Home AdExchanger Talks Why Scripps Is All In On Women’s Sports

Why Scripps Is All In On Women’s Sports

SHARE:
Brian Norris, CRO, The E.W. Scripps Company

Brian Norris started his career in TV sales at Lifetime in 1999, a job that bears little resemblance  to what he does today as CRO of The E.W. Scripps Company.

Back then, TV meant “linear,” ad sales meant “traditional GRPs” and the buyers were almost exclusively large brands working through holding companies, he says on this week’s episode of AdExchanger Talks.

“The business was completely different,” Norris says.

Today, TV is everywhere, measurement is about performance and the buyer mix includes small and midsize brands that used to spend almost exclusively on social.

Scripps itself has legacy roots. It was founded nearly 150 years ago by journalist and newspaper publisher Edward Willis Scripps as a print-focused news organization before expanding into radio and then TV in the mid-20th century. These days, it’s best known for its large footprint of local TV stations and the national ION network.

Now, Scripps is using its distribution backbone to lean into women’s and local sports by behaving less like an incumbent and more like a challenger.

Rather than treating women’s sports as a side bet, for example, Scripps is building around them, with WNBA franchise nights, National Women’s Soccer League matches and Professional Women’s Hockey League games on ION alongside video content designed to tell deeper stories about the athletes themselves.

At the same time, Scripps is investing in local sports rights and a new FAST channel that streams live events and original programming as an antidote to subscription fatigue and paywalls.

“Sometimes you just want free,” Norris says. “We saw that as an opportunity for us to surprise and delight advertisers and audiences.”

The pitch to both brands and viewers centers on flexibility. Because Scripps has ION, local stations and streaming inventory, it’s able to create different combinations of national, local and CTV depending on whether a marketer is optimizing for reach, specific regions, performance or all of the above.

“It is never our intention to say ‘no’ to an advertiser,” Norris says. “We really want to say ‘yes.’”

Also in this episode: How fragmentation can be an opportunity rather than a curse, a preview of how Scripps will position its sports portfolio during this year’s upfronts and why Norris believes GLP-1 weight-loss drugs will reshape marketing strategy even more than AI.

Must Read

Comic: CTV Tracking

Upfronts Advertisers Say They Want Outcomes – And Amazon Licks Its Chops

Amazon has packaged a handful of upgrades to its ads measurement solutions, obviously catered to TV and streaming media advertisers.

AdExchanger Senior Editors Anthony Vargas and Alyssa Boyle.

POSSIBLE 2026: AdExchanger's Hot Takes

AdExchanger Senior Editors Alyssa Boyle and Anthony Vargas share their takeaways from three days chatting about agentic AI at POSSIBLE.

Reddit Reports A 75% Boost In Q1 Ad Revenue As It Reaches For 100 Million Daily US Users

Generative AI search has pushed traffic off a cliff across most of the internet, but not on social platforms. Reddit included.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

POSSIBLE 2026: Can AI Help Agencies Finally Break Down Those Silos?

Domenic Venuto, indie agency Horizon Media’s chief product and data officer, sat down with AdExchanger during POSSIBLE at the Fontainebleau in Miami to unpack the role of AI in today’s media and advertising landscape.

Google Touts Its AI Ad Tech Adoption And New AI Max Features

Google announced new features and ad types for AI Max, its AI-based bidding product for search and shopping or sponsored product ads. The company also touted “hundreds of thousands” of advertisers using AI Max.

Hand pressing blue AI button on keyboard. Digital collage of artificial intelligence interface.

Meta’s Ad Machine Is Purring, So Why Did Its Stock Drop?

Meta’s Q1 call sounded like an AI and hardware pitch, but under the hood it was still about one thing: investing in AI to squeeze more money out of its ads business.