52 REASONS ESPN/ABC/DISNEY SUCKS
While not strictly a college football issue, we all as sports fans consort with the many-armed devil that is Disney/ESPN/ABC in our attempt to digest as much football in the precious time we’re allowed each season. And in doing so–either in watching the games, searching for highlights, or zoning out after downing five beers in front of the television–you will come across much, much, much to dislike. Actually, we thought of fifty-two things we don’t like.
1. Synergy. Promo the games you have the rights to while barely mentioning the big games on in other places, no matter how important they might be. Push your product over THE GAME. Vile corporate entertainment thinking that yields little but viewer disgust.
2. Regional broadcast fiascoes. No shit here–the Tampa Bay area enjoyed the Rutgers/WVU game on the weekend of the Texas/Oklahoma game because…well, because the evil spider god in charge of everything decreed it, we suppose. Here in Atlanta we frequently got the Tar Heels getting knocked around the yard instead of a better matchup across the country.
3. Stuart Scott. His poetry slam two days ago didn’t happen, because if we did admit it, then we’d wake up crying in a ball in the corner struck by the sadness of what has become Sportscenter.

Boo. Yeah, boo.
4. The absence of Keith Olbermann.
5. The continued, painful obsolescence of Keith Jackson. Yeah, that’s more of a complaint with God, but pending a response from the Deity himself, we’ll blame his corporate masters who act as accomplices.
6. Sportstainment! The next few are attached to this umbrella concept of the idea that sports isn’t entertainment all by itself. Consider them pieces of evidence in one long indictment of Disney’s attempt to force ESPN into becoming the story, not the medium.
7. Nick Lachey, interviewer.
8. ESPN Hollywood. Lower ratings than “Christopher Lowell, After Hours.”
9. “The Hot Seat” segment. Nothing more excruciating than watching former partial qualifiers attempting to think against the clock.
10. Dream Job.
11. Stephen A. Smith. Mark Shapiro, the prime mover behind Sportstainment! and former head of ESPN, said he just HAD to hire Smith after every focus group detested his ass. Well, there you go. Would love to kick the ass of the editor of Highlights magazine for bewitching him with those devilish puzzles all these years. Makes a sport we already don’t care about all the more ignoreable–and isn’t that what a great spokesman for the sport is supposed to do?
12. Tom Berenger’s horrible old man prosthetics in The Junction Boys. Bear Bryant as burn victim, evidently.
13. WHOOSH. Fox shares some blame here, but we’ll still fault ESPN for jumping on the bandwagon by putting sound effects to every gesture.
14. Chris Berman’s “WHOOP!” noise. Berman will make several appearances here, since he’s one of the worst things about the network, so we’ll just list the offense and the death strike we think is appropriate. In this case, we think the two hand spiral neck snap, an old Seagal move, would be perfect.
15. TomBob Ley’s banishment. Outside the Lines, one of the best shows on ESPN, is relegated to the status of “Sunday Morning Boring Old Man News Thing.” How Ley stays at the network when he could be at HBO’s Real Sports is a testament to his loyalty–or his laziness, perhaps.
16. Dan Patrick’s hair dye. Has now moved squarely into Wink Martindale territory.
17. I…love…highlights without shtick…songs that don’t suck dick…and twins!!!
18. Speaking of songs that suck…Big and Rich have made their way onto our Orbital Death Ray list, along with Mark Shapiro. For a long time college football existed as a fiefdom apart from the Sportstainmenttastic! world of ESPN–pleasantly stodgy, frills-free coverage of a sport that allowed you to soak in the atmosphere of each game through the screen. Now we have Nick Lachey interviewing people and Big and Rich suggesting that we need more Ying with our Ying Yang. Two old pieces of redneck jerky–including one who one of our readers pointed out, bears a striking resemblance to Phyllis Diller–who were pulled out of a hat at random by marketing schmucks in New York who were like, “Okay, people. Red state sport—we need us some edgy country!” Total, horrid, absolute fecality soiling the last show we watch on the network.
We’re coming…and we’re shit-tayyy!!!
19. Making the story, not reporting it. Two words: Terrell Owens.
20. High school kids committing live on the network. Recruiting’s creepy enough with Tom Lemming involved. Upping the ante to national coverage only adds to the ick factor.
21. Ron Jaworski’s backseat role. His explanation of schemes and coverages is pure, elegant analysis. So he’s forced to do it at 11:30 with a concussed madman and a very cute lesbian. That’s a push, we suppose.
22. Berman’s lack of preparation. He’s ad-libbing half the time and doing so badly, stuttering and stammering while barely concealing his head-tracking reading of the teleprompter. Appropriate death strike: spinning heel kick, Walker, Texas Ranger- style.
23. Desmond Howard. We just hear happy music while he blabs on about whatever he’s talking about. Mostly bossa nova, actually.
24. The Outdoor Games. In a typical move, ESPN takes our insomniac treats–including the World’s Strongest Man competitions–and packages them into Sportstainment!. What they fail to understand is that we liked them because they were on when we got home from the bar drunk enough to find them entertaining.
25. Lee Corso. Not so fast, my friend! His analyses come down to “Ooh! They’re tougher than the other guy!” or “Kirk said this, so I’ll disagree with him and put on this mascot head!” Makes the already superb Herbstreit look like a bona fide savant in comparison, which may be his role.
26. Mike Gottfried. America’s most dyspeptic college football announcer. Frowns at babies and accuses them of lack of discipline for shitting their diapers. Misses calls frequently. The opposite of fun.
27. Berman’s clip of him throwing a football to catching the ball from Doug Williams. Yes, you were skinny once. Now you’re fat and an easy target. Appropriate death strike: run over with Brinks Truck, chase him down with a lawnmower.
28. The forced animosity between John Clayton and Sean Salisbury. Team Under Armor vs. Goliath has more verisimilitude.
29. Wide angle shots, fades, and pensive shots of young athletes recounting the trauma of growing up poor/fatherless/in Bosnia/stricken with acne/slightly nervous/average/motherless/with rickets/etc in puff pieces. Adversity, dear ESPN, is boring. Show us how long it takes for Matt Leinart to pick up a girl in a bar–now that would be Sportstainmenttastic! Hey-yo!
