know that is how it feels for all of us,” Licht said in the memo, which was obtained by The Hollywood Reporter.

Licht said the pink slips would begin with “a limited number of individuals, largely some of our paid contributors” on Wednesday as part of a “recalibrated reporting strategy.” The company will begin notifying other impacted employees on Thursday, with additional detail from Licht on CNN’s next steps to follow by that afternoon.

CNN’s Chris Licht has warned for weeks that layoffs were coming.
Getty Images for Warner Bros. Di

It wasn’t immediately clear how many CNN employees are being laid off. The Post has reached out to CNN for further comment.

This is a breaking story. Check back for updates.

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Don Lemon claims covering politics in primetime gig had ‘gotten old’

CNN anchor Don Lemon revealed Thursday that he felt the political focus of his nixed primetime show had gotten stale prior to his move to the struggling cable network’s revamped morning show.

Lemon, who is set to serve as co-host of the new “CNN This Morning” beginning Nov. 1, said he grew “tired” of the politically charged nature of primetime news.

“I would be lying to you if I didn’t say that was a factor,” Lemon told Semafor in an interview published Wednesday.

The left-leaning anchor was known for frequently targeting former President Donald Trump in nightly monologues.

“Look, has it been frustrating over the last couple of years having to deal with politics in the way it’s been dealt with in primetime? Yes. Was I tired of it? In some ways, yeah it’s gotten old,” Lemon told the outlet. “But I also think we were transitioning to a different time.”

Lemon noted changes in the news cycle as the war in Ukraine supplanted Trump mania as CNN’s main topic of conversation in primetime, adding he “was ready to move on and I think the audience is ready to move on as well.”

Don Lemon said he grew tired of the political focus of his primetime show.
YouTube/Hell Of A Week

The 56-year-old anchor couldn’t resist taking another shot at Trump, telling Semafor the former president “didn’t have the courage” to submit to an interview on his primetime show, “Don Lemon Tonight.”

Lemon is moving from primetime to mornings as CNN President Chris Licht leads an overhaul at the network. Licht and top brass at WarnerBros. Discovery are trying to shift the network toward centrist news coverage rather than the opinion-based programming that has seen its ratings crater.

“Don Lemon Tonight” recently aired its last show.
CNN

Lemon denied the network’s nudging under new leadership has been “uncomfortable” and expressed support for Licht’s vision.

“I really like Chris. When I read stories about what’s happening at CNN and about Chris and what he’s doing, I think it’s unfair,” Lemon said. “I think people should give him a chance. Everyone has a new vision when they come in as a new boss. Let’s see what his vision is and how it plays out.”

CNN is in the midst of massive shakeup.
CNN

The nixed “Don Lemon Tonight” struggled with low ratings prior to CNN’s shakeup. Despite losing a coveted primetime gig, Lemon has insisted his shift to mornings is a “promotion.”

Lemon is set to host “CNN This Morning” alongside fellow anchors Kaitlin Collins and Poppy Harlow. The show will air weekdays from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m.

He also provided a glimpse into how he plans to approach his new gig, telling Semafor that he will “be wearing what I wear in my normal everyday life” to reflect the more casual environment.

“I’m just going to be myself. It seems to have worked for the past however many decades in the business,” Lemon said. “I’m really not concerned about the ratings. I’m concerned about making it the best morning show possible and appealing to multiple demographics and people who are interested in other things than raw, tribal politics.”

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CNN Announces Abrupt Shutdown of ‘Vault’ NFT Marketplace, Users Call It a ‘Rug Pull’

CNN, the popular TV news channel and digital media outlet, will no longer continue its non-fungible token (NFT) and Web3 project announced in the summer of 2021. The company confirmed this in a statement on Monday, saying, “we have decided that it’s time to say goodbye to Vault by CNN,” the Web3 project in question. CNN initially launched the project as a six-week experiment of issuing digital collectables or NFTs of exclusive historical moments and new stories. However, the scope of Vault was later expanded amid engagement and support from the community.

“The Vault team is honoured to have partnered with amazing journalists, producers, artists, photojournalists, and collectors from all over the world during our time together, but we have decided that it’s time to say goodbye to Vault by CNN,” the company said in a statement.

