“It was the missing piece for us.”
With that one sentence, ESPN president of content Burke Magnus summed up why the most famous four letters in sports media wanted Inside the NBA for decades—and how the iconic studio show has pushed ESPN’s 2026 NBA Finals coverage to a whole new level.
For more than 20 years, ESPN’s NBA Countdown tried and failed to compete against TNT Sports’s irreverent program. ESPN experimented with a revolving-door cast that included everyone from Bill Simmons to Magic Johnson. But nothing worked.
If you can’t beat them, join them.
When Warner Bros. Discovery’s TNT Sports lost its NBA media rights in 2024, Inside the NBA’s future was uncertain. Then, ESPN swooped in with an offer for TNT: What if we trade a package of Big 12 college football and basketball games for licensing rights to the legendary show? TNT agreed. Just like that, the competing networks pulled off the biggest media trade since Disney sent announcer Al Michaels to NBC for the intellectual property rights to Oswald the Lucky Rabbit in 2006.
Nobody was sure how the shotgun marriage between two longtime competitors would work. But Inside the NBA officially premiered on ESPN and ABC on Oct. 22. By all metrics, the unique arrangement has been a success.
The Emmy-award-winning program starring Charles Barkley, Shaquille O’Neal, Kenny Smith, and Ernie Johnson is still produced by TNT. Despite ominous predictions that ESPN would “ruin” the program, the Worldwide Leader has been hands-off with TNT, which maintains complete editorial control. With the studio show’s first NBA Finals underway, Magnus couldn’t be happier about getting his mitts on the show after fruitlessly competing against it for years.
“It was the missing piece for us. No disrespect to the pregame shows we’ve been producing for many years now. But I put Inside the NBA and College GameDay in my personal top two all-time sports studio shows,” Magnus told Front Office Sports after watching the Knicks’ Game 4 comeback win over the Spurs in person at Madison Square Garden.
“Having to compete with the best that there’s ever been is a tall order for anybody. Being able to bring them over, and add them to our game coverage, which I believe is at an extremely high level, has just made us that much better. It has seamlessly come on board where it feels very comfortable for everybody involved.”
The biggest change for the Inside the NBA cast and viewers is that Barkley & Co. finally got to work the NBA Finals this year. For decades, they were relegated to spot appearances on NBA TV during the league’s marquee event because ABC/ESPN held the exclusive rights.
Watching Barkley joking with NBA Countdown host Malika Andrews, or Johnson throwing it to game announcer Mike Breen during has been a delight. The cast’s chemistry is unmatched. The TNT-produced program makes the Finals feel bigger, more fun, more freewheeling.
For the first time, ESPN’s NBA Finals studio coverage is must-see TV. Viewers have responded. Monday’s Game 3 edition of NBA Tipoff pulled 10 million viewers across ABC/ESPN. That was up 173% from the comparable edition of NBA Countdown last year. It was the most-watched edition of the show ever.
Unlike other studio shows, Inside the NBA can pivot from silly and funny to brutally honest and controversial. During ESPN/ABC’s coverage of the Knicks’ historic comeback against the Spurs Wednesday night, the cast ably demonstrated why it has been hailed as the finest studio show in sports media history.
When TNT techs handed actor Ben Stiller a defective microphone on the pregame show, Barkley cracked: “Nice job, crew!” The Diesel, meanwhile, delighted on-air guest John McEnroe by sharing his nickname at the local tennis club: “BlackEnroe.”
But when the Spurs choked away a 29-point lead over the Knicks by continuing to miss three-point shots, the gloves came off. Barkley pulled no punches about the Spurs’ historic collapse. If Victor Wembanyama doesn’t like it, too damn bad. He’ll have to take his medicine from the outspoken analyst like everybody else over the years, including Michael Jordan.
“We saw the dumbest basketball team in the history of civilization,” declared the Chuckster. “They had a 25-point lead. Took eight straight threes…That was some of the most mismanaged, stupid basketball. When you blow a 29-point lead, the other team has to help you. The San Antonio Spurs helped the New York Knicks win this game by doing some of the stupid-ass stuff I’ve seen on a basketball court.”
Some network executives might be taken aback by that kind of commentary. Not Magnus. He loved it.
“Charles is going to be Charles. The reason you get the moments like that, at the end of the show, is because that’s who he is as a person. I’ve really enjoyed getting to know Charles and I consider him a friend. To me, he’s the best who’s ever done it in that type of studio environment,” he says. “He has Hall of Fame credentials. Obviously, he was a fantastic player. He’s got all the credibility you could possibly want. And he’s just brutally honest and astonishingly funny at times. It’s a great combination.”
While ESPN, Disney and TNT bask in the glow of critical praise, it’s easy to forget how close the show came to going away for good. But ultimately, the trade worked out for both sides. ESPN, which had been lusting after Barkley and his castmates for years, got the show. TNT got valuable game inventory to replace its old NBA rights–while saving a beloved property for legions of loyal viewers. As the icing on the cake, Johnson just won the Sports Emmy for Outstanding Studio host in May.
“It was opportunistic on both sides,” says Magnus. ”The rights they got from us are an important component for them. It really was a win-win. As we sit here watching the Finals, and seeing Charles and Shaq and Ernie and Kenny and Draymond [Green] last night, it has been an amazing addition…The talent has been a joy to work with. The Turner staff have been fantastic to work with on the production side. We have been true to our word–and not meddled in the situation. I think it has been a great partnership because of all those components.”
It hasn’t all been flowers and roses for Inside the NBA’s first season on ESPN. The network took a lot of heat for airing the show sparingly during the first half of the season, then backloading it around the start of the NBA Playoffs. But that was not ESPN’s idea, say sources. Since Barkley & Co. remained TNT employees, the network was trying to keep the cast free for a possible new show last fall that would have covered multiple sports; not just basketball. ESPN wasn’t thrilled with the arrangement. But the brass in Bristol decided it wasn’t worth blowing up the deal. So they bit the bullet and agreed.
Magnus was reluctant to address the specifics of the negotiations. But he did admit he wants to air Inside the NBA on a more regular basis next season: “Phase 2, as far I’m concerned, is to try to get [scheduling] more balanced…That’s on the to-do list for next season.”
ESPN/ABC controls TV rights to the NBA Finals through the 2035-2036 season. Barkley has announced his retirement more times than you can count. But he always comes back. So I asked Magnus: How long do you want to keep the Beatles of Basketball together?
“As long as they want to do it,” he says. “I know that’s a little bit of a cliche. But as long as they want to do it. It’s remarkable. The one thing I’ve learned in my time on this side of the business is that chemistry is extremely hard to find and get and maintain. They’re all in various stages of their careers. So who knows? But as long as they’re willing to do it, we’ll have a home for them.”