30. Woody Paige. In our hometown, this guy cleaned your septic tank. On ESPN, he’s an “expert.”
31. The rape of Buster Olney, a fine sportswriter.
32. Fake news conferences.
33. Flavor in our broadcasts. Yes, Dan and Keith did it very well. But show us a goal, td, basket, point, or homer without a “SAY HELLO TO MY LITTLE FRIEND” once, and we will send you a shiny dollar in the mail.
34. Mark May. The youngest disciple of the Gottfried school of broadcasting, a nasty, choleric presence on the screen whose vagina-pelt-looking goatee only added to his dislikeable on-air demeanor. Makes pure evil presence of Lou Holtz seem agreeable in comparison. Oh, speaking of…
35. Lou Holtz. You have a speech defect, and should not make a living talking on television. Oh, and you’re a cheater. Would be entertaining only if they made him speak from behind his own salad bar shield; we’re guessing it would look like those shots of cobras striking at people behind plexiglass in zoos, with spit flying in gobs all over the surface.
36. Chris Berman’s nicknames. Appropriate death strike: in honor of their upcoming Big 12 championship game, how about a dim mak Brown shot to the throat?
37. Beano Cook. Beano’s visage just plain scares the hell out of us. Plus, he’s been trying to kill us for years, with the last incident being a failed stabbing on the streets of Singapore in 2003.
38. World Series of Poker. Not bad in an hour’s dose. Unbearable in four hour stretches.
39. 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story. Find us someone who thinks anyone actually calls their father “diddy” in the South NOT named Bowden, and we will show you an actor two years out of drama school.
40. ESPNU. Not even sure what this is, but it’s unknown and strange–therefore by instinct we must hate it.
41. Chris Berman referring to himself as “The Schwam.” Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck you. Appropriate death strike: cruise missile while singing onstage with Huey Lewis.
42. ESPN, the Magazine. Huge pages, fellatio-style coverage of the shittiest citizens of the athletic world, and very, very little content.
43. Mark Shapiro, the man behind the Sportstaimentization! of the network. Gone, but not forgotten.
44. Mike Lupica. Only makes two statements a year about college football, both atrociously wrong and dumb. Abrasive without insight. We’d say he represents the worst of Northeastern sportswriting, but Dan Shaughnessy still breathes in Boston.
45. Mel Kiper, Jr. We shouldn’t really hate on Mel–to be this wrong and still get paid for it bespeaks of a certain grandiose swindletude we have to admire. But that said–no one gets their assigned pundit beat wrong with greater consistency. Built entire reputation on saying Trev Alberts sucks, which, well, duh?
46. Not enough Sumo. The Bashos rule, and we have no idea when they’re on.
47. The ESPYs.
48. Rush Limbaugh, football analyst. Yes, it’s ancient history–but the shame remains.
49. The disappearance of Chris Mortensen. He’s your NFL insider, and you put him–literally–behind the set. Because he’s working back there during the show! It Sportstainmenttastic!
50. PTI. Not for the show itself, but for its shambolic impact on ESPN programming, which now features argumentative elements in even the least confrontational formats.
51. Jim Donnan. Looks like he rolled out from beneath an overturned fishing boat in someone’s front yard, put on a tie and and a coat, and rolled into the studio for a segment or two.
52. Chris Berman’s BACK BACK BACK BACK BACK BACK call. Appropriate death strike: kicking knee break, joint-lock arm hold, thrown into path of oncoming commuter train.
1,370 Responses to “52 REASONS ESPN/ABC/DISNEY SUCKS”
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1001
Jay P says:
Not ESPN-related. But it sure was funny last night watching the New York guy (David Wright) the media spent the entire night turning into the next great All Star Game hero go down in flames as some obscure no-name infielder from the Texas Rangers (who gets zero publicity whatsoever) took the MVP away from him in the ninth inning.
When are you going to interview Michael Young’s dad on national television?
July 12th, 2006 at 9:30 am
1002
dg says:
I know it’s sad and everything, but why am I watching the Make A Wish Foundation on Sportscenter? If ESPN wants to do this, fine, it’s nice watching athletes help out the community. But don’t put it on Sportscenter. I turn on Sportscenter to watch highlights from the days sporting events, not to be depressed.
July 13th, 2006 at 1:38 pm
1003
Wildog says:
It is that time of year where the “X Games” commercials are going to smuther all man-kind to death. What a stupid f’n competition. Nothing better than to manipulate pre-adolesence youth into underaheiving potheads.
July 13th, 2006 at 4:53 pm
1004
Corliss says:
Let’s see, Michelle Wie puked her way out of the John Deere Tournament(PGA I might add). She’ll WIN REALLY SOON, though. Why? because ESPN SAYS she will. She’s not a child but she’s ONLY 16. See reason #987. Again, ESPN exploiting(whoring)out this CHILD’S moment. Sooooo ESPN.
July 14th, 2006 at 6:25 pm
1005
Brandon says:
I’ve been away from a computer for several days, but I saw something the other nite on SC that made me laugh, or maybe it was BT..
After their overly, and i mean overly, excessive breakdown of an exhibition game, they were asking everybody to make a BOLD prediction for the 2nd half of the baseball season. That awesome baseball analyst Harold Reynolds went way out on a limb predicting that the Florida Marlins would finish 2nd place in the NL East…. WHOA Harold, way to go! What great baseball insight you’re giving us! Stay up all night coming up with that? Man, the only thing bold about that is actually saying it on national t.v. so that everyone can see how stupid you are. That’s bold.
What a waste he is!
July 14th, 2006 at 10:18 pm
1006
Wildog says:
I actually just saw DARTS on ESPN. I have no words for something like this being on television.
July 18th, 2006 at 8:52 pm
1007
Chris says:
Mr Corliss:
CAPITALIZING three out of EVERY five words IS not conducive to an EFFECTIVE writing STYLE.