CNN added that the Discord channel would be closed by the end of October. However, the Vault’s website and NFTs already collected by users will continue to be live (on Flow blockchain), and collectors will be compensated.

“While we will no longer be developing or maintaining this community, the Vault NFT collection will live on,” CNN added. “To thank the thousands of collectors who joined us in this experiment, we are committed to compensating wallets that own Vault NFTs.”

Meanwhile, the community appears to be rattled by the announcement, to the extent some of the collectors are accusing CNN of a “rug pull.” As per a CoinTelegraph report, a CNN staff member in the ‘Vault’ Discord mentioned that users involved in the NFT program will be compensated in one way or another. He noted that users who bought NFTs would be compensated with stablecoins or another token.

The staff mentioned that details are being worked on but stressed that the company would only pay 20 percent of the mint price for each NFT back to those that bought them. He mentioned that the Vault marketplace would continue functioning, and the collections would remain valuable.


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Gov’t idiocy at work, FDA’s dumb plan on smokes and other commentary

From the right: Gov’t Idiocy at Work

“Cities are rapidly inventing new job titles,” reports City Journal’s Steven Malanga, and the “hottest (pun intended)” is “chief heat officer” — whose task is to “enumerate the impact of heat on the local population” and “seek ways to mitigate it.” One popular idea among CHOs: plant trees to boost shade. And one term “you’re unlikely to hear” from them: “air conditioning,” though “warm-weather-related deaths dropped precipitously over the last century” thanks to AC. The problem: “Air conditioning demands electricity” often powered by fossil fuels or nuclear energy, “two unseemly phrases” in government circles. Yet “the biggest threat” is the loss of AC due to rising prices and outages made more likely by government climate actions. Don’t worry: “Your local CHO is coming soon to plant more trees.”

Libertarian: FDA’s Dumb Plan on Smokes

The Food and Drug Administration “wants to prevent smoking-related deaths by making cigarettes less appealing,” notes Reason’s Jacob Sullum. It “plans to ban menthol cigarettes and limit nicotine content” even as it’s “determined to make vaping products, the most promising harm-reducing alternative to cigarettes, less appealing to smokers.” Its policies contain a “condescending assumption that African Americans are helpless to resist menthol’s minty coolness” and “would spur black-market activity” while encouraging smokers “to smoke more”; its vaping stand “is hard to reconcile with its acknowledgment that vaping has great potential to reduce smoking-related disease and death.” Seems the FDA “learned nothing from the country’s unhappy experience with the war on drugs.”

Conservative: Germany Says the F-Word — Fracking

“Germany’s energy crisis is a crisis of choice, or rather a crisis of two choices, the second following directly from the first,” explains The Wall Street Journal’s Joseph C. Sternberg. The Ukraine war already has it rethinking the second choice, to rely on Russia for natural-gas imports. “But Germany is as dependent as it is on foreign fuel only because of the first decision Berlin made: not to tap the country’s substantial domestic gas reserves,” put off-limits by the 2017 ban “on dubious safety grounds” of “the fracking techniques that could reach most of Germany’s gas.” Polling shows just 27% support, though “‘only’ 56% of respondents opposed fracking outright, with the remaining 17% undecided. This after voters have been bombarded for years with antifracking messages.” In fact, Germany’s “perceived resource poverty is more a form of learned helplessness than a geological reality.”

Pundit: My Stealthy, Sexist CNN Suspension

“It came to my attention in July that I had been punished under old CNN leadership — kept off air since January,” writes Mary Katharine Ham at her MK Hammer Time Substack, “for tweeting about Jeffrey Toobin,” who’d left his webcam on while masturbating during a video call with colleagues. “I was never informed of my punishment until it was rescinded recently by new management,” and Toobin “was off air for eight months; I was off for seven. One month was the difference between punishment for” his repugnant action “versus commenting on the inadvisability of” masturbating “at work.” Oh, and: “I was also told I wasn’t informed of the network’s displeasure because I had just had a baby and someone in the old leadership thought I might be a ‘loose cannon.’”

