Nexstar closes $6.2B Tegna deal after FCC approval
Nexstar closed its $6.2 billion merger with Tegna immediately after FCC approval, gaining control of 200+ stations and reshaping local TV. The deal pressures rivals to consolidate and strengthens Nexs
Nexstar Media Groupโs chief operating officer, Mike Biard, said the company had โnot at allโ second thoughts about declaring its $6.2 billion merger w
Read Full Story at Deadline Hollywood โWhy This Matters
The FCCโs greenlight for Nexstarโs $6.2 billion takeover of Tegna isnโt just another corporate mergerโitโs a seismic shift in local media ownership that could reshape how Americans consume news and entertainment. By immediately closing the deal, Nexstar has accelerated an industry-wide consolidation wave, forcing competitors to either scale up or risk obsolescence in an era where scale often dictates survival.
Background Context
Nexstarโs aggressive expansion isnโt a new strategy; itโs the culmination of a decade-long push to dominate local broadcasting, often through acquisitions of distressed or smaller rivals. Tegnaโs sale, however, marks a turning point: its 200+ stations were among the most profitable in local TV, making them a prize worth the regulatory and financial risks Nexstar took to secure them.
What Happens Next
With Nexstar now controlling a near-monopoly in local news markets, competitors like Gray Television and Sinclair may face pressure to merge or divest to avoid being left behind. Meanwhile, the fate of The CWโa network already in fluxโcould hinge on whether Nexstar uses its expanded reach to reshape its programming or abandon it entirely.
Bigger Picture
This deal underscores the accelerating decline of independent local journalism as media consolidation favors massive conglomerates over community-focused outlets. It also highlights how pay-TVโs decline is reshaping the economics of broadcasting, pushing operators toward digital distribution and alternative revenue streams.

