MediaTalk

S&P Global Market Intelligence analysts and reporters take a deep dive into issues facing the evolving media landscape. Tune in for interviews with industry insiders and analysts as well as brief outlooks for the TMT sector. If you are interested in learning more about TMT/SPGMI offerings, please visit https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/campaigns/tmt

  1. As RSN Models Evolve, Who Wins Baseball's Local Media Rights Battle?

    3 HR AGO

    As RSN Models Evolve, Who Wins Baseball's Local Media Rights Battle?

    "MediaTalk" delves into the ins and outs of baseball media rights, distribution disruption, and the business model pressure points shaping MLB's next decade. The episode unpacks how MLB's new ABS (Automated Ball-Strike) challenge system adds a layer of on-field strategy without fully replacing human umpires, reflecting a broader theme: incremental tech adoption with high-stakes outcomes. From there, the conversation pivots to the World Baseball Classic's breakout viewership, underscoring how premium events can generate outsized audience demand and advertiser value. The biggest story, though, is structural: the collapse and restructuring of the regional sports network (RSN) ecosystem and MLB's expanding role in local production and direct-to-consumer distribution. With top franchises still collecting massive local rights fees while others face uncertainty, the episode highlights widening competitive imbalance — fueling concerns that the next labor fight could center on caps, floors, and revenue sharing. Will MLB successfully centralize local streaming by 2028 — or will big-market teams block the model to protect premium RSN economics? Finally, the episode examines why Netflix and NBC want curated MLB inventory and what that signals about sports' role in reducing churn and owning "appointment" windows. As streamers cherry-pick tentpole games, what's the next must-have rights package that will reshape sports media valuations? More S&P Global content: Navigating the Chaos of Sports Media Rights Fragmentation Maximizing Sports Media Rights Value: Benchmarking, Negotiation, & Market Intelligence in 2026 Featured experts: Scott Robson, principal analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. Michael Johnson, research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan Credits: Host/Author: Mike Reynolds Producer/Editor: Sarah James www.spglobal.com www.spglobal.com/market-intelligence

    17 min
  2. Big Dance, Bigger Business: The New Economics Powering March Madness

    19 MAR

    Big Dance, Bigger Business: The New Economics Powering March Madness

    March Madness is a case study in how premium sports rights stand to be repackaged and monetized in an increasingly  fragmented TV-and-streaming ecosystem. This "MediaTalk" episode highlights the long-running CBS and TNT Sports partnership as an unusually durable co-rights model — one that blends broadcast reach with cable affiliate economics and modern streaming distribution. With the looming possibility of Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery becoming corporate teammates, the episode explores what consolidation could mean for rights strategy, brand architecture and platform rationalization. A key theme: distribution optionality is now paramount. Between March Madness Live, Paramount+ and HBO Max, the tournament demonstrates how major events can drive authentication, subscriptions, and ad sales across multiple endpoints. However, this also raises the question of whether three parallel digital destinations is sustainable long-term. The episode also connects tournament scheduling and expansion chatter to broader sports calendar realities and ad inventory constraints. Beyond rights, the episode digs into NIL and federal policy proposals (including the SCORE Act and College Sports Competitiveness Act) as forces that could reshape cost structures, conference leverage, and the long-run economics underpinning media deals. Finally, the episode frames sports betting — including prediction markets — as an increasingly material engagement layer, especially in non-legal betting states. More S&P Global content: Navigating the Chaos of Sports Media Rights Fragmentation Maximizing Sports Media Rights Value: Benchmarking, Negotiation, & Market Intelligence in 2026 Featured experts: Justin Nielson, principal analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. Scott Robson, principal analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. Michael Johnson, research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan Credits: Host/Author: Mike Reynolds Producer/Editor: Sarah James www.spglobal.com www.spglobal.com/market-intelligence

