HBO axes another Vice program, âVice News Tonightâ
HBO has canceled its short-lived, 30-minute newscast âVice News Tonight,â marking the end of the premium cable channelâs seven-year relationship with the millennial-focused digital content company, Vice Media.
âWeâve decided not to renew âVice News Tonightâ after this season,â HBO said Monday in a statement to The Times. âWeâve had a terrific seven years partnering with Vice Media, first with the weekly newsmagazine series and most recently with the nightly news show.â
For the record:
2:25 p.m. June 10, 2019An earlier version of this article said that coverage of the Charlottesville, Va., rally was documented on âVice.â It was on âVice News Tonight.â
The evening show, which debuted in 2016, will end in September. Its most recent episodes have tackled topics including domestic and global politics, Israelâs most-hyped burger, the state of the National Rifle Assn., new abortion laws in the U.S. and digital models. Itâs the same show that documented the white nationalist âUnite the Rightâ rally in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017 and received four News and Documentary Emmy Awards, a Peabody Award and several other accolades for its reporting.
The cancellation comes after HBO in February axed its Emmy-winning weekly documentary news series âViceâ â the program that famously chronicled NBA star Dennis Rodmanâs visit to North Korea in 2013.
Disney writes off its Vice stake â a sign of trouble for the digital media firm Âť
âA daily Vice News show will continue and Iâll be able to share with you all the details in the coming weeks,â Vice Media CEO Nancy Dubuc said in an internal letter to the Vice Global Team, obtained by The Times. âAs one of the most trusted places for news for people under the age of 35, the world needs VICE News more than ever and weâre dedicated to ensuring more people around the world have access.â
HBO on Monday thanked Viceâs news chief, Josh Tyrangiel, for âhis tireless effort in creating a news show from the ground up, geared for a modern generation of viewers.â
Alas, Monday also brought news of Tyrangielâs departure from Vice this summer after nearly four years of âharrowing challenges and huge highsâ with the former startup company, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
Ten percent of the Vice Media staff was laid off in February under the leadership of Dubuc, formerly of A+E Networks. Dubuc, whoâs been in her role for just over a year, succeeded Viceâs freewheeling founder, Shane Smith, who became executive chairman of the Brooklyn, N.Y.-based outfit months after it was rocked by reports of systemic sexual harassment in the company and having a culture that is not hospitable to women.
Dubuc on Monday announced the hiring of Jesse Angelo, the New York Postâs former chairman and CEO, to oversee news, television and digital at Vice. Angelo steps into the newly created role âto create expanded platform opportunities and franchises for all our great talent and the content we are making every day,â Dubucâs memo said.
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