logo
Lead singer Kelly Hansen leaving Foreigner, band names Luis Maldonado as replacement

Lead singer Kelly Hansen leaving Foreigner, band names Luis Maldonado as replacement

USA Today21-05-2025
Lead singer Kelly Hansen leaving Foreigner, band names Luis Maldonado as replacement
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Jamal Roberts on being 'American Idol' winner, going home to daughters
Jamal Roberts won "American Idol" Season 23, but he's about to get even busier after recently welcoming a baby girl.
Foreigner lead singer Kelly Hansen is exiting the band, but the '70s rockers found a familiar face to replace him.
During the band's performance on the May 20 season finale of NBC singing competition "The Voice," Hansen announced his departure with a "passing of the torch" to their guitarist Luis Maldonado.
"Being the voice of Foreigner has been one of the greatest honors of my life," Hansen said in a statement. "But it's time to pass the mic. Luis has the voice, the energy, and the soul to carry these songs into the future. I couldn't be prouder to hand this off to him." Hansen will exit the band after their summer 2025 tour ends.
Foreigner founder Mick Jones reveals Parkinson's diagnosis amid farewell tour absences
Foreigner's Mick Jones, the only founding member in the band from the original lineup, said that "in 1976, my goal was to assemble the finest group of musicians I could find" and "Results have shown that it worked!"
He added that "about thirty years later, Jason Bonham encouraged me to do it all over again and create a brand-new Foreigner, and the magic was still there," telling fans "I was especially fortunate in the choice of lead singer."
In the statement, Jones called Hansen "one of the best" frontmen in music and said he "breathed new life into our songs" over a 20-year span.
"His boundless energy and flawless talent has helped us climb the mountain and set up the opportunity for Foreigner vocalist and guitarist, Luis Maldonado, to bring us home," Jones said. "I wish Kelly great happiness in his next endeavors after our summer tour, and I look forward to welcoming Luis to his new position."
Original Foreigner band member Mick Jones revealed Parkinson's disease diagnosis
In February last year, Jones announced his ongoing absences from the band's tour, revealing that he was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease.
"Several years ago, I was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease," Jones revealed in a statement shared on social media. "I want everyone to know that I am doing alright. However, I've always liked to be at my best when performing onstage, and sadly, at present, I find that a bit difficult."
The musician behind hits like "Feels Like the First Time" and "I Want to Know What Love Is" added that he is "still very much involved in the background with Foreigner and remain a presence."
Contributing: Naledi Ushe
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Farewell, MSNBC. Hello, 'My Source for News, Opinion and the World.' Wait, What?
Farewell, MSNBC. Hello, 'My Source for News, Opinion and the World.' Wait, What?

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Farewell, MSNBC. Hello, 'My Source for News, Opinion and the World.' Wait, What?

