Part-Time
Posted on 5/16/2026
Owns and operates numerous U.S. stations
No salary listed
New Haven, CT, USA
In Person
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Nexstar Media Group operates the largest portfolio of local television stations in the United States, owning 197 stations affiliated with networks such as CBS, Fox, NBC, and ABC. It earns revenue from selling advertising time and from retransmission fees paid by cable and satellite providers, and it also owns digital assets like The Hill and NewsNation, a national news channel. The company combines a broad local TV reach with digital media expansion to monetize both TV and online audiences. Its goal is to provide broad access to news and entertainment across local markets while growing its digital footprint and sustaining revenue through multiple streams.
Company Size
1,001-5,000
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
Irving, Texas
Founded
1996
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Nexstar names Elizabeth Ryder General Counsel in return to in-house role. Ryder, who previously oversaw legal work on Nexstar's marquee acquisitions of Media General and Tribune Media, comes back as the company battles antitrust challenges to its $6.2 billion Tegna deal. Nexstar Media Group has brought back one of its longtime legal executives, naming Elizabeth Ryder as executive vice president, general counsel and secretary to the board of directors. * Exclusive Reporting - Fast, authoritative coverage and sharp analysis. * Integrated Insights - Compass and Radar context built right into articles. * Personalized Experience - Tailored homepage content and curated newsletters. * Smart Search & Alerts - Powerful search and real-time updates. Questions? Contact an Account Specialist at [email protected] | 1-855-808-4530 (Americas) | 44(0) 800 098 386009 (UK & Europe) NOT FOR REPRINT Michael Gennaro The veteran government lawyer, who previously served as general counsel of AmeriCorps and deputy general counsel of the General Services Administration, takes on a newly created role at the nation's largest Latino civil rights organization. May 12, 2026 Chris O'Malley Heaven Hill Brands co-president Allan Latts said incoming general counsel Matthew Hamm "leads in a way that builds trust and clarity." May 08, 2026 Michael Gennaro Christopher Bennett will serve as chief legal and compliance officer, part of a new management team trying to turn around the company after an $8 billion merger went off the rails. May 08, 2026 Michael Gennaro Marc Kesselman has taken the reins of Knoa Pharma LLC, a public benefit corporation owned by the Knoa Foundation, a newly formed nonprofit. May 07, 2026 Michael Gennaro The division's No. 2 lawyer, General Counsel Liz Gibson, also is taking on additional duties in the reshuffling. May 06, 2026
Nexstar Media Group has completed a $1.73 billion private offering of 7.250% senior unsecured notes due 2034. The proceeds were used to redeem its 5.625% senior notes maturing in 2027 and cover related fees. The refinancing extends debt maturities and adds guarantees and covenants aimed at enhancing creditor protections and financial flexibility. It follows Nexstar's June 2025 overhaul of bank facilities, which added a larger revolver and extended term loan maturities to 2030 and 2032. Whilst the refinancing reduces near-term refinancing risk, concerns remain around elevated leverage and interest coverage following weaker 2025 earnings. The moves provide liquidity for potential TEGNA-related outlays and ongoing investment in The CW and NewsNation, though execution and regulatory outcomes remain key risks for investors.
Nexstar Media Group shares rose 4% to $232.01 on Friday after its wholly owned subsidiary announced plans to offer $3.39 billion of senior secured notes due 2033 and $1.725 billion of senior notes due 2034. Proceeds from the secured notes will primarily repay bridge and secured credit facility borrowings related to the acquisition of TEGNA Inc. The unsecured notes will help redeem existing 2027 notes. Trading volume reached approximately 191,698 shares, below the average of 325,079 shares. The stock has traded in a 52-week range of $141.66 to $254.30.
FCC approves combination of Nexstar and Tegna TV stations. March 19 (Reuters) - The Federal Communications Commission said on Thursday it has approved the sale of some local broadcast TV stations from Tegna to Nexstar. "By approving this transaction, which allows Nexstar to own less than 15% of television stations, the FCC acts mindful of the media marketplace that exits today - not the one from decades past," FCC chair Brendan Carr said in a statement. The approval comes a day after a group of eight states filed a suit in the U.S. District Court in Sacramento, California, to block the merger that would make the combined entity the largest U.S. broadcast station group. Streaming and satellite TV provider DirecTV also filed a separate suit, seeking to prevent the deal, late on Wednesday. "This transaction is essential to sustaining strong local journalism in the communities we serve," Nexstar's CEO Perry Sook said in a statement. (Reporting by Bhargav Acharya in Toronto and Juby Babu in Mexico City; editing by Michelle Nichols and Alan Barona)
8 states, including California and New York, sue to block $6.2B Nexstar-Tegna merger. If the blockbuster deal is allowed to go forward, the combined television station group would reach nearly 60% of U.S. households. March 19, 2026, 6:48 AM PDT / Updated March 19, 2026, 9:22 AM PDT 00:00 03:56 California, New York and six other states filed a lawsuit late Wednesday seeking to block television station owner Nexstar's proposed $6.2 billion takeover of rival company Tegna, arguing the tie-up violates federal antitrust laws. "When broadcast media is owned by a handful of companies, we get fewer voices, less competition, and communities lose the critical check on power that local journalism delivers," California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a news release. In filing the suit, Bonta and New York Attorney General Letitia James were joined by the attorneys general of Colorado, Illinois, Oregon, North Carolina, Connecticut and Virginia. Nexstar and Tegna did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the legal coalition's filing. Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr has said he supports the proposed deal. "Let's get it done," Carr wrote in a Feb. 7 post on X. But completing the merger would require changing a federal rule that bars a single company from reaching more than 39% of U.S. households. The combined entity would reach nearly 60% of U.S. households. The FCC has not publicly announced whether it plans to hold a vote on changing the national ownership cap. The agency did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In recent months, state attorneys general have asserted themselves on other issues at the nexus of antitrust and the media industry. More than two dozen Republican and Democratic state attorneys general filed a motion for a mistrial in a federal antitrust case that aimed to break up Live Nation and Ticketmaster. (Live Nation, the parent company of Ticketmaster, ultimately settled with the Justice Department.) Bonta's office is also investigating Paramount Skydance's deal to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery, a merger that would unite two historic Hollywood movie studios and potentially put CNN under the same corporate roof as CBS News. The lawsuit over the Nexstar-Tegna deal was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California. It argues that the deal violates Section 7 of the Clayton Antitrust Act, which bars acquisitions that would "substantially lessen competition." Bonta's office has argued that the merger would reduce healthy competition in the Sacramento and San Diego media markets, while James' office has said it is concerned about the effects of consolidation in the Buffalo media market. Nexstar oversees more than 200 owned and partner stations in 116 markets across the country. The company's assets also include the broadcast network The CW and the cable news channel NewsNation. Tegna has 64 stations across 51 markets. "This illegal merger threatens local news and could raise fees for consumers by combining hundreds of TV stations under the same owner. I'm suing to stop Nexstar's illegal merger with Tegna to keep cable bills down and ensure New Yorkers can access the independent local news options they count on," James said in a statement. Anna M. Gomez, the lone Democratic commissioner on FCC panel, reacted to the states' suit in a post on X, saying in part that the agency's review should be "transparent." "The FCC must not rubber-stamp this unlawful merger behind closed doors. This would unleash a new broadcast behemoth that could gut local news and lead to higher prices," Gomez said. "Consumers deserve an open and transparent process, not a backroom deal. The full Commission must weigh in." California and New York's plans to challenge the Nexstar-Tegna deal were first reported earlier this month by The Wall Street Journal. Daniel Arkin is a senior reporter at NBC News.