In what many are calling a last-ditch effort to revive flagging viewership, MSNBC is shedding its established name and Peacock logo in a bold rebranding to MS NOW—short for My Source News Opinion World. The changes come courtesy of Comcast’s spin-off of several cable channels into the new publicly traded entity, Versant, led by Mark Lazarus. But instead of injecting fresh vitality, the rebrand has coincided with another tumble in MSNBC ratings, reinforcing the narrative of a network struggling to stay relevant.
Rebrand Under Fire, Not a Ratings Salve
Announced on August 18, 2025, the MS NOW rebrand was supposed to symbolize a bold new chapter, independent of NBC and its heritage branding. According to Versant’s CEO, the stripped‑down name “underscores the brand’s mission to serve as the destination for domestic and international breaking news and best-in-class opinion journalism.”

Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski during Morning Joe on MSNBC – YouTube, New York Post
READ: NBC Drops Its Name From MSNBC As Ratings Plummet — Network to Become “MS NOW”
Instead of energizing audiences, Nielsen data for the week of August 11th demonstrated a 3% decline in prime-time total viewers (to around 797,000) and a 5% drop in total-day viewership (to 497,000). The key 25–54 demo also slumped by 8% during the day, while posting only a modest 1% uptick in prime time.
Meanwhile, competitors enjoyed gains: Fox News soared, with 2% growth in prime-time total viewers and 4% during the day; CNN rose as well, showing 4% gains in prime-time and 10% increases in total-day total viewers.
A Broader Downward Trend
This isn’t a one-off. Across Second Quarter of 2025, MSNBC saw a 15% year‑over‑year drop in median prime-time viewership (down to 1.008 million) and a 20% fall in the 25–54 demo. Daytime metrics were even more dire, plunging 26% in total viewership and 31% in the 25‑54 demo.

Joy Reid on MSNBC – YouTube, SkyNews Australia
Additionally, lead-in changes—like replacing The Rachel Maddow Show with Jen Psaki’s The Briefing—saw nearly a 50% drop in audience, and a 52% slump in the key demo. The network’s revamped primetime overall saw a 27% decline in viewers and a 30% drop in the demo.
Rebrand, or Reversal?
Instead of reinvention, MS NOW’s debut increasingly looks like branding overreach—and perhaps desperation. The move comes amid widespread internal skepticism. Staff were reportedly blindsided despite earlier assurances from Lazarus that the name would stay, fueling distrust.

Joy Reid on MSNBC – YouTube, SkyNews Australia
READ: Rachel Maddow Praises MS NOW Rebrand of MSNBC, Says Cutting NBC Will Make Network “Better”
Public commentary—both social media and the press—has been equally unkind, ridiculing the new acronym with biting alternatives like:
- “Most Surely No One Watching”
- “Majorly Skewed News Overly Woke”
- “MS NOPE”
Internal voices echo skepticism, with one Axios media analyst questioning whether MS NOW can succeed without the infrastructure and brand cachet once afforded by NBC.
Bottom Line: A Rebrand That Triggered a Ratings Slide
Despite expectations that the MS NOW name change would breathe new life into MSNBC, viewership slid further following the announcement—adding to what many insiders see as a deeper identity and ratings crisis. As competitors like Fox and CNN gain ground, MSNBC’s shake-up appears less like a reinvention and more like damage control gone wrong.

Rachel Maddow speaks during her show on MSNBC – YouTube, MSNBC
As the network transitions fully to MS NOW, it’s entering a crucial period. Will this be a launchpad to modern relevance, or another step down the cable-news decline?
What do you think about MSNBC ratings tanking following the rebrand announcement? Sound off in the comments and let us know!