The MSNBC name is about to be phased out. Early Monday, as the news brand preps for a future separated from NBC News, the cable TV stalwart unveiled a new name, logo and acronym-driven identity: MS NOW, meaning 'My Source for News, Opinion and the World.' The shift retires a name that was christened in 1996 with the launch of the co-branded partnership between Microsoft and NBC News that carried the MSNBC name. And, while Microsoft exited a couple years later, the cable brand home to Rachel Maddow, Jen Psaki, Chris Hayes, Lawrence O'Donnell and more had stuck with the original branding for decades. More from The Hollywood Reporter Jacob Soboroff Joining MSNBC As Split From NBC News Looms 'NBC Nightly News' EP Meghan Rafferty Exits to Join Versant MSNBC Brings Back Live Fan Event In Bid to Build New Revenue Lines The impetus for the change? NBCUniversal owner Comcast is spinning off most all of its TV channels into a separate publicly-traded company, Versant, in a deal that may close this fall. Because of that, the formerly named MSNBC is rebuilding its news organization for a world in which it doesn't collaborate directly with NBC News and carry the peacock imagery that's staying with the home base. As the rebrand hit inboxes today, Hollywood Reporter editors chatted about the move, and read in-between the lines on what it could signify. Erik Hayden: For months, with Comcast planning to spin off its declining cable TV assets — MSNBC, CNBC, USA Network, Oxygen, E!, Syfy and the Golf Channel — into a new company, the nondescript Versant, the question was, 'What does MSNBC look like without NBCUniversal and NBC News?' So while it was surprising to see this rebrand for the Rebecca Kutler-run news brand, the writing was on the wall that there needed to be some pivot. And while it's also not that surprising that Comcast wanted to keep the peacock imagery and NBC lettering for its own flagship news services, it's still a bit jarring to see the new identity. What was your first read? Tony Maglio: My first read went something like this: 'Um, what's-that-now?' The MS thing is so weird: Microsoft has had exactly zero ties to MSNBC since 2012 (and from the TV channel, since 2005). Back then, you wouldn't want to change a web address or an established channel/brand name. But now, why not? Instead, Versant (already a confusing name itself) elected to back in to an acronym? Who is making these choices? If you want your own brand, as Versant CEO Mark Lazarus and Kutler have said, just start over. 'MS NOW' to me reads like it's a random Microsoft application I'd uninstall from my PC when storage space got tight. EH: Also, this wasn't a decision made from a position of strength. I doubt that, were it not to be cleaved off from Comcast, that MSNBC executives would like to undertake a rebrand that nearly erases its entire name. I can't think of a single major news organization that has undergone that sort of name change. Usually, it's the corporate parent that changes its name when times get bleak (thinking of Los Angeles Times' owner Tribune trying to go BuzzFeed with ill-fated Tronc) but the names of the news brands themselves stay. I can't imagine many will be using the acronym's meaning, My Source for News, Opinion, and the World, on second reference either. TM: Yeah, that part is just crazy. But it is Versant's expectation, and also just how we would often do it to remind readers that this is, indeed, an acronym, and not some stylization choice. (Example: STARZ is not an acronym, so we write it as Starz, no matter how StArZ wants it written in the media.) But My Source for News, Opinion, and the World is an absurd way to write or to speak. No one will ever say this except with a mocking tone. The acronym is so reverse-engineered and forced. MSNBC was a mashup of Microsoft and NBC News — it actually called for an acronym. EH: Also, what does it say about the relative strengths of the brand — and internal politics at Versant — that CNBC was able to keep its name under the explanation that it was originally known as 'Consumer News and Business Channel' (i.e. not National Broadcasting Channel, trademark Comcast)? That reads to me like it's seen as a safer, more durable brand. Finance news has generally seen more stability than political news and there appears to be a template that CNBC chiefs are following (build like Bloomberg or The Wall Street Journal with Pro tiers while leaning on strengths and access of live TV). TM: CNBC is so interesting because it launched as a bogus acronym itself. Yes, 'Consumer News and Business Channel' is ostensibly what it stood for, but in reality, the acronym stood for Cablevision NBC — as in National Broadcasting Channel — because those were the joint venture partners. We can all play pretend on this one a bit more because the double entendre happened way back in 1989. To be fair, MSNBC losing the MS and now the NBC