I didn’t watch any television over the weekend and have no idea of what ESPN’s coverage of the John Deere looked like, although I am guessing that Michelle Wie and her +7 got a lot more attention than whoever was atop the leaderboard on Thursday and Friday. However, it is not at all clear what you wanted ESPN to do instead: would you have been happier if ESPN had simply pretended that she had not entered the tournament and made no mention of her +7? If they had done that, you would no doubt be just as outraged that they hid her poor play from the spotlight.
July 19th, 2006 at 12:36 am
1008
Jeff says:
The big question on all the ESPN sports programs yesterday: Will Roger Clemens be traded. Then they go to their analyst, and he tells us that there is VIRTUALLY NO CHANCE that he will be traded.
Well, excuse me, but WHY IN THE HELL IS THIS A NEWS STORY? Yep, you’re still not creating the news. I guess you were required by law to talk about it because it was speculated upon in a New York tabloid. If a New York newspaper talks about it, it’s national news.
And they’ve been showing this And-1 streetball basketball bullshit for days on end now. Oh wait, they’re selling these “mix tapes” on the ESPN website now. If they wanted to show bad basketball being played in arenas that are 75-percent empty, they should show more WNBA.
And a non-ESPN (in general) follow-up to an earlier post. David Wright was not the hero of the Home Run Competition. David Wright was not the hero of the All Star Game. But since the All-Star Game, David Wright has gotten to be on, among other things, David Letterman and the cover of Sports Illustrated. This is why New York can kiss my ass. He’s not the hero, but he gets to be the hero–just because New York hasn’t had a marketable white athlete since Jason Sehorn (who didn’t deserve his non-stop publicity either). Meanwhile, Ryan Howard and Michael Young have been forced by the media to go back into MLB’s witness protection program.
July 20th, 2006 at 2:24 pm
1009
garydl says:
This site is truly incredible. Thanks to all the people that have posted here. It’s great to see that my friends and I aren’t alone in noticing the sad decline of ESPN into the nether-regions of television. Keep up the good work and spread the word about this site!
Now, let me get my two cents in. Does anyone else think that the current hosts of Sports Center and ESPNews are the little dorks in high school who couldn’t get laid? You know the kind of guys I’m talking about; nerds that constantly interupted people talking about or playing sports to give their meaningless opinions because they had no friends of their own to talk to. These are the same ass-clowns who never played a single sport in high school or college but somehow thought that they had the right to criticize and second-guess the coaches and players because they thought they were wiser and smarter than all of them combined. I’ll give you ten-to-one odds that none of these guys even got laid until they bought a piece of ass in Bristol after they got their first paycheck from ESPN. And now, thanks to these shitbags, even the local news sports-anchors are trying to be smarmy and cute.
Thanks a lot ESPN; you used to be cool but lost it to your own smug self-righteousness when you decided your network was more important than the sports that you cover. Boo-Yah, motherfuckers, I blocked your channels on my satellite dish!
July 20th, 2006 at 6:15 pm
1010
Corliss says:
Hey Chris(I.e. Michelle Wie’s dad/family member), here’s a news flash: anything Michelle Wie does other than win is a non-story. It’s awfully strange that out of almost 1,010 posts YOU seem to be the only one defending her and the way ESPN(that I WILL capitalize, jackass) continues to shove her down our throats(just like Danica). The fact that she shot a +7 when she had no business there in the first place is also proof that the hype must stop. By the way Chris, since your writng style seems to be so “effective”, I’ll look for your novel(s)on the NY Times best-seller list. Hell, you probably wrote “War and Peace”, too.
July 22nd, 2006 at 4:25 am
1011
Jeff says:
“The biggest story in baseball right now: Alex Rodriguez. He made another error…It could be a Steve Sax, Chuck Knoblauch, Mackey Sasser kind of situation”: ESPNews.
Here’s a bigger story: only two teams–the two teams you show on television more than anything except for Danica Patrick and Roger Clemens–can afford this piece of shit. And you don’t have a problem with it. You even help perpetuate this system.
Oh yeah, and once again, nobody outside of New York Fucking City cares how many errors A-Rod made this week. Remember when ESPN freaked out a couple of months ago when Randy Johnson lost a couple of starts in a row? But it still has to be about the Yankees.
They report. They decide.
July 22nd, 2006 at 6:15 pm
1012
Jeff says:
Two weeks ago the Tour de France couldn’t get arrested on ESPN.
Oh wait…one of OUR guys has a chance to win? We have the chance to market another American athlete? By all means, let’s start talking non-stop about it.
I can’t wait to see this Landis guy on the Budweiser Hot Seat when it’s all over.
July 22nd, 2006 at 6:18 pm
1013
Chris says:
Corliss:
Absolutely, ESPN is shoving Danica Patrick down our throats. The coverage she gets is totally unwarranted, not just because she has never won but also because women have been competing with men in open wheel racing longer than Danica Patrick has been alive. But that topic has been beaten to death on this board and everyone agrees with it. ESPN’s overcoverage of Danica Patrick is an easy target, but citing her does not support your argument that ESPN is “whoring out children’s moments” as you originally posted, because Danica is what, 25 or 26, obviously not an adolescent.
The only thing I disagreed with you about in the first place was that the Michelle Wie phenomenon is dissimilar to the things you compared it to in post #987, i.e. the Little League World Series and grade school spelling bees. Even if you want to argue that Michelle Wie is a “child,” she is a child who has earned the right to compete against adult women for money; she is not competing against preteens and teens. That’s the point I made in post #995.
I will never understand why Michelle Wie and her entourage would prefer to go on this increasingly bizarre quest to make the cut in a men’s event instead of trying to establish herself as a champion on the ladies’ tour first. Doesn’t make sense to me at all. But as long as she can continue getting exemptions to play in men’s tournaments, she has the right to do it. It’s not up to ESPN whether she competes in these events, so what do you want ESPN to do? “Flooding the zone” with Wie coverage when she’s nowhere near making the cut is obnoxious, but they would lose credibility if they pretended that she wasn’t there at all.
If SC just said “John Deere today, 1st round, Joe Blow is in the clubhouse at -4, two other golfers at -3 … on to tennis …” and made no mention of Wie’s +7, people would accuse the network of covering up Wie’s poor play, or of belittling the historic accomplishments of this young woman, etc. I suppose we all have a part of us that would like to just ignore her and hope she’ll go away, but that isn’t a viable option for ESPN right now. Too many more opening round 78s and 79s in marshmallow men’s tournaments and those sponsors’ exemptions are going to dry up anyway, and we can all stop talking about this.
