Kevin Driscoll, Global Head of Audience at Motorsport Network, in Greenwich, Connecticut

Kevin Driscoll

Global Head of Audience, Motorsport NetworkAuthor, the Driscoll GlobeGreenwich, Connecticut

Audience is a product. I build it.

I lead global audience at Motorsport Network, responsible for audience strategy across Motorsport.com, Autosport, Motor1, InsideEVs, and RideApart, brands reaching millions of readers and fans each month. My team runs social, search, newsletters, platform growth, and new audience products, including Two Seats, Motorsport.com's daily F1 draft game.

I also write the Driscoll Globe, an independent publication covering Connecticut politics, public utilities, campaign money, and the institutions that shape daily life in the state. The work starts with primary documents: rate case filings, financial disclosures, campaign finance records. The goal is to show how decisions get made and who benefits from them.

Before Motorsport Network, I led audience and platform work at Bleacher Report, Sports Illustrated, and the Daily Mail. I serve on the Greenwich Democratic Town Committee.

Selected Work

The Driscoll Globe

Independent publication

Connecticut accountability journalism built on primary documents. Utility rate cases, campaign finance, AI legislation, and the money behind state politics.

Two Seats

Motorsport.com · Daily game

A daily F1 draft game, built and launched with my team at Motorsport Network.

Eversource Has Its People Inside the Building

The Driscoll Globe · Utilities & ethics

A sitting state senator works as a corporate attorney for the utility whose regulations he helps review. Under Connecticut's ethics statute, that's legal. The rules are the problem.

Connecticut Spent $155 Million to Lower Electric Bills. Mine Went Up.

The Driscoll Globe · Utilities

Tracking the state's rate relief plan against actual bills, and where the money went instead.

The New Dumb

The Driscoll Globe · Essay

Hunter S. Thompson named it during the 2000 election: confidence that no longer depends on understanding. An essay on watching it become normal.

Profiles & Contact