does put Versant in a tough spot. It is really hard to rebrand from scratch, but this attempt at a half-rebrand (and hope no one asks about the acronym) feels desperate and beneath what MSNBC has achieved. EH: If I was to try and think of a silver lining on this rebrand, at this time, I might say, 'Well, this is a new political moment with massive disruption for traditional media. Brand names, in general, aren't as powerful as they once were and if MS NOW really hopes to thrive it'll need to lean in to the big Rachel Maddow-like names (and hire more) to try and distinguish itself in a fractured environment.' But the problem is that the MSNBC name does mean something, especially to the audience that watches it regularly on linear TV. And yes, that may be an older audience that is getting smaller as more viewers cut the cord. TM: Right. Clearly, Versant wanted the closest-possible thing to 'MSNBC' without the 'NBC.' But the 'MS' was never the point (for television) — the 'NBC' was. So to make the exception for CNBC but not MSNBC feels not tethered to a whole lot. Unfortunately, 'MS NOW' is just like a 'NowThis News' to me. It feels like a media publication that launched 30 minutes ago, not 30 years. MS NOW will have strong resources, but a name that — initially, at least — implies no differentiation from any other ALL CAPS play. EH: It does remind me of NowThis News, or a bunch of similar start-up names that maybe fell by the wayside in the BuzzFeed-Mashable 2010s Facebook traffic era. To use a different example, Cable News Network was the origin of CNN's name. I can't see, even when the last lights are turned off on Cable TV, CNN pivoting from that name — it's like National Public Radio and NPR, the acronym means something at this point, not the medium it originated in. TM: Exactly. Those are branded phrases that became acronyms. Acronyms exist as an accepted societal shorthand for things we all know. Versant is doing this fully backwards. You can picture how this went down, right? A conference room and a whiteboard with:M ______S_______N ______________________ And tuna subs. 'No one leaves this room until we have a new five-letter brand name that starts with MSN and stands for … something.' It's the worst Wheel of Fortune puzzle ever. EH: Speaking of which, MSN still exists as a giant web portal that millions of readers visit, so the argument that the 'MS'-Microsoft connection is not relevant because it was an old reference to a partnership ended long ago when Microsoft was in the news business doesn't quite track. TM: Great point. Those of us in the media are well aware of the reach of MSN. It's a lot more than non-MSN users might think. It's just a staple landing page for endless news content. I don't personally use it, but I can see a universe in which I never left finance for journalism and it is My Source for News and something World… and I've already lost what MS NOW stands on the subject of CNN vs. MSNBC MS NOW: MSNBC had momentum in the fight for second place behind Fox News Channel (FNC to some, because that's actually how initials work!). This feels like a moment for CNN to actually rally — they must be thrilled. EH: The rebrand also does feel like it undercuts efforts to take the MSNBC brand to more platforms than just live TV. There is a burgeoning live events business (the next one is MSNBCLIVE '25, at the Hammerstein Ballroom in October) that now will need to be retrofitted. Obviously the news business relies on talent that can cut through the clutter, or creators with a ton of audience. But, barring that (and in an era of belt-tightening for TV news, which is something relatively new to that side of the media business, unlike print or digital media), brand names are all you have to differentiate yourself. It's tough thinking that 'My Source' stands out in an era of just YouTube tiles asking for clicks. TM: Maybe it's a 'Thai Food Near Me' situation. What I want to know, is did much of the marketing team that came up with 'Peacock,' which was widely mocked at the time, go over with Versant? I do want to give Versant and MS NOW an opportunity for optimism here. The reality is, most brand names don't make all the sense until they do. (Tronc had no chance.) So if MS NOW does an absolutely killer job and becomes essential in the news-gathering and news-reporting industry, we will all become numb to it. In a good way. EH: I remember, back in 2011, when MSNBC's marketing tagline 'Lean Forward' was seen as a bet on embracing an identity. Even if 'forward' was vague in the eye of the beholder. Arguably, this new rebrand does the opposite. TM: Are we able to put a gif in a story? Because… Best of The Hollywood Reporter How the Warner Brothers Got Their Film Business Started Meet the World Builders: Hollywood's Top Physical Production Executives of 2023 Men in Blazers, Hollywood's Favorite Soccer Podcast, Aims for a Global Empire

