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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1101
Jeff says:
I pulled the following statements from ESPN’s analysis of this weekend’s NFL games:
“The only thing is, I can’t really call it hype because we all know just how special Bush is going to be.”
“Despite his being in the same backfield as Deuce McAllister, I’m picking Bush to be the Offensive Rookie of the Year.”
“the chip on his shoulder the Houston Texans placed there by not taking him No. 1 overall”
Okay, ESPN. You think Reggie Bush is going to be good. We get it. But please let him play a game before you enshrine him in the Hall of Fame. Please remember this before you shove Reggie Bush down our throats even further:
1. He’s not a starter.
2. His only big run in preseason came on a broken play.
3. His offensive line is shit.
4. Outside of the broken play, he’s averaging like 2 to 3 yards a carry in preseason.
5. He has yet to prove that he can turn the corner on or fake out fast NFL defenses (even though it is only preseason).
6. Mario Williams might actually (gasp) become a pretty good player too.
I’m a huge Saints fan, and I’m saying this. It just seems a bit premature to say that Mario Williams is Sam Bowie. This is why “instant history” and “instant analysis” is such bullshit.
September 9th, 2006 at 4:53 pm
1102
Mike says:
Current ESPN.com poll: “Are you ready for some football?”
Surprisingly, “Shove your self-promotion up your ass” isn’t a choice.
Additionally, have to love the Jaguars’ “upset” of the Cowboys? Wait, what, they’re the better team and were favored to win?! That can’t be, as they don’t have T.O.! Let’s just spin it the way that we want to.
September 11th, 2006 at 7:04 pm
1103
Jeff says:
F*$K Tom Cruise
F*$K ESPN
And F*$K ESPN for turing its first-ever Monday Night Football game into the Tom Cruise show.
Another institution ruined by ESPN.
I watched MNF tonight instead of “Entertainment Tonight” because I am SICK AND FUCKING TIRED of hearing about Tom Cruise. I guess plugging Dan Snyder’s latest “acquisition” is more important than integrity.
And speaking of “The Dan Snyder/Tom Cruise Show,” do you think we’ll see any shots of Zygi Wilf? Oh, he’s just some stupid owner and I’ve never heard of him? EXACTLY. That’s the way it’s supposed to be.
Oh wait, now here’s another important topic: Tony Kornheiser and Jamie Foxx talking about Clintin Portis’s “outfits.” The ghost of Mark Shapiro lives!
I’m not saying this because I hate ESPN. I don’t care which network this is on: This shit is fucking unwatchable.
September 11th, 2006 at 8:17 pm
1104
Dylan says:
Could not agree more Jeff. My wife and I had some friends over for the games and one (not a big sports fan) said “why are they showing so much of Tom Cruise? Isn’t this a football game?” At least Kornheiser didn’t mention The View (that I heard) or K-Fed (that I heard).
This is as bad as Emmitt Smith prostituting himself for 3 minutes to promote dancing with the stars Saturday night and the Manning Brother promotions on NBC. Dear God, Brady Quinn, AJ Hawk and his sister are thinking this is too much.
September 11th, 2006 at 10:46 pm
1105
RBN says:
Who fell asleep at ESPN to allow Jim Rome’s Show and Around the Horn to stay on the air past it’s conception by an ESPN intern that probably spent more time looking up porn at work than actually doing work? Let me get this straight… The Number 1 Sports Broadcasting network has a show that the special guest (everyday) is the host from Blind Date and a show that reminds me of “Who’s Line is it Anyway?” where comments are scored based on the opinion of a 20 year old pompus prick.
September 11th, 2006 at 11:54 pm
1106
Jeff says:
SUBMITTED TO ESPN’S OMBUDSMAN GEORGE SOLOMON. I’M SURE I WON’T GET A RESPONSE IN HIS COLUMN:
You and your suits opened up this can of worms when you talked about your network’s broadcast decisions. Therefore, explain this one to me:
Why is College Gameday at the USC/Nebraska game this weekend?
The three biggest games this weekend are LSU/Auburn, Florida/Tennessee and Notre Dame/Michigan.
Two of those games are on CBS. The third is on NBC.
The inferior game you chose to send the Gameday crew to is your network’s primetime game.
And, gee, you wonder why LSU and Auburn fans think you play favorites for USC.
Why don’t you just come out and say you did it for self-promotion instead of giving us some lame-ass cop-out excuse?
Any way you slice it, the story you make up is indefensible.