Culture desk: Must You Tip Everyone?

“Everyone wants a tip now. Do you have to give them one?” asks Recode’s Sara Morrison. “Tipflation is everywhere,” with tips “requested at automatic car washes,” for retail purchases, “even for smoothie-making robots, usually through those touchscreen tablets a lot of businesses use.” Thanks to “social pressure” and “a pandemic that accelerated the adoption of contactless digital payment methods, those tablets have become ubiquitous, and so have the tip requests.” Research finds “just the act of asking people to leave a tip can be enough to push some people into doing so.” After all, we all want “to avoid the awkwardness and the guilt of” declining. But take it from the expert: Lizzie Post, Emily Post’s great-great-grandchild, says “there’s nothing wrong with saying no.”

— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

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CNN taps Don Lemon, Kaitlan Collins and Poppy Harlow to anchor morning show

Ratings-challenged CNN will reshuffle the deck chairs on the slowly-sinking network, pushing out left-leaning primetime host Don Lemon from his plum solo slot to a newly-created morning team, boss Chris Licht announced Thursday.

Lemon will join Kaitlan Collins and Poppy Harlow to replace current “New Day” hosts John Berman and Brianna Keilar.

Lemon’s long-anticipated demotion comes after Licht was tasked by new corporate overlord Warner Bros. Discovery to shift CNN away from opinion-based shows to more centrist reporting of the news.

Last month, the network canned Brian Stelter, the outspoken host of the now canceled “Reliable Sources.”

Lemon — who often espoused his liberal opinions on his 10 pm show “Don Lemon Tonight” — helmed the lowest-ranked program in primetime in August, averaging 660,000 viewers to finish a distant third to Fox and MSNBC.

Kaitlin Collins and Don Lemon will be join Poppy Harlow as co-hosts of CNN’s new morning show.
Getty Images

A rep for CNN said the network will be making an announcement on who will replace Lemon in the next few weeks.

Insiders have earmarked Kasie Hunt as a possible replacement for Lemon, or for the 9 p.m. slot, which was left open when Chris Cuomo was fired last year over his role in advising his older brother, then-New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, in his sex harassment scandal.

Poppy Harlow, who has filled in at “New Day,” will co-host the new morning show.
Getty Images for TIME

Sources recently told The Post that Licht “has his work cut out for him” as he tries to pump up the network’s ratings.

In August, Fox News dominated with nine shows making the top 10 highest-rated cable news shows. Only MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow pulled out a fifth-place ranking with 2.7 million viewers, lagging behind Fox’s “The Five” (3.4 million), “Tucker Carlson Tonight” (3.3 million), “Hannity” (2.9 million) and “Jesse Watters Primetime” (2.9 million).

The only CNN show to crack the top 25 was “Anderson Cooper 360” — in 25th place with 950,000 viewers.

Meanwhile, “New Day,” came in 42nd place out of 82 cable news shows, bringing in 396,000 total viewers.

CNN did not provide a start date for the changes but said it will rename “New Day” and update its set later this year. Berman and Keilar will remain at the network, Licht said.

Don Lemon is moved to the morning show as ratings at his primetime show continued to sink.
Getty Images

The exec is known for his previous success launching MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” and revamping CBS’ morning show, which was then called “CBS This Morning.” Both shows brought about a lively conversation about current topics and news of the day with a broad selection of guests.

“There is no stronger combination of talent than Don, Poppy and Kaitlan to deliver on our promise of a game-changing morning news program,” Licht said Thursday. “They are each uniquely intelligent, reliable and compelling; together they have a rare and palpable chemistry. Combined with CNN’s resources and global newsgathering capabilities, we will offer a smart, bold and refreshing way to start the day.”

Harlow has most recently served as an anchor of “CNN Newsroom,” as well as a relief presenter at “New Day,” while Collins served as a White House correspondent for the network.

The rejuggling also comes after Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav said he is looking  to shore up at least $3 billion in cost savings in 2023 across the company. Earlier this year, the parent company shuttered CNN+, the network’s month-old streaming service, laying off roughly 300 staffers.

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