MSNBC gets new name and logo in major shakeup
MSNBC gets new name and logo in major shakeup

USA Today

time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

MSNBC gets new name and logo in major shakeup

MSNBC is undergoing a makeover. As part of a new company, Versant, to be spun off from NBCUniversal in late 2025, the home of popular left-leaning hosts like Rachel Maddow and Jen Psaki will adopt a new name and logo. Versant, which includes USA Network, Syfy, CNBC and Golf Channel alongside MSNBC, will build an "individual identity" for those brands, according to a staff memo from CEO Mark Lazarus Aug. 18. MSNBC, perhaps the biggest name in the exodus, will rebrand as My Source News Opinion World, or MS NOW, a move that conflicts with previous claims from NBCUniversal that the network would be allowed to keep its name amid the shift. NBC's iconic peacock logo will no longer be used for the cable-news network, either. All the TV news anchors exiting their roles, including Lester Holt and Joy Reid A memo sent Aug. 18 by MSNBC President Rebecca Kutler addressed the flip-flop, writing: "During this time of transition, NBCUniversal decided that our brand requires a new, separate identity… The future of our success is not tied to remaining within the NBC family and using the peacock as part of our identity." Lazarus wrote that the peacock logo "is synonymous with NBCUniversal, and it is a symbol they have decided to keep within the NBCU family. This gives us the opportunity to chart our own path forward, create distinct brand identities, and establish an independent news organization following the spin." Hulu isn't shutting down: What's going on with Disney+, Hulu and ESPN MSNBC, which ranks second to Fox News in cable news, has long been tied to the larger NBC news operation. Now, it will operate as a standalone news-gathering machine, with its own set of fact-finders, its own Washington bureau and a fresh leadership team. The editorial tone of the channel is not expected to change. CNN's Marcus Mabry, Crooked Media's Madeleine Hareringer, and ABC News' Scott Matthews are among the big names joining the executive suite. It is losing Steve Kornacki to NBC but gaining NBC's Jacob Soboroff (both had split their time in recent years.) Maddow, by far the network's biggest star, recently addressed the changes during an episode of New York Magazine's "Pivot" podcast. "We're standing up this whole newsgathering operation, which was funded as part of, well, funded, as part of the spin," Maddow said. "We will no longer have to compete with NBC News's properties for the newsgathering, the product of the newsgathering organization, which we otherwise had to." The news comes amid a season of tumult for cable shows writ large, and cable news in particular. As a growing number of younger viewers turn away from the traditional format and an increasingly polarized nation opts out of shows that don't align with their views, networks are scrambling to claim their ever-thinning slice of the pie.

MSNBC will change its name later this year as part of corporate divorce from NBC

time3 hours ago

MSNBC will change its name later this year as part of corporate divorce from NBC

Television's MSNBC news network is changing its name to My Source News Opinion World, or MS NOW for short, as part of its corporate divorce from NBC. The network, which appeals to liberal audiences with a stable of personalities including Rachel Maddow, Ari Melber and Nicole Wallace, has been building its own separate news division from NBC News. It will also remove NBC's peacock symbol from its logo as part of the change, which will take effect later this year. The name change was ordered by NBC Universal, which last November spun off cable networks USA, CNBC, MSNBC, E! Entertainment, Oxygen and the Golf Channel into its own company, called Versant. None of the other networks are changing their name. MSNBC got its name upon its formation in 1996, as a partnership then between Microsoft and NBC. Name changes always carry an inherent risk, and MSNBC President Rebecca Kutler said that for employees, it is hard to imagine the network under a different name. 'This was not a decision that was made quickly or without significant debate,' she said in a memo to staff. 'During this time of transition, NBC Universal decided that our brand requires a new, separate identity,' she said. 'This decision now allows us to set our own course and assert our indepedence as we continue to build our own modern newsgathering organization.' Still, it's noteworthy that the business channel CNBC is leaving 'NBC' in its name. MSNBC argues that CNBC has always maintained a greater separation and, with its business focus, is less likely to cover many of the same topics. Still, the affiliation between a news division that tries to play it safe and one that doesn't hide its liberal bent has long caused tension. President Donald Trump refers to the cable network as 'MSDNC,' for Democratic National Committee. Even before the corporate change, NBC News has been reducing the use of its personalities on MSNBC. Some NBC News personalities, like Jacob Soboroff, Vaughn Hillyard, Brandy Zadrozny and Antonia Hylton, have joined MSNBC. The network has also hired Carol Leoning, Catherine Rampell and Jackie Alemany from the Washington Post, and Eugene Daniels from Politico. Maddow, in a recent episode of Pivot, noted that MSNBC will no longer have to compete with NBC News programs for reporting product from out in the field — meaning it will no longer get the 'leftovers.' 'In this case, we can apply our own instincts, our own queries, our own priorities, to getting stuff that we need from reporters and correspondents,' Maddow said. 'And so it's gonna be better.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store