    27 min
  3. What Drives Most US Broadband Churn: Not Pricing, Bundling or Speeds

    12 MAR

    What Drives Most US Broadband Churn: Not Pricing, Bundling or Speeds

    Broadband is behaving more like a true utility, with churn holding near a remarkably low 1% per month for fixed broadband, comparable only to mobile phone providers. Moves remain the top driver of customer loss, followed by the hunt for lower prices and frustrations with service quality, especially among older households, families with children, and higher-income users who are more intolerant of outages. Speed, while important, ranks further down the list of reasons to switch. At the same time, competitive pressure is intensifying. Fixed wireless access is scaling quickly in both rural and suburban/urban markets, and Starlink's aggressive pricing and rapid growth are reshaping satellite broadband economics ahead of a potential IPO. Fiber leaders like Verizon Fios and Frontier show the lowest churn, and cable operators are leaning on deep bundles to lock in customers for five to 10 years. As broadband matures, will pricing and service quality outweigh speed as the decisive factors in retention? Can incumbents hold the line against fixed wireless and LEO satellite challengers? More S&P Global content: US Broadband monthly churn hits 1.3% Fixed wireless subscribers by state  Featured experts: John Fletcher, principal research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. Brian Bacon, research analyst on the Consumer Insights team within S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan Credits: Host/Author: Mike Reynolds Producer/Editor: Sarah James www.spglobal.com www.spglobal.com/market-intelligence

    20 min
  4. GenAI Foundation Model Funding Records and Data Center Power Debates

    5 MAR

    GenAI Foundation Model Funding Records and Data Center Power Debates

    Funding for the generative AI sector has shattered records in just two months of 2026, surpassing all of 2025. OpenAI's staggering $120 billion funding round, alongside Anthropic's $30 billion and X.AI's $20 billion, signals unprecedented confidence in AI's transformative potential. But the story extends beyond foundation models. As traditional venture capital firms find themselves priced out of mega-rounds, capital is flowing into the application and infrastructure layers, particularly code generation — currently AI's most proven use case. Meanwhile, the SaaS sector faces an existential reckoning as investors question whether AI-native businesses can deliver superior customer value at lower marginal costs. The infrastructure race intensifies as hyperscalers like Microsoft, Amazon, and Google compete for AI supremacy, driving data center valuations into the stratosphere. Yet power constraints loom large — 2026 may mark the first year a data center project fails purely due to energy shortages. With gas turbine manufacturers booked through 2030, the question isn't just about capital availability, but physical infrastructure capacity. This episode explores what happens when unprecedented capital deployment for AI funding collides with fundamental resource constraints and energy supply reality.  More S&P Global content: GenAI VC Funding: A 2026 Outlook Datacenter Dealmaking: Can the Record-Breaking Momentum Continue in 2026? Featured experts: Iuri Struta, senior reporter at S&P Global Market Intelligence  Credits: Host/Author: Mike Reynolds Producer/Editor: Sarah James www.spglobal.com www.spglobal.com/market-intelligence

    21 min
  5. How Brands Are Balancing Human Authenticity and AI Efficiencies

    26 FEB

    How Brands Are Balancing Human Authenticity and AI Efficiencies

    "MediaTalk" host Mike Reynolds sits down with Mike Donoghue, CEO and co-founder of Subtext, to discuss how AI is reshaping brand-consumer relationships in today's cluttered digital landscape. Subtext, a short message service marketing platform, recorded remarkable growth last year, notching a more than 100% revenue increase in 2025. Donoghue emphasized that while AI is inevitable, its proper application is critical. Rather than replacing human voices, Subtext uses AI to analyze consumer responses and generate actionable insights. "People want to talk through machines, not to machines," he explained, highlighting that brands foregoing genuine human connection risk losing relevance in an increasingly automated world. As email marketing faces AI-driven disruption similar to what search experienced, more publishers are turning to SMS to maintain direct audience relationships without big tech gatekeepers. This episode explores what the balance between AI efficiency and human connection will look like in 2026 and 2027, and how brands are preparing for the AI-driven transformation of traditional communication channels. Are direct, unfiltered connections an essential strategy to stand out in an increasingly automated world? More S&P Global content: Technology, Media, & Telecoms GenAI VC Funding: A 2026 Outlook Featured experts: Mike Donoghue, CEO and co-founder of Subtext Credits: Host/Author: Mike Reynolds Producer/Editor: Sarah James www.spglobal.com www.spglobal.com/market-intelligence