Finally: if you’re so thin-skinned that even mild constructive criticism reduces you to a sputtering tirade, I would suggest that a sports blog is not really your speed. I could send you some links to blogs about scrapbooking or something similarly suited to your delicate composition.
Best,
Chris
July 24th, 2006 at 2:34 pm
1014
Quack says:
I can think of alot of other guys from ESPN that should have been fired/let go before this guy…. (source: NY Post)
July 25, 2006 — ESPN yesterday fired analyst Harold Reynolds from Baseball Tonight, sources told The Post. The reason was not immediately known.
“We are not going to comment,” ESPN VP Josh Krulewitz said.
When asked how they are going to explain that Reynolds will never be on the air again, Krulewitz still declined comment.
Reynolds did not return calls.
Reynolds, 45, had been with ESPN 11 years. He had been a fixture on the show, which is a gathering spot for baseball fans, players and team executives.
The program already is dealing with the loss of information man Peter Gammons. Gammons is recovering from a brain aneurysm that occurred at the end of last month. The show’s main analysts had been Reynolds, Gammons and John Kruk.
In Gammons’ absence, ex-Met GM Steve Phillips has played a bigger role on the show. The program uses several analysts, including Orel Hershiser, Tino Martinez and Jeff Brantley.
Last night, host Karl Ravech was joined by Kruk and Phillips. Reynolds usually is on Monday nights.
Reynolds was known for a smooth style that usually was player friendly. He never found himself in too much controversy for what he said on the air. In fact, ESPN was so high on him he was expected to stay with the network through its just signed eight-year deal with MLB.
Now, after yesterday, Reynolds is no longer welcome in Bristol.
July 25th, 2006 at 11:03 am
1015
Wildog says:
I would fire everybody on Baseball Tonight before I would fire Harold. Maybe he refused to do a promo for ESPN mobile? Another reason why ESPN has lost their way, Harold was pretty good in my opinion, I wonder where he will land now.
July 25th, 2006 at 12:18 pm
1016
N says:
Couldn’t read all of the comments so sorry if I repeat anything that was already said (and please pardon my run on sentences, it is just my ranting style)
1) Skip Bayless is the worst person on earth, I am convinced that long ago he realized that he wouldn’t be anybody if he just made correct statements about sports so he decided to play the role of a ‘heel’, like in pro wrestling, so that he could gain attention by making ridiculous statements and be seen as the bad guy, sure pretty much everyone thinks TO is an ass, but is anyone actually dumb enough to take it to the point where they make claims that TO is not a good wide receiver, I could write a novel about how awful this guy is each time I watch a 10 minute segment of him, and why does espn allow these guys to be on air, all you have to do to be a skip bayless or woody paige is be an average writer and pay mild attention to the top five sports stories each day, there are thousands of people out there who could provide in depth analysis of players, coaches, teams, sports, and whatnot because they are former coaches or players and they know the game or they focus on one team or sport and know more about it than skip baseless and company, i could go on for hours
2) stu scott – i believe this ass has a college degree in communications or journalism from the university of north carolina, so why not honor your former professors, teachers, college, high school, parents, and so on and actually speak like an educated person, ok it may be cool to some people that you speak like a high school dropout from the ghetto but you are a 30 something year old television personality with a college degree, so f’ing act like it for once, also scott van pelt is totally annoying, i could go on for hours
3) credibility! does anyone at espn or any of its outlets have any, guys like scoop jackson constantly end up being wrong days, weeks, and months after they write articles on things like the nba, so shouldnt they lose their jobs, if scoop jackson is frequently wrong about the nba, then he shouldnt be writing about the nba, if stephen a smith says the eastern conference teams shouldnt be in the playoffs and that the east is a joke and the pistons dominate the lakers in the nba finals then shouldnt stephen a lose his job, where is the credibility factor, espn should monitor the predictions and analysis of its talking heads and writers and do a yearly evaluation and fire those who are just plain wrong most of the time, i have two awards for lack of credibility this year, award 1 is for espn and it goes to scoop jackson who one week after writing an article about how all of his nba regular season predictions were wrong, he writes about how excited LA is for the lakers-clippers 2nd round matchup (which never happened) and the week after that he wrote about how the pistons were going to punish the cavs and lebron would learn so much from that (he really dodged a bullet with the pistons comeback) and a few weeks later he writes about how antoine walker will be the key to the heat winning the title and how josh howard is about to erupt, so good job scoop, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, and wrong, my 2nd award is a non-espn award and it goes to magic johnson for this pre-season nba gem – “i guarantee the knicks will make the playoffs and stephon marbury will be an all-star under larry brown,” great call magic, so you guaranteed that and you were the farthest thing from correct i’ve ever seen so what do the viewers get, do we get money from you, or will you give us ten seconds of our time back because we had to listen to you say that, do you get fired or resign from your job as guest commentator, what do the viewers get who saw you make that guarantee and have it not come true, dont say guarantee if you have nothing to back that guarantee up with, in fact dont say anything at all because clearly you have no credibility, so why is there no credibility for the sports media, why
4) consistency – make a prediction and stick to it, some of these guys pick like 8 different teams to win the nba finals through the course of the playoffs, or like team a will win game 1 so everyone writes about how they will win the series, but team b wins game 2 so people say b will be the champs, then team a wins game 3 and everyone is saying they are gonna win it all, well you get the point, make your pick and stick to it
5) non sports events – they shouldnt be on tv, poker, fishing, darts, etc.
