Donna Langley, Mark Lazarus, Cesar Conde Upped;
The reorganization comes two months after Comcast president Mike Cavanagh added oversight of the media division.

Comcast president Mike Cavanagh is undertaking a significant executive reorganization of NBCUniversal, giving expanded responsibilities to executives Donna Langley, Mark Lazarus and Cesar Conde, and cutting the number of direct reports he deals with on a regular basis to four operational leaders.
Langley, the chair of Universal Filmed Entertainment Group, will now oversee all content for the company, including for streaming and TV. Her new title will be chairman of the NBCUniversal studio group & chief content officer.
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Mark Woodbury will continue as a direct report to Cavanagh, overseeing the company’s theme parks and merchandising businesses.
As part of the reorganization, Susan Rovner, who had led TV and streaming entertainment content, will leave the company.
Rovner joined NBCU in October 2020 from Warner Bros. Television, where she had served as president of the studio under Peter Roth. At NBCU, Rovner’s role included oversight of streamer Peacock, NBC and cable networks including Bravo, USA Network, Oxygen, Syfy and E!, among others. While she managed the entertainment side, longtime NBCU cable exec Frances Berwick managed the business side of the same portfolio as the company split the creative from such areas as marketing and finance.
During her run, Rovner helped deliver hits including NBC’s Night Court and Peacock’s Poker Face, Paul T. Goldman as well as the unscripted hit The Traitors.
In addition, Berwick will become chairman of NBCUniversal entertainment, reporting to both Langley and Lazarus. Cavanagh will also work with a small number of corporate leaders, including general counsel Kimberley Harris; CFO Anand Kini; communications, HR and operations executive Adam Miller; and Craig Robinson, executive VP and chief diversity officer.
The move comes after the firing of NBCUniversal CEO Jeff Shell shook the company, with Cavanagh, a veteran Comcast executive and Brian Roberts protégé, adding oversight of the entertainment business.
In recent years, Langley focused on building a varied slate as the theatrical business transformed amid coronavirus pandemic pressures, with high concept swings such as Cocaine Bear, horror hits like M3GAN and rom-coms such as Ticket to Paradise, while also delving into the video game genre with the $1 billion grosser Super Mario Bros. Movie and keeping legacy franchises going with Fast & Furious. She also helped lure Christopher Nolan to the studio, with the filmmaker’s Oppenheimer due out July 21.
The executive began at Universal in 2001 as senior vp production and rose to Universal Pictures chairman in 2013.
Langley is well known for building relationships with talent, which may prove to be critical as she adds oversight of NBCU’s TV studios, as well as the NBC broadcast network and Peacock. Giving Langley oversight of the TV content businesses could also, potentially, make it easier to exploit the company’s film IP for TV or streaming.
Peacock had a good year, growing to 22 million subscribers, although its losses continue to grow, as well.
Conde, the former head of Telemundo, took over NBC News group in 2020 after the exit of Andy Lack.
Cavanagh’s note to staff, below.
Dear Colleagues,
It has been two and a half months since I stepped in to lead NBCUniversal, and I want to thank all of you and the leadership team for keeping the business humming during this time. I’ve had the privilege of spending time with many of you as I visited with all of our businesses. I’ve been deeply immersed in the day-to-day business of NBCU, which has reinforced what I already knew – that NBCU is a very special place with tremendous opportunities ahead.
- We have an incredible depth of talent and a strong leadership team. Over the past couple of months, I’ve been inspired by our people. Individuals at all levels of the company have stepped up, filled voids, and enabled NBCU to continue operating seamlessly. We have not missed a beat. I’m grateful to the entire leadership team for the stability and strength they bring to this company.
- NBCU benefits from a diverse array of businesses, each with leading market positions. We have the best, most innovative creative capabilities, which have developed powerful franchises, attracting large audiences and delivering premium monetization. We are the #2 Film studio in global market share this year, with nearly $3 billion in box office receipts to date. Our five global theme parks are firing on all cylinders with exceptional demand. We have the #1 TV portfolio by total audience with the largest reach of any media company. Our TV studio is award winning and prolific. We’re the #1 most watched News organization in the U.S. And sports is a huge driver with the NFL, Premiere League, a record-breaking World Cup on Telemundo, Big 10 debuting this fall and the Paris Olympics coming up next year.
- We have the right business strategy for the future. We produce premium content through our studios, distribute it through our TV networks, Peacock and third parties, and further monetize this content with our theme parks and consumer products.This strategy, combined with our superior execution, differentiates us from our competitors. We are also able to pivot as needed to adapt to market conditions and an evolving media and technology landscape. Peacock is a good example. We launched Peacock with a different thesis than most: an ad supported model that is an extension of our existing business.We set out a plan, which we have adapted as needed, and we have great momentum. Peacock is strong and growing, more than doubling our paid subscriber base in 2022 to more than 22 million, with over $2 billion in annual revenue.
- We are stronger together, both across NBCUniversal and as a part of Comcast. Our ability to take advantage of being one company sets us apart. First, the diversity of businesses within NBCU strengthen each other. Symphony – and the philosophy that we are better together– is core to how we operate. We also have the strength and benefit of being part of Comcast. We have $120 billion in revenue, the majority of which is in growth categories, including broadband, wireless, business services, parks, streaming and studios, and this is growing nearly 10 percent year over year. And we have the strongest balance sheet in the industry. Together this gives us the capacity to continue investing in our future. Our position of strength is an advantage for every part of this company.
With that goal in mind, I’m pleased to announce a new leadership structure for NBCU that takes advantage of the strengths of our leadership team and the power of the business as a whole. I will continue to lead NBCU as President of Comcast and will not name a new CEO. Instead, I will hand responsibility to a core leadership team to work with me in pursuit of the opportunities outlined above. The new leadership team will be made up of four operational heads: Donna Langley, Mark Lazarus, Cesar Conde and Mark Woodbury; and four key corporate leaders: Kimberley Harris, Anand Kini, Adam Miller and Craig Robinson. This new structure will facilitate a streamlined decision-making process and foster even more collaboration across our company.
As part of this new structure, we will create the NBCUniversal Studio Group led by Donna Langley, the NBCUniversal Media Group led by Mark Lazarus, and a broadly expanded NBCU News Group led by Cesar Conde – plus the rapidly growing Universal Destinations & Experiences Group led by Mark Woodbury.
Mark Lazaruswill become Chairman, NBCUniversal Media Group. In this role, Mark will run the company’s TV and Streaming platforms, distribution and monetization. He will continue to run our television networks, Direct to Consumer business, including Peacock, as well as the NBC Sports Group and NBC affiliate relations. Mark will permanently oversee advertising sales, which will continue to report to Mark Marshall, Interim Chairman, Global Advertising and Partnerships. He will now also oversee our content distribution business, which will continue to report to Matt Bond, Chairman, Content Distribution. Together, these businesses comprised more than $20 billion in revenue last year. Mark’s decades of experience running television, sports and advertising sales – both within NBCUniversal and earlier in his career – will be critical to the long-term growth of NBCUniversal’s media business.