    18 min
  6. Wired vs. Wireless: The Convergence Trends Reshaping Telecom in 2026

    19 FEB

    Wired vs. Wireless: The Convergence Trends Reshaping Telecom in 2026

    "MediaTalk" host Mike Reynolds is joined by three analysts from S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan to discuss the evolving landscape of mobile and broadband markets across the US and Europe in 2026. The discussion highlighted how connectivity has become the central focus for telecommunications providers, with streaming service aggregation emerging as the new strategic approach for traditional operators seeking to maintain relevance in an increasingly competitive marketplace. The conversation revealed contrasting trends in pay TV markets, with the US showing some resilience in 2025 after years of decline, particularly through virtual providers like YouTube TV. European markets have experienced less dramatic subscriber losses due to stronger bundling strategies and robust free-to-air options that continue to satisfy consumer demand. These regional differences underscore how market structures and consumer preferences continue to shape telecommunications business models differently across geographies. The analysts emphasized how the convergence of fixed and mobile services is fundamentally reshaping competition in the telecommunications sector. T-Mobile's strategic expansion into fiber, cable companies' growing mobile service offerings, and the acceleration of fixed wireless access are creating new competitive dynamics that blur traditional industry boundaries. Meanwhile, the media landscape continues to transform as telecommunications companies increasingly divest content assets that are being consolidated by dedicated media companies. These shifts suggest a fundamental restructuring of how telecommunications services will be packaged, marketed and delivered to consumers in the coming years. More S&P Global content: Technology, Media, & Telecoms Fixed wireless subscribers by state  Featured experts: Lynnette Luna, senior research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. John Fletcher, principal research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. Mohammed Hamza, principal research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. Credits: Host/Author: Mike Reynolds Producer/Editor: Sarah James www.spglobal.com www.spglobal.com/market-intelligence

    27 min
  7. Will Super Bowl 60 Set New Viewership Records or Fall Short?

    5 FEB

    Will Super Bowl 60 Set New Viewership Records or Fall Short?

    Super Bowl 60 is not just the biggest NFL game of the year — it is arguably the single biggest media and advertising event on the sports calendar. "MediaTalk" host Mike Reynolds is joined by a panel of S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan analysts to unpack how NBC's presentation of the big game across NBC, Telemundo and Peacock turns the matchup into a cross-platform showcase designed to maximize reach and ad yield. The episode examines the NFL's strong regular-season audience and how recent Nielsen measurement changes — especially "Big Data + Panel" and expanded out-of-home tracking — matter when interpreting year-over-year growth. The discussion also touches on streaming's continued momentum and how premium live sports can scale outside traditional TV, even as linear remains the dominant mass-reach environment. On the ad side, the headline is pricing: the most expensive 30-second spots reportedly fetched $10 million this year, with the average around $8 million. Advertisers remain willing to pay up for the cultural impact and attention that is hard to replicate elsewhere. The group also flags the expected surge of AI-themed Super Bowl advertisers and debates whether this year can match last season's 127.7 million record audience. More S&P Global content: The Business of Sports  Moneyball: The impact of sports media rights on the US video market Featured experts: Justin Nielson, head of Kagan Research at S&P Global Market Intelligence. Scott Robson, principal analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. Michael Johnson, research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence Kagan. Credits: Host/Author: Mike Reynolds Producer/Editor: Sarah James www.spglobal.com www.spglobal.com/market-intelligence

    23 min

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S&P Global Market Intelligence analysts and reporters take a deep dive into issues facing the evolving media landscape. Tune in for interviews with industry insiders and analysts as well as brief outlooks for the TMT sector. If you are interested in learning more about TMT/SPGMI offerings, please visit https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/campaigns/tmt

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