• Loading stock data...
Friday, February 13, 2026
opinion
Media

Fox’s Terrible Week: Harassment Lawsuit, Venu Cancellation

Between a 42-page lawsuit and the end of the company’s live-streaming bundle bet, Fox Sports has endured a singularly tough week.

Nov 16, 2024; Boulder, Colorado, USA; General view of a Fox Sports end zone broadcast camera before the game between the Utah Utes against the Colorado Buffaloes at Folsom Field.
Ron Chenoy/Imagn Images
Exclusive

Orioles Owner Met With Jeffrey Epstein

The meeting has not been previously reported.
Read Now
February 12, 2026 |

One week ago, Front Office Sports was first to report the news of a bombshell workplace misconduct lawsuit filed against Fox Sports by a former hairstylist. 

The 42-page lawsuit takes a kitchen-sink approach; enumerating the whole litany of claims takes a lot of words. The most salacious of them are against FS1 exec Charlie Dixon, former host Skip Bayless, and current host Joy Taylor. 

Fox, Fox Sports, FS1, and FS2 are all named as defendants in the suit.

The plaintiff, Noushin Faraji, accuses Bayless of years of sexual harassment, offering her $1.5 million for sex, and accusing her of sleeping with Shannon Sharpe; she accuses Taylor of sleeping with Dixon and Emmanuel Acho; she accuses Dixon of grabbing her buttocks at a bar, and elevating Taylor thanks to their relationship; she accuses Fox of ignoring multiple complaints she lodged with HR over the years. 

The lawsuit has possible ripple effects beyond those named in the document. Marcellus Wiley, who hosted the FS1 show Speak for Yourself for four years and was replaced on the show in 2022 by Joy Taylor and LeSean McCoy, told Jason Whitlock in the wake of the lawsuit, “Lawyers are reaching out to me. Because when they saw me get surprised by the allegations, especially the one about Charlie Dixon, they said, ‘That is actionable.’ Now I’m trying to make sure that everything that I went through, and everything that I read in that article, is actually true.” It sounds like Wiley is getting legal advice urging him to file his own lawsuit for wrongful termination.

What will happen next? What will Fox do with Dixon? Who else will come out of the woodwork to corroborate or deny the claims? All we know for sure is that the lawsuit won’t go quietly into the night. 

By Friday, perhaps the news cycle around the lawsuit had died down just a little bit, giving Fox’s crisis PR people a reprieve. But then came the news that Venu, the highly anticipated live sports streaming bundle from Fox, Disney, and WBD, is dead

The news that Venu is canceled came as a shock just a few days after Disney bought 70% of Fubo, the “little guy” who had sued the television goliaths to block Venu from launching. (Fubo CEO David Gandler told me in an interview in October, “Our goal is to really demonstrate the negative impact these types of companies have had on the industry as a whole, particularly over the last 35 years, and consumers have really paid the price for it.” Nevermind.) By swallowing its loudest opponent, it looked like Disney did Fox and WBD a solid and cleared Venu’s path to launch. Nope.

“After careful consideration, we have collectively agreed to discontinue the Venu Sports joint venture, and not launch the streaming service,” the triumvirate said in a statement. “In an ever-changing marketplace, we determined that it was best to meet the evolving demands of sports fans by focusing on existing products and distribution channels.”

Or they determined that the effort has become more trouble than it’s worth, an albatross around their necks that lawmakers are still likely to block, even after Fubo got removed from the equation. A judge in August agreed with Fubo’s accusations that Venu was anti-competitive and granted a temporary injunction against Venu that stopped it from launching. In November, the DOJ and 17 state attorneys generals filed amicus briefs arguing Venu should not be allowed to watch. DealBook reports that the DOJ “was not pleased to learn that Disney had acquired a rival apparently to make an antitrust case go away.”

The death of Venu is arguably a more crushing loss for Fox than for Disney, which is more focused on its ESPN direct-to-consumer offering “Flagship” anyway. Fox has no such exciting imminent OTT offering, and WBD is reeling from missing out on the new NBA rights package but has responded by gobbling up other rights like college football games and Unrivaled women’s basketball.

