October 23, 2025

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Fans of the iconic show Inside the NBA may have been worried that its move from TNT Sports to ESPN this season would tamp down its signature spiciness. The familiar crew debuted ahead of the Wednesday doubleheader with the same sharp banter they’ve brought for decades.

—Ryan Glasspiegel and Michael McCarthy

‘Inside the NBA’ Keeps Irreverence Intact in ESPN Debut

Screenshot via ESPN

Any question that ESPN wasn’t going to let the Inside the NBA guys be themselves was answered in the first few minutes.

The show, which moved from TNT to ESPN when the network lost NBA rights to ESPN, NBC, and Amazon Prime Video, featured the familiar ensemble of Ernie Johnson, Charles Barkley, Shaquille O’Neal, and Kenny Smith. It kicked off with a bang Wednesday before an NBA doubleheader with the Cavaliers visiting the Knicks and the Spurs visiting the Mavericks. After Barkley said he was “nervous” about his first evening on the network, Johnson rolled a clip of the many times Barkley has said on different programs, including The Dan Patrick Show, that he wouldn’t let ESPN work him “like a dog” by making him go on a bunch of talk shows.

After the montage, Barkley said it was an “honor and a privilege” to be with ESPN. The crew then riffed on a spoof graphic that showed what Barkley’s schedule with the network would look like with a dozen appearances Thursday, including spots on Get Up, First Take, and American Cornhole League. Barkley quipped that he saw Smith on ESPN’s airwaves Wednesday, “Talk about kissing ass. Did it taste like chicken? Oh! Now we’re sponsored by Popeyes!” 

The authenticity continued into the basketball talk. While there’s been discussion that the NBA wants its partners’ studio programming to be nice and friendly when talking about current players, O’Neal looked straight into the camera and told Lakers big man Deandre Ayton that he needs to “step it up,” and gave a thumbs down in assessing his performance in the Lakers’ loss to the Warriors on Tuesday night.  

“I need you to do three things,” O’Neal said, knowing that the segment would get clipped and Ayton would see it. “You’ve got to rebound, you’ve got to block shots, and you’ve got to dominate. The pressure’s not on you. You’re playing with two great players [Luka Dončić and LeBron James; the latter was out Tuesday] that get doubled a lot. When they make the little bounce pass, catch it and throw it down. You’re not getting doubled, [when] you have a small guy guarding you in the post, you turn around and shoot a fadeaway, that’s not going to get it done.” 

Barkley said Ayton should have been “on fire” and hungry to get James’s shots with the 40-year-old star out of the game. 

Later in the program, Barkley made a joke about Kawhi Leonard “having two jobs,” an obvious allusion to the reports that the Clippers allegedly skirted the salary cap through a no-show endorsement gig with environmental fintech company Aspiration. 

Other questions about the show will be answered in due course, like how much time Inside the NBA will actually get in postgame, especially during the playoffs when many of the games air on ABC and the network has to hustle out of basketball coverage to local news (and the NBA coverage is expected to migrate to ESPN’s streaming app). Nevertheless, any concerns that the program would be watered down by its affiliation with ESPN have been quelled quickly.

Marc Stein Joins Amazon NBA Coverage

Courtesy of Marc Stein

Marc Stein is taking his talents to Amazon Prime Video. 

Stein has joined Amazon’s NBA coverage as an editorial contributor, the network confirmed to Front Office Sports. Stein’s role will be off-air, making sure facts and figures are journalistically sound before they are discussed by the studio crew and game announcers on-air. It is a similar role to what the legendary late ESPN insider Chris Mortensen used to hold with Amazon’s NFL coverage. 

Stein has been covering the NBA for more than 30 years, including previous jobs with ESPN and The New York Times. He currently operates “The Stein Line” subscription outlet with deep NBA reporting, which has grown to be large enough that he added fellow NBA insider Jake Fischer to the staff. 

