NBA on TNT era Inside the NBA debuted after TNT acquired the rights to broadcast NBA games during the
1989–90 season. In its first season, there were no permanent hosts or analysts.
Craig Sager,
Hannah Storm,
Vince Cellini,
Tim Brando and
Fred Hickman shared hosting duties at various points of the season. In the following season,
Ernie Johnson Jr., formerly a sideline reporter, took over as the show's full-time host, a role he retains to this day. Initially,
Inside the NBA focused on recaps of the day's games. Occasionally, Johnson invited a former or current NBA player or coach to sit in as a guest analyst.
Kenny Smith joined Johnson full-time in 1998. Newly-retired former NBA All-Star
Charles Barkley joined TNT in 2000 and became notorious for his bold, and at times controversial, statements on the air. In late
2002, Barkley told Kenny Smith that he would "kiss [his] ass" if
Houston Rockets then-rookie
Yao Ming scored 19 points in a game, which was followed by Yao doing exactly that later that week. As a result, on
Listen Up! With Charles Barkley and Ernie Johnson that Thursday, Barkley kissed the rear end of a
donkey that Smith brought into the studio. In
2002, a controversial
Sports Illustrated cover, in which Barkley was portrayed in chains (as a
slave), led to a debate between Smith and Barkley about the merits of the cover. During the 2000s, TNT added a third analyst alongside Smith and Barkley. Hall of Famer
Magic Johnson served as the third analyst between 2003 and 2007, and
Reggie Miller and
Chris Webber split the role between 2008 and 2011. Before the
2011–12 season, TNT hired
Shaquille O'Neal as a studio analyst. O'Neal's addition led
Inside the NBA to add the
Shaqtin' a Fool segment, featuring bloopers from around the league. During the , , and playoffs,
Golden State Warriors forward
Draymond Green made occasional appearances on
Inside the NBA. In 2022, Green was added to TNT's analyst roster, and would contribute occasionally on the show while still an active player. The popularity of the program has led the NBA to air reruns of the show (as well as reruns of other TNT NBA studio programs,
NBA Tip-Off, the
American Express Halftime Report and
Game Break) on the TNT Overtime on NBA.com. Analysts from the show, with the notable exception of Barkley, have been featured in the popular
NBA 2K video game series beginning with
NBA 2K15. Beginning in 2011, the team has also covered the
NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament as CBS began partnering with Turner for
NCAA March Madness. During the 2021–22 season,
Inside the NBA aired after TNT Tuesday games during the
NFL regular season and on Thursday nights once football season ends. TNT moved its marquee games to Tuesday in the fall and early winter in order to avoid competition with
Thursday Night Football. The postgame shows after TNT Tuesday games, beginning in January, were rebranded as the
NBA on TNT Postgame Show, with Adam Lefkoe as host and analysts O'Neal,
Candace Parker and
Dwyane Wade. Wade decided not to return to NBA on TNT coverage for the 2022–23 season, choosing to focus on other business interests.
Jamal Crawford replaced Wade as an analyst on
NBA on TNT Tuesdays. Prior to the 2022–23 season,
Warner Bros. Discovery Sports announced contract renewals for all four of the main
Inside the NBA panelists, including a 10-year extension for Barkley that he called "a life-altering deal".
Move to ESPN On July 24, 2024, the NBA announced new 11-year broadcasting agreements with
ABC/
ESPN,
NBC, and
Amazon Prime Video. TNT parent company
Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) attempted to use its backend rights to match the offer made by Amazon, but it was rejected on the basis that WBD did not match the terms offered by Amazon. On July 26, WBD filed its lawsuit against the league in New York state court, seeking to delay the NBA's new 2025 media deals from taking effect and to rule that TNT's offer matched Amazon's deal. Both parties reached a settlement on November 18, allowing WBD to continue operating NBA's digital properties. WBD also entered into a sublicensing agreement with
The Walt Disney Company to broadcast
Inside the NBA on
ESPN and
ABC beginning in the 2025–26 season, with the program continuing to be produced by
Warner Bros. Television Studios,
doing business as TNT Sports, with its existing personalities from the show’s longtime home at the Turner Studios in
Atlanta. The final edition of
Inside the NBA on TNT was broadcast on May 31, 2025, following Game 6 of the
Eastern Conference finals. During the final sign-off, Johnson said: O'Neal and Smith dropped
f-bombs during their TNT sign-off, with O'Neal saying: ESPN announced prior to the 2025–26 season that
Inside the NBA will be shown 20 times throughout the course of the regular season. The first edition will air during an
NBA Wednesday doubleheader on October 22, followed by an
NBA Thursday doubleheader the following night. Two Wednesday editions on October 29 and November 12 would follow before returning on ABC and ESPN's
Christmas Day slate. After that,
Inside the NBA would return January 24 on ABC and would continue to air on select Saturday and Sunday marquee games, as well as a few ESPN weekday doubleheaders. The postgame edition of
Inside the NBA during
NBA Saturday Primetime would air on ABC before moving to the ESPN app in favor of
local news programming across ABC affiliates, while on
NBA Sunday Showcase, it will only serve as its pregame show. The show is expected to run during select playoff games, as well as the Eastern Conference Finals and NBA Finals. ESPN will then continue to air
NBA Countdown for those broadcasts when
Inside the NBA is not on. ESPN assured that the show would remain relatively unchanged with the move from TNT, with no changes to personnel or format, and also maintaining the exact same on-air presentation and studio with few changes (aside from a rebranding to replace the TNT logo with the ESPN logo where applicable). Its panel has also made self-deprecating jokes regarding the move on-air, with Barkley showing a mock schedule of planned appearances on other ESPN shows that included the
American Cornhole League and
World Axe Throwing League, and a later episode featuring a segment mocking ESPN's perceived overemphasis on the
Dallas Cowboys in its NFL programming. ==Recurring segments==