September 13th, 2006 at 5:14 pm
1107
Mark says:
1. How about the fucking score tickers on ESPN? Do you remember back when you could actually watch ESPN and just see score after score on the ticker? You could go there and see every score that you wanted to know in about two minutes flat! Now ESPN infests the damned ticker with fucking game details and a lot of useless shit that nobody cares about. They do this so much that you might be lucky to see five scores between the commercial breaks! ESPN is the absolute fucking worst about this when it comes to their baseball scores. Allow me to provide you a sample – no disrespect towards anybody here, I’m just making up data to make my point:
YANKEES 3, RED SOX 2 FINAL
NYY R. Johnson 8 IP, 12 K
NYY J. Giambi HR, 2B
NYY D. Jeter – scratched his dick 55 times in 5th inning (new ML record)
NYY B. Williams – got BJ from J. Torre in dugout between 7th and 8th innings
BOS J. Varitek 2B, SF
BOS A. Cora 3B, Single
BOS J. Beckett – left game in 5th inning after farting four times (possible skid marks)
Do you get my point? Stop showing unnecessary shit on the tickers please! THE TICKER IS INTENDED FOR SCORES ONLY, YOU FUCKING ESPN ASSCLOWNS!!!!!
2. Jim Rome – somebody please bitch slap this turd. He’s nothing but another dime-a-dozen smartass who somehow managed to get his own show. The guy can’t even conduct a fair and unbiased interview without being a total prick at some point. He intentionally schedules people he doesn’t like so he can humiliate them on the air. He absolutely needs a severe beating.
3. Chris Berman – OK this douche has been mentioned enough on here already (and rightly so), but I just have to say that his “WHOOOP” noise has to be the most obnoxious and irritating piece in his shitty repertoire. Every time I hear it I just want to beat the shit out of him. It makes me wonder what kind of annoying noise he would make if somebody would repeatedly kick him in the crotch! Maybe somebody should find out!
4. The NHL playoffs (whenever they show any) and Chris Drury. Yes ESPN, we know already – this cock played in the Little League World Series when he was a kid. Who gives a fuck anymore? As if I needed another reason to detest the LLWS! Look, it was nice to know the first time you told us TEN FUCKING YEARS AGO!!!!! Now every year I find myself hoping that the team that Chris Drury plays on misses the NHL playoffs so that I don’t have to hear you dickweeds tell it to us again, plus show us annoying clips of his damned LLWS games! I can’t wait until his ass retires so we don’t have to hear it anymore.
September 14th, 2006 at 5:17 pm
1108
Jeff says:
ESPN “Top Ten” highlights last night included a clip from “Live! With Regis and Kelly” (a show, as the tag along with the clip reminds us, comes from Buena Vista Television), and a clip from the ESPN-sponsored “End Zone Celebration” competition.
September 15th, 2006 at 8:20 am
1109
Dave says:
Ed Werder – I don’t need to see this hick come on every day to kiss the Tuna’s butt and tell me what TO ate for breakfast – what a joke. What does this guy tell his kids? “Hey kids, Daddy’s job is to suck up to an old fat man, give him back rubs, wear my stars, and go on TV and tell the world how important the Cowboys are!!!”
September 15th, 2006 at 8:41 am
1110
Wildog says:
He is not as pathetic as Sal Palontonio or whatever his name is or the ultimate tool Pedro Gomez. Im suprised that guy hasnt committed suicide yet.
September 15th, 2006 at 10:38 am
1111
Jeff says:
BIG NEWS: ESPN.com is reporting that the Yankees might be looking for a new triple-A affiliate. Big-time front-page news.
Here’s what’s interesting: the article accompanying the story said that 4 other teams are looking for new affiliates.
Why wasn’t it front-page news when the Nationals and the Phillies annonced that they were looking for new triple-A affiliates?
Maybe if it would have been if ESPN’s news producers looked beyond the New York Times, New York Post, Newsday and the Bergen County Record for its “national” news.
September 15th, 2006 at 6:26 pm
1112
Jeff says:
You know it burns ESPN’s collective asses that Yahoo! Sports won’t let this Reggie Bush go. Shame on them for ruining our College Gameday/Primetime telecast! Why do these journalists want to piss all over our gravy train??????????
Isn’t it amazing that ESPN, the Worldwide Leader in Synergy, keeps getting scooped on USC violations by Yahoo!?
With all the ESPN “journalists” out there in SoCal sniffing out USC stories, and with all the USC alumni who work for the network, you’d they would have found something before those shmucks!
It’s almost like they’re either not looking for it or are consciously trying to avoid it or something. Naaaaah, that would NEVER happen.
September 15th, 2006 at 10:09 pm
1113
Jim says:
Jason Whitlock wrote today that he believes that Jack Del Rio and the Jaguars keep 3 black quarterbacks on the roster in order to take pressure off Byron Leftwich, because fans in the ‘Dirty South’ still don’t accept and African-American quarterback. How the FUCK does this man still have a job? Not everything in life is about race, Jason. I expect it from Scoop Jackson, but not from a supposed ‘journalist’.
September 16th, 2006 at 12:23 am
1114
Joe says:
Two Minute Drill with Chris Berman! Time for some hard hitting, in dep….oh, wait, he’s going to spend the whole time bragging about how he went 5-1 in his picks last week, and then an inexplicable clip of him somehow sinking a 1 ft. putt. Watch out, Tiger, you’re gonna have some competition if Berman keeps kicking ass like that. It wouldn’t be as bad if he didn’t sound/look like a whale giving birth to an elephant. WHOOP
September 16th, 2006 at 9:01 am
1115
Jeff says:
Dan Fouts is doing the Oregon game this week. Unbelievable.
