Los Angeles Times

ESPN joins forces with Vice Media

The companies make a deal to provide each with access to the other’s programmin­g.

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio@latimes.com

Sports TV behemoth ESPN is going to start hanging out with the cool kids at Vice Media.

The two media companies announced Tuesday that they are joining forces in a deal that will provide each with access to the other’s programmin­g.

Vice, which has attracted a strong following among younger media consumers for its edgy storytelli­ng style, will create new programmin­g for the Walt Disney Co.- owned sports media company, which it will share with ESPN’s cable network and digital platforms.

In return, Brooklyn, N. Y.based Vice will get access to re- air some of the highly acclaimed documentar­y f ilms from ESPN’s “30 for 30” series for airing on its recently launched Viceland cable network.

The companies said they will also collaborat­e on programs that “look at dominant athletes, fascinatin­g characters and championsh­ip events that reside outside the mainstream.” They are also developing a short- form animated series.

Current Vice programs will also get exposure on ESPN channels, including the Vice digital series “The Clubhouse,” which features athletes presenting their unf iltered views in short videos, and “Vice World of Sports,” the weekly Viceland show that examines the relationsh­ip between sports and society.

For ESPN, Vice programs offer a way to connect with younger viewers who are eschewing traditiona­l cable subscripti­ons for online viewing and over- the- top streaming services. While Bristol, Conn.- based ESPN remains highly profitable, the slow decline of cable subscriber­s has cut into what has long been a major revenue source for the network and caused consternat­ion among analysts who follow Disney.

But Vice is also pleased with the associatio­n with the award- winning “30 for 30” series, based on a statement from company co- founder and Chief Executive Shane Smith.

“To be teaming up with ESPN, creating brand- new sports shows for them, and then showing ‘ 30 for 30s’ on Viceland is perhaps one of the favorite moments in my profession­al life,” he said. “I can now die a happy man. No, wait, we have to take over the world f irst! Here it comes baby, Vice World of Sports!!”

Disney has invested $ 400 million in Vice Media, giving it a 10% stake in the company. The programmin­g deal gives the Vice brand name broad exposure on ESPN’s channels, which reach 86 million cable and satellite homes as well as millions of digital and mobile users.

“Shane and the team at Vice do an extraordin­ary job presenting stories through their own, very unique lens — and working with them will help to bring a new perspectiv­e to our storytelli­ng,” ESPN President John Skipper said.

Launched in 1994, Vice grew into a popular destinatio­n for young adults through its websites and a weekly news magazine series on HBO.

But over the last year it has been increasing its push into the television business with Viceland, a 24- hour cable channel that airs nonfiction f ilms and programs that focus on travel, food, sports, gaming, fashion and music. The channel is operated in partnershi­p with Disney’s A+ E Networks.

Vice is also in the process of ramping up a daily news program for HBO that is expected to debut this year.

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