Black News Channel, a cable news network that went on the air two years ago to provide an alternative look at news from Black Americans’ perspective, is shutting down, the outlet’s chief executive told employees on Friday.
“Due to challenging market conditions and global financial pressures, we have been unable to meet our financial goals, and the timeline afforded to us has run out,”
Princell Hair,
who has been chief executive since July 2020, wrote in a memo to staff. “Effective immediately, BNC will cease live production and file for bankruptcy.”
Black News Channel’s abrupt closure comes just a year after the network revamped its lineup with high-profile commentators like
Charles Blow
and
Marc Lamont Hill,
and added a new morning show. It also shows the difficulties traditional cable-TV channels face as cord-cutting continues and consumers turn away from the channel dial.
The network, which was co-founded by former Oklahoma congressman
J.C. Watts,
is largely backed by automotive-parts billionaire and Jacksonville Jaguars owner
Shad Khan.
Mr. Khan had explored a sale of some or all of the network in recent months, people familiar with the matter said. Mr. Khan, who has invested roughly $50 million in BNC, won’t invest any further, according to some of the people. A spokesman for Mr. Khan had no comment.
By 5 p.m. ET on Friday, the network will start running old programming, which will last through the rest of this month, according to one of the people familiar with the matter.
BNC’s more than 200 employees didn’t receive their paychecks this week, the people said. They won’t receive severance pay or benefits beyond the end of the month, the people said. It couldn’t be learned whether they would receive the paychecks they were supposed to get this week.
Under Mr. Hair’s leadership, BNC landed distribution deals with most pay-TV providers, including
Comcast Corp.’s
Xfinity,
Dish Network Corp.
and DirecTV. The network said it reached roughly 50 million households.
BNC didn’t receive fees from distributors for carrying its channel, according to one of the people familiar with the matter. Instead, the network relied on advertising revenue and funding from its backer—a practice that is commonplace for most upstart cable channels.
The network’s viewership hit a peak of 80,000 this week, according to Nielsen data, as it aired wall-to-wall coverage of confirmation hearings for Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman nominated to the Supreme Court.
Mr. Hair, a TV veteran whose resume includes
CBS,
CNN, Turner Broadcasting and NBC Sports, had looked to shake up the cable-TV news landscape, which has seen audiences divided among major networks like CNN,
Fox
News and MSNBC. Fox News parent Fox Corp. and Wall Street Journal parent
News Corp
share common ownership.
Write to Lillian Rizzo at Lillian.Rizzo@wsj.com
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