Burke Magnus — Senior Vice President of College Sports Programming at ESPN | Comparably
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Burke Magnus — Senior Vice President of College Sports Programming at ESPN

Burke Magnus — Senior Vice President of College Sports Programming at ESPN

Executive Bio

Mr. Burke Magnus has been Senior Vice President of College Sports Programming at ESPN, Inc., since March 2008. In that role, Mr. Magnus is responsible for the strategic direction of college football, college basketball and NCAA Championships on the various ESPN platforms. That includes the acquiring and scheduling of programming across ESPN on ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, Longhorn Network, ESPN3, ESPN Classic and more. He also manages the relationships with college rightsholders, such as the NCAA and conferences. Prior to his current job, Mr. Magnus served as vice president and general manager of ESPNU, the 24-hour college sports network, since November 2004. He guided all programming, production and operations for ESPNU and led the inter-departmental team responsible for the growth and development of the network and related multi-media initiatives. Under Mr. Magnus' guidance, ESPNU significantly increased its subscriber count through its satellite and cable affiliation agreements and launched ESPNU.com. He also helped lay the groundwork for the launch of ESPNU HD (August 2008). Mr. Magnus joined ESPN in 1995 as a program associate and in 1996 was promoted to program planner. In 1998, he advanced to program manager and later became director of brand management in 2000 (later changed to director, programming and acquisitions), primarily responsible for ESPN's men's college basketball programming and scheduling. From 2002 to 2004, Mr. Magnus was a member of the ESPN Original Entertainment (EOE) team where he served as the project manager for several programs, including the biopic on the life of Dale Earnhardt entitled '3', which was critically acclaimed and the second-highest rated movie of 2004 on ad-supported cable. Prior to joining ESPN, Mr. Magnus was an administration assistant for Soros Fund Management from 1994 to 1995. Under his ' direction, men's college basketball ratings increased over multiple consecutive seasons and new initiatives such as Bracket Buster Saturday and College GameDay (basketball version) were introduced. In 2006, Mr. Magnus was named to the distinguished Sports Business Journal Forty Under 40, honoring the most promising young executives in sports business under the age of 40. For his efforts, in 2005, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch named Magnus the 'fourth most powerful person in college basketball.' He served as a programming intern for CBS Sports from 1993 to 1994. Mr. Magnus graduated from Holy Cross in 1988 with a bachelor's degree in history and then received his master's degree in sport management from the University of Massachusetts in 1994.

Executive Team Culture Ratings from ESPN Employees

BOTTOM
20%
ESPN's Executive Team scores in the Bottom 20%
of similar sized companies on Comparably
Who ranks the Executive Team the highest?
Experience - Entry Level 83/100
Ethnicity - African American/Black 78/100
Experience - 1 to 3 Years 78/100
Who ranks the Executive Team the lowest?
Experience - 6 to 10 Years 31/100
Department - Executive 35/100
Ethnicity - Caucasian 40/100

ESPN's Executive Team at a Glance

Based on 75 ratings, ESPN's employees are less satisfied with their Executive Team and give them a ā€œDā€ or 54/100. On average, Men provided higher ratings for their Executive Team compared to Women.

ESPN's Executive Team ranks in the Top 5% of other companies in Danbury, CT and Bottom 20% of other companies on Comparably that also have 5,001-10,000 Employees.

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