US Trends

what happened to get up on espn

What happened to Get Up on ESPN?

Get Up —ESPN’s weekday morning sports talk show hosted by Mike Greenberg—is still on the air as of mid-2026. The show currently airs live from 8–10 a.m. ET on ESPN, with reruns later in the day on ESPN2 and ESPNews.

Early struggles and format changes

When Get Up launched in April 2018, it was a high-profile, high-budget experiment for ESPN’s morning lineup—but it immediately faced stiff competition and underwhelming ratings.

Key developments in its early years:

  • Ratings pressure: Within weeks of launch, reports noted the show was down significantly compared to prior programming in the slot, and it struggled to consistently hit 300,000 viewers.
  • Deadline to improve: ESPN reportedly gave the show until the start of the NFL season (early September 2018) to turn things around, with “big changes”—including possible cast shakeups—on the table if it didn’t.
  • Major 2018 overhaul: In August 2018, ESPN announced significant changes:
    • Co-host Michelle Beadle exited the daily show to focus on NBA Countdown in Los Angeles.
* The show was **cut from three hours to two** , giving the 7 a.m. hour back to _SportsCenter_.
* Mike Greenberg remained as the central host, with a rotating roster of contributors and analysts.

Recent status (2025–2026)

Despite the early turbulence, Get Up stabilized around Greenberg’s hosting and has continued as part of ESPN’s daily schedule.

  • In June 2025 , the show moved production to ESPN’s new Hudson Square studios in Lower Manhattan, with no interruption to its broadcast.
  • Episodes are still being published and streamed through at least April 2026 , confirming it remains an active program.
  • The show’s podcast feed also continues to release episodes under the Get Up banner.

Why people ask “what happened”

The question usually stems from one of three things:

  • Early cancellation rumors: The 2018 ratings struggles and announced deadline led to widespread speculation the show might be axed.
  • Cast and format changes: Beadle’s departure and the time-slot reduction made it feel like a different show than the one that launched.
  • Studio moves and rebrands: ESPN’s office/studio relocations and on-air refreshes over the years can make long-running programs feel “different” or Create confusion about whether they’re still running.

TL;DR

Nothing catastrophic “happened” to Get Up —it struggled out of the gate, underwent major changes in 2018 (host exit, shorter runtime), but survived and is still airing weekday mornings on ESPN as of 2026.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.