Amazon kicks off its NBA coverage on its Prime Video streaming service Friday, with a doubleheader featuring Celtics-Knicks and Timberwolves-Lakers. Elsewhere in the journalism department, Amazon also recently added Chris Haynes as an insider and Athletic NBA reporter Marcus Thompson for on-air feature stories. 

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Welcome to Kinder, Gentler NBA Media Coverage

Oct 21, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) looks to drive against Golden State Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga (1) during the second half at Crypto.com Arena.

William Liang-Imagn Images

The phrase “Happy NBA Day” trended on X/Twitter on Tuesday morning as fans welcomed back The Association. That’s fitting because happiness is what the NBA wants from media partners Amazon Prime Video, NBC Sports, and ABC/ESPN this season. Based on early returns, that’s what the league’s going to get.

More inspiring NBA coverage would be a departure from recent seasons when coverage has often revolved around flaming hot takes, criticism of today’s players by ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith and TNT’s Charles Barkley, and the never-ending debate over the league’s TV ratings. Where is the appreciation for the beauty and athleticism of hoops, asked critics? Or the discussion of X’s and O’s strategy so common in NFL coverage?

This spring, commissioner Adam Silver expressed his frustration to Kenny Beecham, whose “Enjoy Basketball” production company takes a cheerfully positive approach.  

“Sometimes I think they don’t spend enough time talking about why people love this game,” Silver told Beecham and his crew on the Numbers on the Board podcast. “Recently I was at a meeting with Mike Krzyzewski, the former coach at Duke. He condensed it with this headline. He said we should educate people about the game—and celebrate the game. Educate and celebrate. I wish there was more of that.”

Silver doesn’t need to issue coverage diktats to the three U.S. media partners paying a collective $77 billion over the next 11 years to televise or stream games. They know the drill—and they got the message. Moreover, a growing number of TV executives have shared their own concerns with me that hoops media has gone overboard. Especially when it comes to feuds pitting media personalities against current stars, such as Stephen A. Smith vs. LeBron James. Or Barkley vs. “bus riding” Kevin Durant. So get ready for kinder, gentler NBA coverage this season. 

No, we won’t see Sir Charles & Co. holding hands and singing kumbaya. Or ESPN’s Mike Breen wearing a “Give Peace a Chance” T-shirt. But we’ll see more appreciation for the incredible athleticism of players, more discussion of coaching strategy—and less navel-gazing over TV ratings. Consider:

Amazon Prime Video: As it did with the NFL’s Thursday Night Football, Prime will lean heavily in to analytics for inaugural U.S. coverage. The streaming giant just unveiled a new state-of-the-art studio in Los Angeles that features an all-LED regulation half-court and basketball hoop that can be used for demos all season. As Prime’s U.S. chief Jay Marine told me at the Front Office Sports Tuned In summit in New York: “Our approach is really twofold: Celebrate and educate. Celebrate the game. Celebrate how great these players are. I mean the modern player in the NBA, the skill level up and down the bench is incredible, and sometimes there’s too much weird negativity out there when really we should be celebrating how good these guys are. That’s true for the WNBA as well, which is also part of our rights deal. Then, on the educate side, it’s really about trying to teach the game within the game. Make fans smarter. And then figure out the right way to bring technology in to do that.”

NBC: The network leaned heavily in to nostalgia for its return to NBC coverage with a season-opening doubleheader Tuesday night. Viewers heard John Tesh’s familiar “Roundball Rock” theme that served as the NBA’s anthem during NBC’s previous run from 1990 to 2002. Michael Jordan, who won all six of his titles with the Bulls on NBC’s airwaves, returned for a halftime interview with Mike Tirico. Bill Simmons basically said Jordan could read the phone book during his Tirico hits and he’d still watch. The whole production had a premium look and feel, similar to Sunday Night Football. ESPN and Prime should be on notice. As ESPN’s Don Van Natta Jr. wrote on X: “The NBA on NBC is that old friend you haven’t seen in years but when you reconnect, you realize how much you missed him.”

