If anyone knows the ins and outs of cable television, it’s Val Boreland.
Prior to becoming the executive vice president of content strategy and acquisitions at NBCUniversal Television and Streaming, Boreland held high-level positions at Lifetime Television, Comedy Central and music television network REVOLT.
Now, she oversees the buying and curating of content across NBCU’s broadcast, cable and streaming platforms, including on NBC, Peacock, Bravo, E!, Oxygen, USA Network and more.
So, if you love “Yellowstone,” The Office” and the Harry Potter movies, you can thank Boreland, who secured the rights to these properties.
Boreland recently chatted with Know Your Value founder and “Morning Joe” co-host Mika Brzezinski about her start in television, changing jobs, how to find confidence, her best advice for young women and more.
Below is their conversation, which has been edited for brevity and clarity:
Mika Brzezinski: What do the words “know your value” mean to you?
Val Boreland: This answer might be a reflection of the time we’re in, but [it’s about] taking a moment to reflect and get out of the day-to-day, taking in everything that you are, what you have accomplished and are accomplishing, because it is so much.
Often, we don’t appreciate that because we’re so consumed with the day-to-day, and we don’t take a step back to say, “Oh wow, I am a superwoman.” Life can seem so overwhelming hour by hour, but then when you step back, you’re like, “Oh wow, I actually fed my kid, got them to school, had an important business meeting, sent in a kindergarten application and cooked dinner.” It’s all the things that we do that seem like everyday duties, because it’s what we have to do. But the fact that we get them all done is really an accomplishment.
Brzezinski: Is TV the industry you’ve always wanted to work in?
Boreland: This is such a funny question because I’ve been asked this before, and I always start out by saying TV was my babysitter. And then, I always feel so bad because my parents cringe every time they read that in an article somewhere, and it makes them look like they were awful parents. But it turned into a wonderful career!
I was obsessed with television as a child. I used to go through the TV Guide that came in the mail and highlight all the shows that I was going to watch on the daily grid. I would highlight it with an actual highlighter, and it was just something that was thrilling to me.
It’s funny that I ended up being the person who actually programmed television networks and created those grids for people to watch. So, I think that I was actually destined to do what I do. But I just didn’t know that as a child or even a young adult …
Brzezinski: You once said, “I took the job and convinced them I could do it. But then I had to convince myself.” And that to me is the Know Your Value experience. It’s like men don’t have to do that second part. And even if it’s something they’ve never done before, they’re like, “I can do better than whoever’s in there, just move over.” Tell me more about what you said.
Boreland: There was fear there, but the fear came after I got the job. I didn’t go in with fear. I had the fear after.
I had been at Comedy Central for a little over eight years. And this opportunity had come up at Revolt, which was a startup company. They were starting a television network, which I had never done. I had only been in established networks before. And they asked me to come on board. And I was in this situation, which I had never been in before, where they said, “what would it take for you to come over?” That’s a dream opportunity, right? Everyone wants to be in that situation.
…I asked for everything I wanted, and it was more than anything I could ever wish for. And they said “OK.” And I was like, “Oh, did I go too far?”
Brzezinski: By the way, a question a man ever asks.









