Phil Mattingly has been named chief domestic correspondent at CNN. His focus for now will be on Donald Trump’s presidential campaign.
Mattingly had been co-hosting CNN’s morning show before it was scrapped by network boss Mark Thompson earlier this month. But Thompson had high praise for Mattingly in the announcement of his new job, saying, “Phil Mattingly is one of the strongest political journalists and anchors we have at CNN.”
Mattingly has been with CNN since 2015.
Hasan’s new venture
Earlier this year, Mehdi Hasan announced he was leaving MSNBC after the network surprisingly, and to the dismay of many viewers, canceled his Sunday night show.
Just last week, it was announced that he will write a column for US Guardian. But now he’s putting something bigger on his plate. He is starting his own new subscription digital media company called Zeteo, which means “seek out.” The site is billed as having a “strong bias for the truth and an unwavering belief in the media’s responsibility to the public.”
Other media types have tried this idea, including conservative media figures such as Tucker Carlson, Bill O’Reilly and Megyn Kelly.
But Hasan told The Washington Post’s Jeremy Barr, “No one really on the progressive left has been able to pull off anything similar.”
The site started to roll out Wednesday, and will have a full launch on Substack in April. It will include a weekly streaming show hosted by Hasan called “Mehdi Unfiltered,” a weekly podcast and written pieces by various contributors. Barr reported the cost for annual subscriptions will come out to $6 a month. Hasan told Barr that he has raised $4 million from friends, family and fans.
He told Barr, “I’m not someone who can just sit back and just not have an outlet where I can say what I need to say. I’m restless, always.”
He added, “This is one of the biggest news years of our lives, and that’s why I wanted to do something like this. I’m not a businessman. I’m not an entrepreneur. I’ve never done anything like this before. It’s a huge gamble. But if I wasn’t confident, I wouldn’t be doing this.”
Sherman’s TV future in question
Former NFL star Richard Sherman, who is now a regular guest on FS1’s “Undisputed” with Skip Bayless and an analyst on Amazon Prime’s “Thursday Night Football” pregame and postgame shows, was arrested last weekend in Washington state on suspicion of driving under the influence.
In 2022, Sherman pleaded guilty to two misdemeanor charges stemming from a drunken driving and domestic disturbance the year before.
FSI’s “Undisputed” was on break last week and Sherman’s incident and future with the show was not discussed when it returned this week.
The Seattle Times’ Lauren Girgis reported that King County prosecutors said they’ll wait for blood test results before deciding whether to charge Sherman, who spent most of his career in Seattle. Girgis wrote, “It’s standard for prosecutors to wait for test results in such cases, according to a Prosecuting Attorney’s Office spokesperson. The timeline for receiving test results depends on the workload of the state crime lab, which takes almost a full year, on average, to turn around blood tests in suspected Washington DUI cases, delaying the prosecutorial process.”
If it might take a year, it’s unknown if Fox Sports and Amazon Prime would keep Sherman off the air or allow him to keep working.
Sherman is one of several guests who have taken over on “Undisputed” for Shannon Sharpe, who left the show after his working relationship with Bayless turned sour (although Sharpe did thank Bayless when he left). On a recent episode of his “Nightcap” podcast, Sharpe talked about Sherman, saying the latest news was “really tough” to hear.
Sharpe added, “For Sherm to put himself back in harm’s way and to potentially bring others, that’s what I’m most disappointed in. Because he knows better. You brought every other car that’s on the road into the equation. We always say what didn’t happen, but then when it does happen, ‘Thoughts and prayers.’ Thoughts and prayers ain’t help nobody. I know Sherm. And I just hate that he put himself back in this situation. Take time, get this problem solved, bro. Because you’re better than this. You have a lot to give, and I would hate to see you really, really, not only hurt yourself, but harm someone else. Right now, your television career should be the last thing on your mind. The first thing that should be on your mind is getting the help that you need so you can be there for your family.”
Celebrating the careers of two sportswriters
I wanted to take a moment to celebrate the careers of two excellent sportswriters who wrote farewell columns this week.
First up, NFL writer Peter King, whose epic-length “Monday Morning Quarterback” columns became a must-read for football fans and, arguably, the single most important weekly column in recent sports memory. It certainly was the most important NFL column. King spent 44 years covering the NFL, most of them for Sports Illustrated. He spent the past several years working at NBC Sports.
Fittingly, King, 66, wrote a 12,000-word-plus farewell column, saying, “It’s time.”
Appearing on Richard Deitsch’s sports media podcast, King said he no longer enjoyed all the grind work that comes with the 24/7 NFL news cycle, such as figuring out who teams might take in the draft, or which coaches are going to be fired, and the latest free agent news.
King said he isn’t necessarily done working, although he wants to do nothing for the next few months. He told Deitsch that he might be interested in teaching.
But King had some interesting comments when Deitsch asked him what he might tell students who have dreams of entering a journalism industry that is so unstable.
“It’s easily the saddest time since I got my first job in the business with the Associated Press in early 1980,” King said. “And it continues to be. You just think, ‘Well, we’ve hit the floor.’ And then there’s a lower floor to be hit. That’s one of the things that worries me about standing in front of a group of 25 young students who are incredibly excited about getting into either the journalism business or something in the media business. The business is bad right now.”
King said some young people might find the career they want in journalism, but many might need to use the skills they learn to work in industries such as public relations. Some, he added, might find that the only way to make a living working in sports is to work for team or league-run websites.
“But,” King said, holding out hope for the future of journalism, “it’s different, but not impossible.”
Then the other sportswriter who is moving on: Helene Elliott wrote a superb farewell column for the Los Angeles Times. I sat alongside Elliott at many Stanley Cup playoff games over the years, and she was always a gem to be around with her dry sense of humor. Most of all, she has been a heck of a sportswriter over her 47-year career, the past 34 at the Los Angeles Times.
Remembering Richard Lewis