6) pti & around the horn – just do pti, drop around the horn, they discuss the same topics and i could say randy johnson will win tonights matchup vs. barry zito because he is 6-2 vs. the oakland a’s and tony ’statface’ reali will give me 3 points and then barry zito will go out and beat up on the yanks and johnson, you cant give points for predictions until after the predicted event happens or doesnt happen, that doesnt even make sense to do it before the event happens
7) skip bayless, oops i already did him, he deserves like ten spots, because i know that in the ten minutes between now and what i wrote about him at 1 he probably said something to a friend or co-worker along the lines of, ‘lebron james is a selfish player, his team would win the nba championship without him because larry hughes and zydrunaus are top ten nba players, i would rather have morris peterson on my team than lebron james’
9) i hate espn, espn2, espn.com, and espn the magazine – the list of 52 is very good and if everyone here put their minds together we could probably make a list of 25,000 things wrong with espn and maybe 50 things good about it, too bad we dont really have an alternative
**** here are the acceptable people at espn and its outlets (i’m sure i’ll forget a few) – DJ Gallo, Ron Jaworski, Harold Reynolds, Joe Morgan, Greg Anthony, Tom Tolbert, Peter Gammons, John Clayton, George Solomon, 1/2 Bill Simmons, Tim Kurkjian, Len Pasquarelli, and I think thats it, thats it? 12 people? what? that is awful*****
July 25th, 2006 at 1:21 pm
1017
Jeff says:
You know, it’s funny how ESPN loves to shove its “accomplishments” down our throats. Forget that they’re not really technically even newsworthy. ESPN signs a new contract with the Big Ten Conference, it’s the top story on the ESPN.com website. ESPN signs a contract with NASCAR, it’s in the first segment of SportsCenter.
But MLB renews the contract with Fox, it’s not even mentioned ANYWHERE. TBS takes some of baseball’s division series away from ESPN? Nope…never happened according to our news outlets. And yet, it was “news” when ESPN got the contract. Hmmm… . And now they even refuse comment on the Harold Reynolds situation. Just like when Trev Alberts was fired from College Gameday. Ignore it and maybe no one will notice or it will go away. Fuckin’ Nazis. Are Karl Rove and Roger Ailes running the network?
And this Danica Patrick/Roger Clemens/Brett Favre/Michele Wie/T.O./Barry Bonds fetish has been annoying, but could you please get the “real” news before covering them? They don’t even come close to getting the news these days. The Reggie Bush holdout story was on Yahoo! Sports for about 72 hours before ESPN actually acknowledged it. Then, last night, Chris Mortensen’s “sources” told him that Reggie Bush was thinking about holding out for a very long time. Some source there. Was it the same one that told you that Pete Carroll was going to be the head coach of the Los Angeles Saints this year? Of course, Yahoo! also scooped ESPN on the Reggie Bush house story by a couple of days.
You’d think they would have asked Reggie Bush about these things when he shot his stupid fucking ESPN Mobile commercial….
In ESPN’s defense though, there wasn’t enough time for SportsCenter for these stories. If they would have run them, there wouldn’t have been enough time to tell us who will win the 2012 NFC Wild Card Game.
July 26th, 2006 at 10:58 am
1018
BFA says:
These comments just prove the inevitability of how something starts out great (for the hardcore sports fan) and turns into everything it wasn’t (hit the mainstream).
Time for another network to start it over again with the old formula (remember New Coke?)
July 26th, 2006 at 3:46 pm
1019
Jeff says:
f.y.i. Various websites report that Reynolds was fired for an ACCUSATION of sexual harrassment.
It wasn’t anything insignificant. You know, like urinating off a balcony (Gary Miller), or saying that the crack pipe belonged to your friend (you know who). Both of them got to keep their jobs after their “incidents.”
It’s okay for sports anchors to pitch cellphones or car insurance, but this isn’t
Class act, that ESPN…
July 26th, 2006 at 5:07 pm
1020
Chris says:
Jeff –
I agree with a lot of what you’ve said here, but #1017 is a little over the top. ESPN is a for-profit business — they’re not the Associated Press and they’re not a public utility. It’s a little disingenuous to disguise your advertising as a “news” feature, eg the new Big 10 deal kicking off SC, but I don’t see anything wrong with making that part of their business model. The TV networks do the same sorts of things all the time, filling dead air time in sportscasts by having the announcers hawk other shows on the same network. It can be annoying at times but there is nothing “f***ing Nazi” about it. And I hardly expect the competing sports networks to plug each other’s programming; if ESPN DID start talking about new programming on Fox or OLN, you’d be condemning them all for being in cahoots.
I agree with you about the inconsistency in firing guys though — it seems to be 100% political and 0% based on the gravity of the offense involved. The shadiest one of all was Gregg Easterbrook (the former “Tuesday Morning Quarterback” columnist) who got fired in midseason 2005 after he wrote a column criticizing Michael Eisner, the CEO of the whole mothership. They fired him without announcement and then deleted his entire archive from the ESPN.com website, as if he had never existed and nobody would notice that his column had been discontinued.
July 27th, 2006 at 5:50 pm
1021
mike says:
I love your 52 Reasons! Interesting how I found your site. The other night, during a break in the MLB game I was watching, I switched over to ESPN News to get some scores. I go to ESPN News, instead of the other ESPN channels so I don’t have to watch, poker, darts, Stu Jackson or Linda Cohn!
Anyway, 2 nights ago this attractive black female anchor on ESPN News was interviewing Harold Reynolds. I wish now I could remember what he said to her, but it was something that caught my attention, and my reaction was I couldn’t believe he just said that to her on the air.
If you or any of your readers caught it, and remember what he said, please post it. Thanks.
BTW, ESPN does suck. I think they have lost their focus. They once did sports and did it well. Now they can’t decide if they want to be MTV, CNN, or Comedy Central.
This is a personal plea for Bill Gates to begin an all sports network that actually does sports.
July 27th, 2006 at 5:59 pm
1022
Chris says:
Quick breakdown of the “content” in the 7/31/06 issue of ESPN the Magazine (why the definite article, btw?)
Full page ads for products not affiliated with ABC / ESPN: 55
Full page ads for ABC / ESPN programming other than XGames: 5
Full page ads for the XGames: 8
Feature stories on XGames, net of ads: 10
“Zoom” feature, devoted to double-page spreads of a single photo with brief caption: 6
Full page photos that introduce a feature story and contain no text: 10
Fantasy football rankings that you can get a million other places: 10
Actual stuff: 44
Total pages: 148
That’s a fluff to content ratio of >2:1 … why don’t they just make it a monthly magazine if they can’t crank out enough content to make it a weekly?
