Miami's media landscape has undergone a dramatic transformation in recent years, with homegrown talent breaking free from traditional constraints to build independent empires. These media moguls aren't just covering Miami—they're reshaping how the world sees the Magic City, from its sports culture to its complex criminal history.
Leading this revolution are figures who've turned local knowledge into national influence, leveraging Miami's unique position as a cultural crossroads to create compelling content that resonates far beyond South Florida's borders.
Who Are Miami's Most Influential Media Powerhouses?
Dan Le Batard: The Independent Broadcasting Pioneer
After departing ESPN in 2021, Miami-based broadcaster Dan Le Batard co-founded Meadowlark Media to build a fiercely independent outlet unbeholden to corporate gatekeeping. The company now produces over 30 hours of weekly sports and culture programming distributed across DraftKings Network, Peacock, HBO Max, and YouTube, all anchored by his unfiltered daily show from Miami studios.

Dan Le Batard
Founder of Meadowlark Media, Le Batard produces over 30 hours of weekly sports and culture programming distributed across DraftKings Network, Peacock, HBO Max, and YouTube, anchored by his unfiltered daily show from Miami studios.
View full profileLe Batard's gamble on independence has paid off handsomely. Following co-founder John Skipper's 2026 departure, Le Batard secured a multiyear extension with DraftKings valued at over $50 million that guarantees sponsorship and placement across streaming platforms. Meadowlark's portfolio now reaches hundreds of millions of views weekly, with Le Batard's Local Hour maintaining Miami's sports culture at the operation's heart.
Meadowlark Media has expanded beyond sports into original documentaries and upcoming football programming, establishing Miami as a legitimate media production hub.
The Le Batard-Hochman Legacy
The foundation of Le Batard's success traces back to his partnership with Marc Hochman, who served as creative architect and executive producer for Le Batard's show on 790 The Ticket for eight years. According to the Miami Herald, their collaboration made it "the highest-rated sports-talk program in South Florida," with the duo's friendship dating back to their days as classmates at the University of Miami.

Hochman
Greg Cote holds the role of Sports Columnist at the Miami Herald, delivering sharp analysis on Dolphins rebuilds, Heat playoff pushes, and Inter Miami's MLS pursuits, while hosting The Greg Cote Show podcast and guesting on The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz.
View full profileTheir professional paths diverged in 2014 when Hochman launched his own competing show on WQAM, stating per the Miami Herald: "My show is hopefully going to be this place where anyone who lives in South Florida can hang out for a couple hours, talk about things interesting to people in South Florida." He noted that Le Batard's show had evolved into a national platform, creating space for more local-focused content.
Billy Corben: Miami's Documentary Truth-Teller
While Le Batard conquers sports media, Billy Corben has made Miami's darker stories his specialty. The Fort Myers native and co-founder of Miami-based Rakontur broke into directing at 23 with the Sundance-premiering "Raw Deal: A Question of Consent," launching a career rooted in South Florida's gritty undercurrents.

Billy Corben
Billy Corben, director and co-founder of Rakontur, crafts unflinching documentaries exposing Miami's drug-fueled past, sports triumphs, and hidden scandals. His films transform the Magic City's turbulent tales into gripping, award-winning narratives that resonate worldwide.
View full profileTeaming with Alfred Spellman, Corben delivered "Cocaine Cowboys"—Showtime's top-rated documentary—and ESPN's record-breaking "The U" on University of Miami football. His standouts include "Square Grouper," "God Forbid: The Sex Scandal That Brought Down a Dynasty," and Netflix's "Cocaine Cowboys: The Kings of Miami," all highlighting his knack for blending crime chronicles with cultural impact.
How Are These Moguls Addressing Current Miami Issues?
Corben's work extends beyond historical documentaries into contemporary Miami politics. He appeared on The Dan Le Batard Show With Stugotz on July 16, 2021, to discuss Miami's intense relationship with Cuba and the SOSCuba movement's role in national conversations.
More recently, on May 16, 2025, Corben provided an update on the "Miami Mafia" during another Le Batard show segment, linking the Trump administration's deportation efforts to impacts on South Florida real estate, where landlords increasingly demand proof of legal status from renters.
What's Next for Miami's Media Evolution?
Rakontur remains a Miami fixture, with Corben tackling upcoming releases including the 2024 "The Last of the Cocaine Cowboys" on Medellín cartel leader Carlos Lehder and "A Sunny Place for Shady People" focusing on local controversies. As a vocal critic on social media and podcasts, he champions the region's raw stories from his hometown base.
Meanwhile, Le Batard's Meadowlark continues expanding its multimedia reach. His flagship show evolved from ESPN's rigid formats into a freewheeling property featuring longform interviews via South Beach Sessions and sports business analysis through Nothing Personal with David Samson.
Both Le Batard and Corben represent a new breed of Miami media moguls—creators who've leveraged the city's unique stories and perspective to build national platforms while maintaining deep local roots.
| Media Mogul | Company | Specialty | Key Achievement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dan Le Batard | Meadowlark Media | Sports Broadcasting | $50M+ DraftKings Deal |
| Billy Corben | Rakontur | Documentaries | Cocaine Cowboys Franchise |
| Marc Hochman | Independent Radio | Local Sports Talk | Highest-rated SF Sports Show |
These media moguls prove that Miami's influence extends far beyond real estate and nightlife. By building independent platforms that capture the city's authentic voice—from its sports passion to its complex history—they're ensuring Miami's stories reach global audiences on their own terms, free from corporate sanitization.








