Joseph
M. Cohen
Chairman
of the Board and Chief Executive
Officer
Joseph M. Cohen, Chairman
of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer of
HTN Communications,
LLC, is recognized
universally for both
his accomplishments
in and contributions
to the television broadcast
industry. He is highly
regarded as a pioneer
in the sports television
Industry, but his record
of achievement extends
well beyond television.
The Cohen touch
has created and revived
companies and organizations
in television, cable,
radio, arena
operations, arena development
and management, and
professional sports
franchises,
among others.
Born and raised in
New York, he attended
Joel Braverman High
School in Brooklyn
before matriculating
to the University of
Pennsylvania where
he earned a BS in Economics
in 1968.
He earned an MBA at
Penn’s Wharton
School of Business
two years later.
Cohen began to make
his mark in New York
when he was Assistant
to the Vice-President
of Operations at Madison
Square Garden Corporation
from 1970-72. He ascended
rapidly in Garden operations
becoming the Director
of Special Forces from
1972-73
and Director of Bookings
from 1973-74.
In 1975, he was named
Vice-President of MSG
Cable and Vice-President
of Development
for the Garden serving
in both roles for four
years. In 1979 he was
elevated to President
of
MSG Network where he
was responsible for
advertising, sales,
production, and program
development for MSGN
as well as the broadcast
and cable operations
of all Garden events.
During his tenure,
MSGN experienced unmatched
growth and established
itself as one of the
largest regional cable
broadcast networks
in the country. One
of his first moves
was to acquire Hughes
Television Network,
a broadcast transmission
delivery company. It
would prove to be
a move he would repeat
again in 2003.
During his tenure
as president, Cohen
used his entrepreneurial
spirit and his unique
understanding of the
industry to co-found
the USA Network with
Bob Rosencrans,
transforming UA/Columbia
Cable Television into
a 24-hour, national
broadcast entity.
It was that opportunity
that saw Cohen and
USA Network negotiate
the first-ever cable
broadcast contracts
for the NBA, NHL, and
Major League Baseball.
In
1985, Cohen left
Madison Square Garden
and MSGN to form an
investment group which
would, ironically,
purchase the Hughes
Television Network
from the Garden. He
served as
HTN president and CEO
after the acquisition.
Just a year later,
he put together another
investment group, this
time buying the Z Channel
in Los Angeles and
adding Dodgers, Anaheim
Angels and LA Clippers
games to the mix. He
served as the company’s
CEO and promptly led
the entity to its former
prominence in the market.
Cohen
was on the move again
in 1989, when he
became a consultant
for Spectacor and
Rainbow Program Services.
In 1991 he was named
President of Spectacor
West and
President and CEO of
Spectacor Films. His
consultancy with Rainbow
ended in 1991
and his CEO and President
roles with Spectacor
ended in 1993 when
he was named
Chairman of the NHL’s
Los Angeles Kings.
Along the way, he sold
HTN to IDB.
In
1995, after eight
years away from New
York, he returned to
Madison Square Garden
as Executive Vice-President
where he was responsible
for MSGN, Fox Sports
Net New York (FSNY),
and MSG Radio, among
a host of other duties.
Always at the forefront
of the
profession, he is responsible
for MSGN’s development
of High Definition
Television (HDTV) capacities
and for the network’s
record Emmy awards
during his tenure.
It was fitting that
Cohen, who had nurtured
the network in its
infancy, came back
to run it in its teenage
years.
In the fall of 2000
Cohen was charged with
the responsibility
of developing a new,
state-of-the-art Madison
Square Garden arena
and entertainment complex
as well as a practice
facility for the Rangers,
Knicks, and Liberty.
This acclaimed facility,
located in Greenburgh,
New York, opened in
the fall of 2002.
In
2005 Cohen served
as principal architect
of STO – Sportstime
Ohio is a Northern
Ohio regional sports
network reaching nearly
3 million homes and
designed to offer a
variety of sports programming
produced for the Ohio
sports fan. STO offers
150 Cleveland Indians
games annually with
ALL games in HD and
52 weeks of Indians
Cleveland Brown coverage.
Cohen’s expertise
has been called on
in service to a myriad
of committees and
organizations. He
served on the television
committees for both
the NHL and NBA between
1976 and 1985, representing
the Rangers and Knicks.
He also helped negotiate
the NHL’s contract
with ESPN. In addition,
he was active in
the production and
management of live
events at
arenas and racetracks.
He is a board member
for the March of
Dimes, the Police
Athletic
League, is a trustee
of the New York Sports
Museum and Hall of
Fame, and has advised
numerous public organizations,
including the New
York State Council
for the Arts. In
1996 he was the recipient
of the Boy Scouts
Good Scout Award
and in 1998 received
the
prestigious Ellis
Island Medal of Honor.
He has also been
named a Cable Pioneer,
one of
the highest accolades
an individual can
receive from the
industry.
In 2004
Cohen was elected
to the Board of Trustees
of California Institute
of the Arts (CALARTS),
one of leading arts
colleges in the United
States. He is also
Vice Chairman of
Campus Affairs of
the institute.
As of 2007 Cohen serves
on the Board of Directors
for footage.com, a
web based software
solution for video
storage, statistics,
and video streaming
of high school sporting
events. Created in
2006, Vootage.com allows
high schools and their
athletic programs the
ability to control,
distribute, monetize,
and index their video.
Cohen is currently
a Board Member of MediaXstream,
a production and broadcast
company. MedaXStream
specializes in source
content management
technologies and network
applications, connecting
captured images with
production services
to be handed off to
broadcasters. Solutions
are designed for producers,
broadcasters, and content
distributors who creat,
manage, and distribute
original media – with
an emphasis on high
definition.
Cohen
is married to the
former Rita Llop
and has four daughters – Aren,
Marianne,
Johanna and Gabriella.
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