July 28th, 2006 at 2:25 am
1023
Mark says:
Post No. 99
Someone knew something in 2005. HILARIOUS!
#
99
Harold Reynolds needs to be bitch-slapped.
He needs to have a prostate exam done by a rhino.
He’s the worst thing about Baseball Tonight.
Comment by Jer — November 29, 2005 @ 6:11 pm
July 28th, 2006 at 1:44 pm
1024
Jeff says:
After watching our favorite’s network cover SEC Media Days, one thing is for certain: Steve Spurrier and South Carolina are the only story and team ESPN has deemed worth covering, Forget that Auburn, Florida, LSU, Georgia, and perhaps Tennessee and Alabama are going to be better. The SEC needs a Danica Patrick so the “average” person can be interested too.
And I’m sorry about the offense about the Harold Reynolds comments. But you have to understand. ESPN left itself wide open after not firing Michael Irvin when police found “his friend’s” crack pipe in his car. Every personnel decision deserves to be scrutinized after that one. And just keeping your mouth shut (and forcing everyone involved to shut up too) smacks of arrogance, and is not the way to get yourself out of this mess. Confidentiality statements notwithstanding. Thank goodness “anonymous” ESPN staffers had the balls to stand up and tell us what really happened. Read Noam Chomsky’s “Media Control,” especially the section on selective perception, and apply it to ESPN. That’s all I did. Yes, sports doesn’t matter compared to politics and war, but it doesn’t make it right.
July 29th, 2006 at 9:47 am
1025
Jeff says:
This ESPN Mobile thing defines ESPN in a nutshell.
You don’t have to venture too deep on the Internet to find stories that will tell you that ESPN Mobile has been a colossal, Ishtar-type failure. Some accounts I’ve read say that it currently has about one-fourth of the subscribers it projected at this point.
So what’s ESPN’s reaction? Admit defeat? Apologize for wasting our time with this shit on news programs? Move on to something else?
Of course not. Their reaction is, of course, SHOVE IT DEEPER down our throats. Just pathetic. Of course, I don’t know why I expected anything less. The news department has done the same thing with Danica Patrick.
July 30th, 2006 at 11:24 am
1026
Jeff says:
Is ESPN going to do a story on Terrell Owens on EVERY SINGLE DAY of training camp? So far, they’re 5 for 5.
July 30th, 2006 at 11:51 am
1027
Jeff says:
Any athlete, coach, owner, etc. says anything controversial or that somewhat doesn’t make sense, and ESPN’s “journalists” crucify them and tear them completely apart.
But apparently these journalists can make statements like “I’m not voting for Mark McGwire for the Hall of Fame” (even though there if no definitive evidence of steroid use),” and nobody gets an opportunity to question them. Whho watches the gatekeepers?
And Danica Patrick throwing a temper tantrum is not news, much less worth being mentioned THREE TIMES on a single episode of SportsCenter. Especially after she basically admitted that the NASCAR story was a total lie concocted by her handlers to keep her in the spotlight. ISN’T THERE ANY SORT OF PUNISHMENT FOR THIS????????????
Same thing with any discussion of which NEW YORK nightclubs Jeremy Shockey goes to.
August 1st, 2006 at 10:34 am
1028
Corliss says:
Chris,
It’s very clear that we BOTH don’t like the way ESPN covers some things/people. Let’s simply agree to disagree on which ones and how ESPN does it. Let’s layoff the personal stuff which our posts seemed to have devolved into. Scrapbooking? Hilarous.
Corliss
August 2nd, 2006 at 8:47 am
1029
Brandon says:
Holy crap! They just led off SC with the Oakland/LA highlights… finally!!! Now I don’t have to watch the rest of the lame ass show. Thanks ESPN, you got it right at least this one time! What’s amazing, nothing of importance happened in the game, it was just your run-of-the-mill ballgame. Usually to beat out Yanks, Red Sox, etc. there has to be a record breaking perfomance, or an amazing ending to lead off SC.
I’m off to enjoy the rest of the morning now, woohoo!
August 2nd, 2006 at 9:12 am
1030
Brian says:
The Good
Mike and Mike
Jaws
Woody and Skip debating
Herbstreit
Bill Simmons
Colin Cowherd (but horrible setup)
Mort
Harold Reynolds (gone now though)
Peter Gammons
Sal Paolantonio
Stink
Dick Vitale–not college hoops without him
Kornheiser
Wilbon
Buster Olney
The Bad
Mike Gottfried
Joe Thiesmann
Dana Jacobs
Michael Irvin
Around The Horn
Lee Corso
Merril Hoge
Swami
Trey Wingo–as big of a jerk in person
Stuart Scott
Jason Whitlock-idiot from KC
The Ugly
Suzy Kolber
Paul McGuire
Van Pelt
Beano Cook
Berman
John Kruk
The fat guy who talks about horse racing and football
Bob Ryan
August 2nd, 2006 at 5:49 pm
1031
Dylan says:
It’s nice to see the AL East/ Central/Wild Card race is between the Tigers, Red Sox, and Yankees. Forget the defending champs in Chicago and the monumental comeback the Twins have assembled. Yahoo Sports seems up on this, but ESPN seems to forget the Yankees just passed the White Sox for the Wild Card and the Twins are two games back.
Here’s to the A’s/Twins and Cards/Padres in the Championship Series. Then we’ll be treated to looks back at the 2006 season headlines:
Barroids,
E-Rod,
Why the Yankees should be in the Series and why they will be in 2007,
plus a look at ESPN’s Pirates’ coverage-Disney’s Pirates of the Carribean (like they covered Pittsburg except during the All Star Game),
Ditto for racing coverage-meaning DisneyPixar Cars highlights with a smattering of Danica.
Also, I will FREAK if I hear one more “Pirates in Pewter.” It’s bad enough that sweaty tub of bourbon and chicken wings ruins a few baseball games a year, but must also destroy NFL highlights on the accursed network.
