Another day, another “strategic realignment,” which is corporate-speak for layoffs. According to Deadline, NBCUniversal is back in the job-cutting business, this time with a more “surgical” scalpel than its usual machete. But whether it’s a clean-cut or a messy hack, the message is the same: if you’re not at the top, you’re expendable.
The trigger this time? NBCU’s new SpinCo—yes, that’s what we’re calling it until they give us a proper name—is finally starting to take shape. The Frankenstein patchwork of basic cable brands (E!, Syfy, Oxygen, USA) is being siphoned off into its own little experiment, helmed by Val Boreland. Congrats, Val. You’ve inherited the streaming equivalent of a garage sale.
Let’s be real. These aren’t the networks you build empires around in 2025. USA Network peaked with Suits reruns, E! is still clinging to Kardashian residue, and Syfy… well, Syfy’s last big splash was Sharknado. Yet NBCU is dressing this up as a bold new chapter. Spoiler alert: it’s not.
The latest layoffs—”a few dozen,” mostly in marketing, comms, and some junior programming roles—are just the cost of doing spin-off business. You move execs around, you give titles to a few survivors, and you quietly show the door to everyone else. It’s like musical chairs, except the music is always a somber instrumental version of “We’re Restructuring to Innovate.”
Pearlena Igbokwe and Frances Berwick now have more defined roles, which is NBCU’s way of saying, “We finally figured out who’s in charge of what.” This comes after the high-profile exits of Kelly Campbell and Corie Henson, which looked a lot less like attrition and a lot more like “you’re not on the new org chart.”
SpinCo’s whole existence feels like NBCU is admitting what everyone else already knows: linear cable is dead weight. The networks being offloaded don’t generate enough original content to justify their current overhead, so they’re being corralled into a leaner, likely ad-heavy operation where success means surviving long enough to be folded into Peacock’s “live TV” tab.
Here’s the takeaway: NBCU is cutting fat, but they’re also slicing into the meat. They can call it surgical all they want, but behind the PR spin, it’s another chapter in the ongoing consolidation of a legacy media empire trying to keep pace in a streaming-first world.
You can rearrange the deck chairs however you want. Just don’t pretend the ship isn’t still leaking.