Categories: ArticlesNBCNews

MSNBC, NowThis Team For Daily News Series On Facebook

MSNBC will release two millennial-focused shows online before they appear anywhere else. The cable network partnered with news media company NowThis (in which MSNBC’s parent organization NBCUniversal owns a stake) to release two news series exclusively on Facebook.

MSNBC and NowThis will release the first show, titled Sound Off, each morning. It will encourage Facebook users to discuss a breaking news story. Then, at the end of the day, FacePalm will cover one of the day’s most controversial or appalling happenings, thus generating further audience engagement. Sound Off and FacePalm will be released on both NowThis‘ and MSNBC’s official Facebook pages.

Subscribe to get the latest creator news

Subscribe

MSNBC and NowThis jointly came up with the ideas for the two Facebook series based on findings from NowThis about the type and timing of content that performs best on Facebook. At the same time, MSNBC was aware of the importance of data from Pew Research showing nearly half of 18- to 29-year-old adults in America get their news online, with that demographic’s highest rates of discovery and consumption coming on Facebook.

“If we’re serious about reaching younger audiences where they are, we have to create content in the formats that work for the platforms where they live,” MSNBC President Phil Griffin

said in a staff memo, as reported by Variety. “And we also must seek out other partners and content creators who are experts at doing this, and share our interest in compelling storytelling and innovation.”

Griffin also said the digital collaboration with NowThis will include other media platforms. The companies are planning to produce daily video content for Twitter, Vine, and Snapchat. MSNBC and NowThis will also re-purpose the videos for the network’s own outlets, like its traditional cable channel.

MSNBC joins many other traditional television networks turning their focus to the digital realm to deliver news-based video content. In November 2014, CBS unveiled its free, ad-supported news streaming service, CBSN. Only a month later, ABC joined the digital news crowd with The One Thing, a minute-long, Facebook-only newscast summarizing the day’s most important stories.

You can catch all future episodes of Sound Off and FacePalm by liking either (or both) the MSNBC Facebook page or the NowThis page.

Share
Published by
Bree Brouwer

Recent Posts

YouTube just made a Shorts deepfake machine so creators don’t have to be in their own videos

Hey YouTubers! Do you want to be rid of the pesky chore of actually appearing…

2 days ago

Have you heard? Gaming Historian says so long, Ms. Rachel sells shoes, and TikTok ad exec moves on.

Each week, we handpick a selection of stories to give you a snapshot of trends,…

2 days ago

NAB Show wants to be the meeting ground for creators and legacy entertainment: “These two segments have so much to offer each other right now”

Back in 2024, the National Association of Broadcasters recognized the importance of content creators by…

2 days ago

Hoorae returns to Issa Rae’s web series roots with “Screen Time” microdrama

Too much screen time can be a dangerous thing, and Hoorae is taking that idea literally. The…

2 days ago

Kylie Jenner brings “star power and aura” to hydration product k2o, launched in tandem with Night

The latest product backed by Night's venture studio emerged out of a partnership between the creator…

2 days ago

Hollywood has a lot to learn from creator animators (and their IPs), YouTube says in latest Culture & Trends report

Indie animation is flourishing on YouTube. From the pop culture juggernaut that is The Amazing…

3 days ago