August 3rd, 2006 at 11:56 am
1032
Jeff says:
I tried to get the latest NFL news this morning on “NFL Live,” but instead I found out three things: there’s a quarterback controversy in NEW YORK (nothing new about it–they just rehashed it again), it’s hot at NEW YORK Jets training camp, and Jerome Bettis (RETIRED) played golf with Tiger Woods yesterday.
The rest of the show was dedicated to an interview with Chad Johnson. At the end of the interview, the unidentified ESPN “journalist” told Johnson that “we look forward” to the celebrations he has in store for us this year. He should be fired immediately and move to Fox to cover the president.
August 3rd, 2006 at 1:40 pm
1033
Paul says:
Brian: ON YOUR LIST UNDER BAD, you forgot to list the worst of the bad! Jason Smith of All Night with Jason Smith.
What a jerk! He has a segment where he says that you can call in and ask him any question you want. About three weeks ago during this segment someone was put on the air. Jason Smith asked him what his question was. I forget what the guy asked, but Smith responded with, “That’s not the question you said you were going to ask!!!” I tell you, this was the high point of the 4 or 5 months this bozo has been on the air!! The whole thing is a setup…someone on the staff screens the questions. What a sham!!
Something “new” which Smith evidently finds really great is “football on the fours.” Just his frequent mentions of this segment must take up at least 30 minutes of his 5 hours of air time!! Oh, and he sometimes makes some sort of sound before alerting his listeners to the fact that this great segment is coming up or is about to take place! Whatever this sound is, it is more sickening than his fake laugh…though I didn’t think anything could be worse.
By the way, I’m not the only one his fake laugh irritates…I was at another site the other day and there were several comments on this jerk and his laugh.
ESPN – DUMP JASON SMITH……PLEASE….
August 4th, 2006 at 5:41 am
1034
Jeff says:
The Cold Pizza hosts just said on the air that ESPN will be running a SportsCentury tonight on Ricky Bobby (the character in the new NASCAR movie).
I must be losing my mind or something, because this kind of shit doesn’t even phase me anymore.
A few minutes later, Woody and Skip were debating what kind of impact the NEW YORK media would have on Chase Utley’s 35-game hitting streak this weekend. Beyond shameless. No debate, however, on why he should be forced to answer their often irrelevant or often antagonistic (”That’ll teach him he can’t go through this without answering to us”) questions.
August 4th, 2006 at 10:57 am
1035
Joe says:
Better get used to ESPN beating us over the head with this Ballad of Ricky Bobby thing for the next few days. Mike & Mike in the morning must have mentioned it 20 different times this a.m. (and I am not exaggerating!!!) Not only that, they and their whole staff are going to see it together after the show so get ready for 20 more mentions (if not more) on Monday morning!!! What a bunch of shills!!
Not only that, they had Will Ferrell on the phone the other morning promoting the movie (he’s the STAR!) He ended by saying he watches Mike & Mike every morning. I’ll bet! It brodcasts 4 to 8 a.m. eastern every morning and if he is in CA, that means 2 to 6 a.m.. Yeah, right, he listens every morning!
Listened to 45 minutes of Colon* (Cow-heard ) this a.m. He mentiioned the movie too. It must be a Disney product. I checked a review of the movie and it was rated “Hicky, slobby.” Sounds like a winner like the rest of ESPN.
*Spelling error is intentional!!)
August 4th, 2006 at 1:35 pm
1036
Joe says:
Well….all that promotion paid off. Ricky Bobby or whatever finished #1 at the box office. I read they even promoted it on the Food Channel.
August 6th, 2006 at 4:04 pm
1037
Vic says:
If you think Ricky Bobby was bad, you ain’t seen nothing yet. The new football movie “Invincible” is coming out soon with Mark Walhberg. That IS a Disney/ABC owned movie. You know they will be cutting pieces of that movie with Eagle highlights for the entire season. Mark Walhberg will be on the hot seat answering the six pack of questions and giving the top ten highlights while holding cold pizza on Good Morning America. This movie will also win the brand new “Best Sports Movie” category on the ESPY’s Quite Frankly, I’m sick of it.
August 8th, 2006 at 7:38 am
1038
Jeff says:
It’s WAY TO DAMN EARLY to discuss which hats Roger Clemens and Mike Piazza will be wearing for the Hall of Fame. Especially considering they have to wait five years to get in once they retire, and they’re both still playing. Oh wait. I forgot. Every ESPN baseball story has to be about Roger Clemens or have a “NEW YORK CONTROVERSY” connection.
And saying that “Talladega Nights” was #1 because ESPN (and, I have to say, everyone else) shoved it down our throats, is not entirely accurate. If that was the case, the new Superman movie would have made as much money as Titanic. And that one crashed and burned. In addition, all of these lousy ESPN movies would be getting Survivor-type ratings if that theory held water. Now I’m not saying that media saturation didn’t help. But come on.
I have to keep this one short. I have to watch Bronson Arroyo get his haircut on Cold Pizza in just a few minutes!
August 8th, 2006 at 11:15 am
1039
Jeff says:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/writers/richard_deitsch/08/10/media.circus/index.html
ABC Sports is now known as ESPN on ABC.
Some people just don’t fucking get it.
August 10th, 2006 at 4:59 pm
1040
Jeff says:
Does anyone remember ESPN’s two biggest baseball stories (not related to Roger Clemens) one month ago? I do. First, the Yankees were not going to make the wild card because they (gasp) LOST ONE SINGLE FREAKIN’ GAME BY SEVENTEEN RUNS!!!!!!!!!! Second, A-Rod had made so many errors that he was on the verge of becoming Chuck Knoblauch. It had gotten so bad that the network was forced to give us bat-by-bat and groundball-by-groundball updates on live television.
One month has passed, and what does ESPN think? First, the Red Sox are now the team that is dead, and there is no way that they’ll EVER be able to catch the playoff-bound Yankees–who are now (in their humble opinion) serious World Series contenders. Second, ESPN.com is giving us a E-Ticket cover story wanting to know why “America” hates A-Rod.
Once again, just like the Pele story about “When soccer ruled the USA,” ESPN has mistaken New York for “America.” That’s not to say that we (America) don’t hate the guy, but the story mostly cites examples from spoiled Yankees fans from New York City.
