Andscape reflects a “doubling down” on ESPN’s investment in and commitment to Black stories and voices, the company said. “With The Undefeated, we began a dialogue that will be continued and broadened through Andscape to include more topics, more perspectives and more ways to engage,” James Pitaro, ESPN’s chairman, said in an email.
Ms. Kelley, who helped introduce The Undefeated as its managing editor, declined to say how much money ESPN is investing in the expansion. “I’m happy, and I’m spending,” she said. “That’s all I’m going to say.”
Andscape will continue to be rooted in sports, although Ms. Kelley said her 50-person staff would provide more expansive coverage of current events, music, food, fashion, technology, personal finance, parenting and travel. Content will be aimed primarily at millennial and Generation Z consumers, she said.
Andscape’s YouTube channel, for instance, will debut a weekly show on Friday called “Logged In,” which will examine Black creative contributions to the social media landscape. It will be hosted by Domonique Foxworth, the National Football League player turned ESPN pundit and writer. Another weekly YouTube series, “Another Act,” will be hosted by Kelley L. Carter, an Andscape reporter, and focus on Black Hollywood.
Ms. Kelley noted that Black women made up the majority of her staff. One prominent Andscape journalist is Soraya Nadia McDonald, who was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in criticism in 2020 for her Undefeated essays about film and theater, including “The Unbearable Whiteness of ‘Oklahoma!’”