Read Michael McCarthy’s full story on the kinder, friendlier NBA here.

Around the Dial

Amazon Prime

Amazon Prime Video

  • With Amazon Prime Video poised to show its first live NBA games Friday night, the giant streamer is leaning in to technology. In a nod to league history, Prime has dubbed its two state-of-the-art mobile production units “Bird” and “Magic” on the East and West coasts. Each unit will carry eight super slow-motion cameras and native 1080p HDR production capabilities. There will also be two production control rooms in London as Prime prepares to stream NBA coverage in 12 languages in more than 220 countries. The tech giant recently held a swanky party to unveil its new NBA on Prime studio in Culver City, Calif. Prime’s inaugural NBA coverage in the U.S. tips off Friday night with a doubleheader, featuring the Celtics at Knicks (7:30 p.m. ET), followed by the Timberwolves at Lakers (10 p.m. ET). 
  • The image-obsessed Russell Wilson does not usually engage in flame wars. But the former Broncos QB clearly has a bone to pick with his old coach Sean Payton. The duo endured a long miserable season in Denver in 2023. When Payton took a shot at the backup Giants QB by saying he hoped the G-Men wouldn’t start Jaxson Dart before Sunday’s New York vs. Denver matchup, Wilson cooked his old coach on X/Twitter. “Classless… but not surprised,” he tweeted. “Didn’t realize you’re still bounty hunting 15+ years later through the media. #LetsRide.” Touchdown Wilson. In one tweet, he not only ripped Payton as “Classless” but got in a snide reference to his “BountyGate” scandal while coaching the Saints. 
  • Remember Big Break, the reality show that was like Survivor for golf? FOS’s David Rumsey reports Golf Channel will bring back the show for a 24th season in 2026 after an 11-year hiatus. You can read more about the show’s rebirth, in collaboration with Good Good Golf, here.

Loud and Clear

ESPN

“To be fair — this was from a Ringer piece called ‘Increasingly Bold Predictions.’ My only Suns pick was UNDER 31.5 wins just FYI. Happy to wager on that. But you’re an NBA owner and… um…. you’re not allowed to bet? Maybe we should just bet Aspiration stock.”

—Bill Simmons clapping back at Suns owner Mat Ishbia, who had taken issue with a Ringer NBA preview that included a bold prediction that Phoenix would have the worst defense in the NBA.

One Big Fig

Oct 20, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (27) celebrates with the trophy after defeating the Seattle Mariners in game seven of the ALCS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Rogers Centre.

Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images

9.03 million

That was the average viewership across Fox Sports, FS1, and Fox streaming platforms for the Blue Jays’ epic ALCS Game 7 victory over the Mariners. On the Fox and FS1 linear networks, the game averaged 8.91 million viewers, up 32% from 2023’s ALCS Game 7 between the Rangers and Astros. Mariners–Blue Jays was also the most-watched ALCS game, on any network, since Game 7 of the Yankees-Astros ALCS pulled 9.96 million in 2017. It was Fox’s most-streamed championship series game ever. Across the U.S. and Canada, MLB says it averaged 15.03 million viewers across Fox platforms in the U.S. and Sportsnet in Canada.

Editors’ Picks

NFL’s Goodell Stands by Bad Bunny: ‘It’s Going to Be a Great Show’

by Eric Fisher
The commissioner is undeterred by political criticism of the halftime show choice.

Candace Parker Wants NFL-Style Coverage From NBA Media

by Colin Salao
Amazon will stream its first NBA doubleheader Friday.

Netflix Staying on the Sidelines As TNT Sports Parent Seeks Buyer

by Eric Fisher
The streaming giant shows little interest in acquisition possibilities.

Question of the Day

Do you think “Inside the NBA” on ESPN was as good as it was on TNT?

 YES   NO 

Tuesday’s result: 55% of respondents think Michael Jordan will be must-see TV on the NBA on NBC.

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Written by Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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