President Joe Biden will give his State of the Union address tonight at 9 p.m. Eastern.
The Washington Post’s Jennifer Rubin wrote, “I don’t envy the White House speechwriters. They no doubt spent weeks preparing for a State of the Union address touting the economic recovery, the prospect of a post-pandemic return to normal and the administration’s inflation-fighting plans. Then the world changed.”
What’s happening in Ukraine almost certainly has the speechwriters rewriting. On Monday, White House press secretary Jen Psaki told MSNBC’s Peter Alexander and Kristen Welker, “Certainly, what we’re seeing on the ground in Ukraine, the fact that the president has built a coalition of countries around the world to stand up to Russian aggression, to stand up to President Putin, to put in place crippling sanctions, that will be a part of what people will hear in the speech. That wouldn’t have been the case three months ago.”
Rubin wrote that Biden needs to focus on Russia: “Biden needs a very different State of the Union. Instead of defending remarkable domestic progress, with foreign policy relegated to the back end of the speech, he needs to flip the order and build the speech around a historic moment when the United States is leading a worldwide coalition in defense of freedom. This is a time for public education.”
Here are some more thoughts and previews of tonight’s State of the Union:
Now it’s official
We knew this was coming, but now it’s official. Chris Licht will be the next president of CNN.
Licht is a veteran TV producer who helped create MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” and helped revamp “CBS This Morning.” He is currently the executive producer of “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”
CNN’s parent company, WarnerMedia, is in the final stages of its merger with Discovery. That should wrap up in April. On Monday, Discovery CEO David Zaslav said, “We plan to appoint Chris Licht as the new Chairman and CEO of CNN Global, hopefully starting May 1.”
According to CNN’s Brian Stelter, Licht wrote to CNN staffers, “I know you have a lot of questions. Perhaps the biggest one is how will CNN change? The honest answer is that I don't know yet. David Zaslav has given me one simple directive: To ensure that CNN remains the global leader in NEWS as part of Warner Bros. Discovery.”
Meanwhile, Zaslav wrote to CNN employees, “I am a news junkie at the core and was lucky earlier in my career at NBC to play a role in starting CNBC and MSNBC. I have long been a big fan and admirer of CNN with its extended leadership in breaking news, global news, and investigative reporting. The coverage most recently from Ukraine has been extraordinary.”
Licht takes over for Jeff Zucker, who resigned last month because, in part, he had not disclosed that he was in a relationship with one of his top lieutenants at the network. Licht has a sterling reputation in the TV industry because of his work on shows such as “Morning Joe” and Colbert’s late-night show. But now he will be charged with running an entire network that has shown just how strong and valuable it is over the past week covering the war in Ukraine.
He wrote to CNN staffers, “I am a journalist at heart. While I have enjoyed every minute at ‘The Late Show,’ I am joining CNN because I feel a genuine pull to return to news at such a critical moment in history. CNN is uniquely positioned to be a beacon of meaningful, impactful journalism for the world. I am committed to upholding and building on CNN's legacy.”
Axios’ big hire
Axios is making a major push into local news and on Monday, it made a major hire. Jamie Stockwell, a deputy national editor for The New York Times who has overseen coverage of Texas, has been named executive editor for Axios Local. Stockwell was previously a managing editor of the San Antonio Express-News and a reporter at The Washington Post.
Axios’ Sara Fischer wrote, “Stockwell will oversee Axios’ plan to expand its coverage to 25 local cities by the summer, and 50 by the end of 2023. Eventually, it hopes to be in over 100 cities and every state.”
As Fischer noted, Axios has local newsletters in Atlanta, Austin, Charlotte, Chicago, Columbus, D.C., Dallas, Denver, Des Moines, Nashville, Northwest Arkansas, Philadelphia, Tampa Bay and the Twin Cities. It has plans to launch newsletters in Baltimore, Boston, Detroit, Houston, Miami, Phoenix, Raleigh, Richmond, Salt Lake City, San Francisco and Seattle.
In a tweet, Stockwell wrote, “It’s truly a dream role, an opportunity to reinvent and reimagine local journalism with a team of visionary leaders. Those who know me know how passionate I am about local reporting, and how critical I believe it is to reach readers in their communities. We are a divided and polarized nation whose future is at stake. I believe the solution begins with local journalism.”
Charlotte Observer journalists launch union drive
For this item, I turn it over to my Poynter colleague Angela Fu.
Journalists at The Charlotte Observer announced Friday they are unionizing with the NewsGuild and are asking McClatchy to voluntarily recognize their union.
“We seek to ensure a firm future for the newspaper,” they wrote in their mission statement. “That future must be built on fair and equitable pay, transparency from our leadership and a guarantee of continued opportunities for future generations of Observer journalists.”
Nine McClatchy newsrooms have launched union drives since July 2020, when hedge fund Chatham Asset Management won the auction to buy the chain out of Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization. The Observer is the 10th. In their announcement, Observer journalists mention the acquisition by Chatham and write that they are seeking job protections after “years of instability and cuts.”
In recent years, McClatchy has voluntarily recognized most of its newsrooms’ unions. If the Observer’s union is not recognized, journalists there will have the option of petitioning the National Labor Relations Board for an election to get their union certified. Unionization has become increasingly popular within the media industry over the past decade. News publications have launched more than 200 union drives since 2012, and the vast majority of them have been successful.
Changes at The Undefeated
Big changes at The Undefeated — the ESPN site that covers the intersection of race, sports and culture.
It’s changing its name and expanding its coverage area.
The new name: Andscape. And the coverage? Raina Kelley, Andscape’s editor-in-chief, tells The New York Times’ Brooks Barnes, “It’s time to talk about Black and everything. Far beyond just sports and athletes.”
Barnes added, “How do you be an individual as a Black person in America with your own unique set of interests, some of which are bound together by melanin, but not all of them? And how do you feel whole? We wanted to create a space where Black people could be Black people: Black led, Black P.O.V., absolutely. But also where there were no definitions and no rules about what being Black meant, what you had to talk about.”
The Undefeated launched in 2016 and was a part of ESPN.com. But under this new name and rebrand, it will have a much larger presence — including live events, music, TV and film.
So why the name change? Barnes pointed out that “ESPN and Disney do not fully own The Undefeated trademark outside of news and commentary. There is an Undefeated apparel and sneaker company that has no affiliation, for instance.”
Kelley told Barnes, “We couldn’t be everything we wanted to be. Now that we’re growing across the Walt Disney Company, we needed a name that was unencumbered completely.”
NYT-Athletic news
Back in January, the media world was stunned when The New York Times bought the sports website, The Athletic, for $550 million.
Sports and media observers now are waiting to see what the acquisition will end up looking like. There’s no question that the Times is committed to The Athletic. That’s obvious seeing as how they spent a half-billion dollars to get it.
Now another interesting sign: Claudio Cabrera, a five-year veteran at The New York Times, is moving over to The Athletic to become the first vice president of audience and newsroom strategy.
In its announcement, The Times wrote, “He will be defining The Athletic audience strategy, building an audience team to execute it and closely partnering with The Athletic’s newsroom on coverage.”
Before joining The Times, Cabrera led search and social for two years at CBS.
Play ball? Not for a while