MSNBC to change name to MS NOW
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Now, MSNBC is MS NOW. As MSNBC leaves NBCUniversal for Versant (formerly, SpinCo.), the cable news channel is rebranding to an acronym that stands for My Source for News, Opinion and the World. Right, so the MS no longer stands for Microsoft, but it’s still there.
Say goodbye to MSNBC and hello to... MS NOW. The cable channel owned by NBCUniversal (which, in turn, is owned by Comcast) is going through a name change, which means a rebrand.
1don MSN
MSNBC Will Now Be Called MS NOW After Splitting Off from NBCUniversal. Here's What It Stands For
On Monday, Aug. 18, the cable news channel revealed it has rebranded amid its exit from NBCUniversal. MSNBC will now be called My Source for News, Opinion and the World, or MS NOW.
MSNBC will change its name to MS Now, for My Source News Opinion World, and unveil a new logo this year as part of the cable news channel’s spinoff from the Comcast-owned media company NBCUniversal. CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin joins Joe Scarborough to break the news.
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ADWEEK on MSNMSNBC Rebranding to MS NOW Amid NBCUniversal Split
So long, MSNBC, hello MS NOW. In what is the clearest indication of a separation between NBCUniversal and the soon-to-be-spun-off cable networks empire forming Versant, cable news network MSNBC will be dropping the NBC in its name and will be rebranded to My Source News Opinion World or MS NOW.
In addition to MS NOW, USA Network and Golf Channel will merge into a new USA Sports brand and CNBC will change its logo but retain its name
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New York Magazine on MSNMS NOW: Everything Wrong With MSNBC’s New Name and Logo
Morning Joe hosts claim they love it. Everyone else says it sounds like a multiple-sclerosis charity with MS Paint branding.
Cable news channel MSNBC is going to rebrand as My Source News Opinion World, or MS NOW, according to a new report from the New York Times. The change is happening because Comcast’s NBCUniversal is spinning off many of its cable TV assets into a new company called Versant, severing ties with the “NBC” part of MSNBC.
In an internal memo, MSNBC President Rebecca Kutler said the rebrand "allows us to set our own course and assert our independence as we continue to build a modern newsgathering op