The flagship, direct-to-consumer version of ESPN will not be a mere streaming service, insists company chair Jimmy Pitaro, but rather a distillation of all the company’s various offerings and capabilities.
Already the most pressing initiative for not only ESPN, but perhaps parent company Walt Disney Co., the forthcoming offering will feature a wide variety of enhanced features, including multi-screen viewing, full integration with ESPN Bet, ticketing, and merchandising, fantasy content, user personalization, and advanced statistics, among others. The existing ESPN+ will also be available within the flagship ESPN streaming service.
“It’s not just about flipping the switch [and making the network available direct-to-consumer],” Pitaro said, appearing Thursday at the Columbia University Sports Management Conference. “When we do this, it will come with significant product enhancements. Yes, you’ll be able to get all of our networks. But the shoulder experience around the video will be much more interactive and it will be much more personalized. … I could go on and on, but we have an army of engineers and designers on all of this right now.”
The service, expected to cost around $30 per month, is still set to debut next summer, in time for the 2025 college and pro football seasons, as ESPN and Disney officials have detailed for many months.
‘Worldwide Leader’ Tag Again Dismissed
Pitaro, meanwhile, remained quite clear on one of his foremost pet peeves: any reference to the sports media giant as the “Worldwide Leader in Sports.”
The network used that slogan for many years, particularly as it was growing into the dominant, multi-platform entity it now is, and top on-air talent such as Stephen A. Smith still use the moniker now. But Pitaro said the nickname still gets very much under his skin.
“It’s always felt un-ESPN-like,” Pitaro said of the “Worldwide Leader” framing. “The fact that historically we’ve referred to ourselves that way, it’s always felt a bit off from my perspective. I’m fine if other people want to refer to ESPN in that way. But let’s focus on serving the sports fan. Let’s be of service. That’s our mission.”
Those comments expand on those he made in late August during a press day at network headquarters in Bristol, Conn. There, he said of the Worldwide Leader” nickname that “I don’t think it’s representative of the culture here,” building on efforts by the former Yahoo executive to downplay the moniker since he began his current role in 2018.
Instead, Pitaro continues to lean hard into the current ESPN mission statement of “to serve sports fans. Anytime. Anywhere.”
“We really mean that, and any employee [of ours] will be able to tell you that,” Pitaro said Thursday. “I believe our employees know where we’re going and they know what we need to do. We’re operating in an incredibly challenging environment. There’s no way around that. There’s fewer people watching television today than there were yesterday, and there will be fewer people tomorrow.”
Within that mission statement, Pitaro said all network functions are guided by four key business priorities: direct-to-consumer operations, audience expansion, quality storytelling and programming, and innovation, with the flagship streaming service leaning heavily into that last notion.