Randy Falco

Randy Falco
Randel A. "Randy" Falcois an American media executive. Falco has been President and CEO of Univision Communications Inc. since June 2011. Before joining Univision in January 2011 as Executive Vice President and COO, he served as Chairman of the Board and CEO of AOL from Nov. 2006 to March 2009. Prior to his tenure at AOL, he spent 31 years at NBC, including serving as the network’s President and COO...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionBusinessman
Date of Birth26 December 1953
CountryUnited States of America
As a presidential candidate, Mr. Trump is going to get tough questions from the press and has to answer them.
The Olympics remain one of the biggest events on television. Despite this being the most competitive quarter I've seen in my 30 years in the television business, the Olympics continue to perform as they have throughout the past decade, compared to the current network television landscape.
The Olympics really are much more than a sporting event It really is an entertainment event and in that sense, it brings to the set a much more diverse audience,
This is about realizing that the Olympics is more than about network television now, and the future is about being a content provider. In the future, it's going to be about going deeper with audiences, of finding ways to satisfy people in different ways.
Last night was an incredible night for network television, with more people tuning in than on any night in more than three years.
What drew me to this job is that Univision is a brand unlike any other in all of media. Univision has the highest brand affinity of any brand, and that includes Microsoft and Apple and some of the iconic brands in all of industry.
We're now coming to the market with one voice.
What I'm concerned about is making sure that every single time somebody who grew up with us goes off to a different platform or a different device, we're going to be there with a Univision-branded product of some kind.
I haven't discussed this with Dick. But I suspect we'll go on that night and program it the way we normally would, using our best stuff, as we build toward midnight.
I'm very involved with all the executives at Televisa.
I don't think there are too many traditional media guys who really understood what the new digital media is about.
The Hispanic population in this country is not a monolith. When you're in Miami, the newscast is going to be different from the newscast in Los Angeles.
The Hispanic culture is finding its way into the American culture. Places like Miami are going to be centers for that influence - places like Los Angeles and, certainly, cities in Texas.
The heart of Univision - and what we do - is here in Miami.