On top of all this, Fox faces a $2.7 billion defamation suit on the news side of the house from electronic voting system company Smartmatic. It settled a similar lawsuit by paying Dominion Voting Systems $787 million in 2023.  

Fox Sports has endured a tough past few years and remains the perennial No. 2 in the live sports broadcast race. It has attempted to make its college football show, Big Noon Kickoff, a real challenger to ESPN’s College GameDay, but the latter is far ahead, often with double the viewership. ESPN says 2024 was GameDay’s most-watched season ever.

Fox has gone all-in on soccer in the last few years, but losing the next two FIFA Women’s World Cups to Netflix was another blow. 

Despite it all, Fox has the Super Bowl on Feb 9. It’s the biggest annual spectacle left on live TV and a chance for Fox to get some glory back. Tom Brady will be in the booth. Kendrick Lamar will be on stage at halftime. Fox will look to get people to stop talking about Netflix. FOS will be there with a team on the ground.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Unrivaled Leans Into NBA Arenas After Making Millions in Philly

The second-year league is thriving on the road while struggling on TV.

LA28 Stands by Casey Wasserman After Reviewing Epstein Ties

Abby Wambach and Chappell Roan have left Wasserman this week.
Jan 17, 2025; Miami, FL, USA; Angel Reese (5) of the Rose takes a shot against the Vinyl in the first half of the Unrivaled women’s professional 3v3 basketball league at Wayfair Arena

Angel Reese Rejoins Unrivaled For Team’s Final Three Games

Reese will rejoin Rose BC to finish out the regular season.
Oct 9, 2024; Charlotte, NC, USA; Pittsburgh head coach Tory Verdi during ACC Media Days at The Hilton Charlotte Uptown.

Former Players Sue Pitt, Women’s Basketball Coach, Alleging Abuse

Six individual suits allege a pattern of “emotional and psychological abuse.”

Featured Today

Epstein Emails Show His F1 Ties Ran Deep

The sex trafficker’s circles included many of the biggest names in F1.
February 6, 2026

Milan’s Olympic Village Is Built for Performance—and Partying

Making Milan’s Olympic Village was a five-year sprint.
February 5, 2026

Welcome to the Prediction-Market Super Bowl

Hundreds of millions of dollars are being traded across many platforms.
Feb 1, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; New England Patriots players arrive prior to Super Bowl LX at San Jose Mineta International Airport.
February 3, 2026

Private Equity Has Reached the Super Bowl

The Patriots are one of four NFL teams with PE investment.

‘Have to Pinch Myself’: Chris Berman Marvels at ESPN Getting Super Bowl

Expect Berman to be pivotal in ESPN’s two Super Bowl broadcasts.
exclusive
February 12, 2026

YouTube Pirating of Netflix’s Sports Podcasts Has Already Begun

A channel got 100k+ views reposting content from The Volume’s football show.
February 12, 2026

NBC’s Winter Olympics TV Viewership Up 93% Through 5 Days

Viewership nearly doubles compared to the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Sponsored

Olympic Hockey Betting Preview: USA and Canada Take Center Ice

Olympic hockey betting odds shift as USA and Canada dominate early action, per BetMGM’s 2026 Winter Games preview.
ESPN images
February 11, 2026

Disney Theme Parks, ManningCast, KidsCast: ESPN Super Bowl Plan Starts Now

ESPN installed a countdown clock at its Bristol campus.
February 11, 2026

Bad Bunny Halftime Viewership Fell 7% From Super Bowl Peak

It was the second-most-watched Super Bowl and fourth-most-watched halftime show.
February 10, 2026

Super Bowl LX Viewership Down 2%, Draws 124.9 Million Viewers

The NFL title game falls slightly from last year’s record viewership.
February 10, 2026

MLB Media Set to Handle Half of the League’s Teams in 2026

The shifts highlight the ongoing disruption across sports media.