But one thing remains consistent in ESPN’s coverage: it is, was, and ALWAYS WILL BE about New York and the things or teams that affect their teams.
I’m also hoping that ESPN will give some analysis or open discussion about the NCAA’s decision to reinstate USC’s Dwayne Jarrett. Especially after Oklahoma (and other teams) were forced to dump some of their star players for their infractions. To me, the biggest difference between Dwayne Jarrett and Rhett Bomar is that Bomar actually performed some work to receive his illegal benefits.
Somehow, I don’t believe that ESPN will be leaving no stone uncovered on this one. At least not as long as the network’s “research” tells it that the same “America” that only wants to hear about New York loves USC football.
August 11th, 2006 at 4:26 am
1041
Corliss says:
It was nice listening to Bill Parcells give the media(particularly ESPN)a reprimand for basically trying to drum up stories about T.O.’s hamstring and his (according to ESPN) “implosion.” Frankly, ESPN WANTS T.O. & Tuna to go nuclear on each other so they’ll have a “sexy” story. God forbid the Cowboys have a somewhat of a normal training camp.
August 11th, 2006 at 10:28 am
1042
Jeff says:
Tonight SportsCenter did a story about the death of 70s talk show host Mike Douglas. It wasn’t because he had any connection to sports whatsoever. It was because it allowed the network to show the same stupid clip of a 3-year-old Tiger Woods hitting golf balls on his show ONE MORE TIME.
We all knew that ESPN had no class or respect for anything. I didn’t know it included the dead too. Using somebody’s death as an excuse to talk about Tiger Woods on your program.
August 12th, 2006 at 1:56 am
1043
Brandon says:
You’ve got to be frickin’ kidding me! This morning on SC, during their 4 Downs segment, the bumbling idiot Sean Salisbury was debating against… Sean Salisbury! I can’t stand one of him, let alone 2. That’s like shit arguing with crap.
ESPN gives this ex-quarterback (and i use the term quarterback loosely) way too much face time.
August 12th, 2006 at 10:46 am
1044
Jeff says:
Preseason football should NEVER the top story on any network, especially in the middle of a bunch of exciting pennant races. I don’t care whose first game it is.
August 13th, 2006 at 1:01 am
1045
Skuter says:
Fuck ESPN, They Love The Redsox and Yankees and make them the top story almost everynight that is if someone isent reported for useing steroids then they have a feel day,fuck their love for terrel owens and barry bonds, fuck their love for broadcasting every yankee and redsox game “HEY WHO NEEDS TO LIVE IN BOSTON OR NEW YORK TO SEE YANKEES AND REDSOX GAMES ANYMORE” it’s like whenever the yankees or redsox are doing bad they feel bad for them or something, fuck them all, go sox WHITE SOX the real best team
August 14th, 2006 at 12:19 am
1046
Jeff says:
ESPN interviews Jerry Rice after being inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. What type of questions do they ask? His college career? Barely. His pro career? A little bit.
But what are they most concerned about? You betcha: his appearance on ABC’s DANCING WITH THE STARS.
Still shameless as ever.
August 14th, 2006 at 7:58 pm
1047
Jeff says:
I said it before, and I’ll say it again. Sometimes I think I take this stuff before. Maybe this obvious NEW YORK fetish and bias is part of my imagination.
And then I watch a segment from new Cold Pizza NFL analyst Marco Battaglia, and I realize that I’m right. I guess you can be a suck-ass third-string tight end your entire career, but if you went to Rutgers and grew up in Queens…
August 15th, 2006 at 11:22 am
1048
Jeff says:
How stupid of me. Why does ESPN shove T.O. preseason/hamstring stories down our throats? Why are his non-stories leading SportsCenter every night?
Of cours! T.O. “may” be making his Dallas Cowboys debut ON ESPN MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL THIS MONDAY NIGHT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Please don’t watch this game unless you are a Saints fan. They have to learn that this is unacceptable.
August 16th, 2006 at 11:03 pm
1049
Brandon says:
Don’t you think it’s a little early to look back at the top 10 greatest moments at Yankee Stadium…. I mean, they’re gonna be there for 2 more seasons still. Guess SC couldn’t wait to do (yet another) story on the Yanks, they had to get a 2 1/2 year head start on this one.
Oh.. did you hear? Sox and Yanks are playing this weekend. Just in case you missed it the million times they mentioned it this week, i thought i’d throw you a heads up. Guess i won’t watch the first 10 minutes of SC for the next several days.
And do we need to debate wether the sox/yanks rivalry is the best in baseball every time they play!? They tried to compare the dodgers/giants to them this time… please.
And god help us if A-Rod makes an error in any of the games…
And god help us if Ortiz hits a walk-off anything…
And god help us on Monday, game 5 of the series coupled with T.O. on monday nite football… should anything eventful happen in either game (or even if it doesn’t), SC is gonna have a double orgasm over this.
August 17th, 2006 at 10:35 am
1050
Mike says:
ESPN has really outdone itself with their coverage of the lack of news about Terrell Owens. I fully expect the company to give themselves an ESPY award next year for outstanding reporting of a non-story.
In baseball news, it might surprise everyone to know this, but the Twins are only 2 games out of the WC (and briefly held the WC lead less than a week ago). I mention this only because ESPN seems to be incapable of considering the Twins to be a contender. Unfortunately, even if the Twins, Tigers, and A’s all make the playoffs, ESPN would still have an AL East team to focus all of its energy on come playoff time.
If you want a perfect example of ESPN’s pathetic NY/Boston love-in, take this line (paraphrased) from a SC host late last night: “And be sure to tune in for Sunday Night Baseball as the Yankees and Red Sox send two fireballing aces to the hill – Josh Beckett faces off against Randy Johnson….Both of these guys have ERA’s over 5.00 this year, I think……which is weird.”
More like both have ERA’s over 5.00 because they have sucked. But, please, feel free to ignore that fact on BBTN, SNB, SC, and any of your other programs. If it helps to sell your products by claiming that Beckett is an ace (he’s not) or that RJ is still an ace (he’s not), go right ahead. Distorting truth is the ESPN way.
August 18th, 2006 at 11:14 am