MSNBC’s
Rebrand Invites Bemusement and Ridicule
The cable
TV network’s new name, MS NOW, became the subject of mockery on social media
soon after it was announced on Monday.
John Yoon Emmett Lindner
By John
Yoon and Emmett Lindner
Aug. 19,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/19/business/msnbc-ms-now-rebranding.html
When
MSNBC announced on Monday that it was being renamed MS NOW, some of the cable
network’s biggest stars expressed their support.
“It looks
very sporty,” Joe Scarborough said on air as he announced the brand change,
which includes a new logo. A graphic showed a striped flag and five capital
letters: MS NOW, for My Source News Opinion World.
“For our
viewers who have watched us for decades, it may be hard to imagine this network
by any other name,” MSNBC said in a statement. The change, it added, “gives us
the freedom to chart our own path forward, and we’re excited about where it’s
headed.”
Outside
the network, especially on social media, the rebrand became a subject of
bemusement and mockery.
A
political strategist in Milwaukee, Gabriella Suliga, wrote that the red, white
and blue design “looks like something you’d scroll past in a pile of political
campaign logos from 2004.”
“Multiple
sclerosis now. Is this some kind of new show?” said Rob Archer, who has worked
as a news anchor in Los Angeles, playing on the chronic neurological disorder
commonly abbreviated to M.S.
Some
conservatives gave the left-leaning network their own name: “Most Surely No One
Watching.” (MSNBC trails Fox News in ratings, drawing 865,000 average
prime-time viewers in July, according to Nielsen. But it is ahead of CNN, which
averaged about 497,000 in the same period.)
MSNBC
began in 1996 as a joint venture between the National Broadcasting Company,
NBC, and Microsoft. Microsoft eventually sold its stake in the venture, but its
abbreviation remained in the MSNBC brand.
The
rebranding is expected by the end of the year as part of MSNBC’s corporate
spinoff from Comcast’s NBCUniversal TV empire. The spinoff required the new
company to stop using the NBC brand and its signature Peacock, which are both
staying with Comcast.
“Some
folks think that changing the logo is changing the brand, and that’s not
necessarily the same thing,” Americus Reed, a professor of marketing at the
University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, said in an interview.
People
might interpret the transition differently, but there won’t likely be major
changes in the MSNBC audience. If a viewer gets their news from the network,
there may not be incentive to look elsewhere, and MSNBC’s announcements tried
to clearly explain the decision to its audience.
“You’re
providing the narrative,” Mr. Reed said. “You’re making sure they understand
why you’re doing this, and you’re trying to maintain that relationship,
maintain that trust.”
A flurry
of changes, though, can affect a company’s public image. When Warner Bros.
Discovery switched back and forth between calling its streaming service “HBO
Max” and simply “Max,” it had the potential to undermine its gravitas.
In those
cases, “you’re signaling that you’re unsure about things, and you’re signaling
that you don’t really have a strategy,” Mr. Reed said.
Aberdeen,
a British investment firm, dropped most of its vowels in 2021 and became
“abrdn” in a widely mocked effort to seem more “modern.” Gap, the clothing
retailer, changed its logo in 2010 and drew a flood of negative comments
online. Both companies eventually reversed the changes.
“I would
not be surprised in the next six months to see a slight shift,” Zachary
Winterton, a creative director in Portland, Ore., said of MS NOW.
The new
logo “does not have the same charm to it,” said Allan Peters, a graphic
designer in Eagan, Minn., who has written a book about logo design.
Some
social media users expressed confusion around why the “MS” remained in the
network’s name 20 years after the end of its TV partnership with Microsoft,
outlasting the “NBC” association that only just finished.
Mr.
Peters said that the space between the logo and the capital letters was larger
than that between “MS” and “NOW,” exacerbating the confusion by drawing
attention to the “MS.”
“Microsoft
hasn’t been involved in years,” Carmen Harris, a communications specialist in
McKinney, Texas, wrote on social media. “I don’t get it.”
Some said
the new branding bore a resemblance to that of some conservative cable
networks, such as the right-wing One America News Network.
“I wonder
if this is a purposeful reimagining to try to appropriate that conservative
image, but I don’t see the network itself really doing that,” said Mr. Archer,
the news anchor.
Rebecca
Kutler, MSNBC’s president, said in a memo that the rebrand will not change the
network’s core identity or its editorial focus. MS NOW has plans to launch a
marketing campaign that will aim to settle any confusion.
“While
our name will be changing, who we are and what we do will not,” she said.
Rebranding


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