Does ESPN decide who does its college football games by selecting the announcing crew that has the most obvious conflict of interest at every site?
September 16th, 2006 at 7:12 pm
1116
Jeff says:
I actually heard Craig James say Saturday night that he was DROPPING Auburn in his power rankings because “they struggled to beat LSU.”
You beat a recognized national championship contender, the #6 team in the country, and ESPN commentators can still justify dropping you in the polls. Basically because USC looked better beating a far inferior team.
How do these people sleep at night?
September 17th, 2006 at 9:25 pm
1117
Jeff says:
This just in (from deadspin.com):
ESPN THE CREDIT CARD
https://www.providiancard.com/bap/envwa/jumpApp.jsp?offer_id=esp02&banner_id=espn00execa09092006000ros0728×902500
God, do I hate them.
September 18th, 2006 at 1:02 pm
1118
Joe says:
they sleep at night because after a good day of collectively blowing usc, they are too tired to go on sucking the life out of sports.
September 18th, 2006 at 4:18 pm
1119
Jeff says:
All night, the MNF crew talks about how this Jacksonville Jaguars team is good, but nobody knows about them, and they never get any publicity.
You know what, ESPN? I’m guessing that a certain 24-hour sports network NEVER TALKING ABOUT THEM has something to do with that.
And it will continue right after the show. Jevon Kearse is out for the year. David Pollack BROKE HIS F—ING NECK ( watch the original “The Longest Yard”). But ESPN is freaking out tonight because T.O. might miss 2-4 weeks.
September 18th, 2006 at 11:34 pm
1120
Corliss says:
For once, it’s nice to see ESPN ingest a slice of humble pie. For some reason ESPN seems to think Charlie Weis is the second coming of Vince Lombardi or Bud Wilkinson. Well, Michigan’s destruction of Notre Dame should show ESPN that there are more than just USC/ND playing football this year. It’s also nice to see that pompus-ass Weis get taken down a notch or 3.
September 18th, 2006 at 11:55 pm
1121
Mike says:
Completely agree, Jeff. I just logged in to post the same thing regarding the lack of coverage of the Jaguars. Additionally, can someone tell ESPN that Jacksonville was favored to beat Dallas in nearly every sportsbook aside from perhaps “ESPN: The Point Spread Guide – Making T.O.’s team and Notre Dame the favorites no matter the matchup.” I have to give ESPN a smidge of credit of credit for making MNF somewhat watchable, though, as I do enjoy listening to Kornheiser make comments whose purposes seem to solely be to annoy Theismann. Besides being a godawful analyst, Theismann is a humorless jackass, so listening to him be consistently tweaked amuses me.
Also, have to love ESPN’s coverage of the MLB games today. Their two news stories during the in-game cutins: 1) T.O. is out 2-4 weeks (we knew this yesterday, it’s not news) and 2) Maurice Clarett gets sentenced to jail (again, who cares about this guy anymore?). No mention of the Tigers/White Sox game, or even the Mets clinching the division, although the latter was such a certainty that it really doesn’t merit a cut-in. And then after the game, one had to weather an additional 10+ minutes of coverage of the dreadfully dull MNF game before one got to see the baseball highlights. But, they, of course, can’t go through more than a couple of games before showing more NFL coverage and the Top 10 plays from this week. #10? A crappy, short kick return by Reggie Bush. Anything to show A) Bush and B) a mention of next week’s Falcons/Saints MNF game, I guess. I am already feeling sick about the many ways ESPN will be exploiting the Hurricane Katrina tragedy over the coming week in order to promote their televised game.
Additionally, on the Bottom Line graphics, three separate ESPN football promos ran before they showed the baseball scores. Enough is enough. It’s ridiculous that has to sit through so much shameless self-promotion just to be told the results.
September 19th, 2006 at 2:11 am
1122
Joe says:
what’s great is that espn had notre dame favored to lose every game last year, or at least most of the college football team (i’m not counting lou holtz cause he’d be obviously biased, and also because i can’t understand a thing he says), save for kirk herbstreit (who picked them to win every game, if i’m not mistaken), and when notre dame damn near won every game, ESPN jumped on the bandwagon. you know that if notre dame would’ve went 7-4 during the regular season, there would be about no stories about notre dame at all.
so now, because notre dame went 9-3, ESPN has to ram Notre Dame down everyone’s throats. I’m a notre dame fan, and i’m getting sick of it.
also, it’d be interesting to see how much they discuss the pac-10 officiating for the oregon-oklahoma game. i haven’t been watching espn, so i don’t know if they have, but i’m assuming they’ve moved away from football for the week, every top 10 play has been a homerun, complete with neil everett mumbling something about maui and alcohol
September 19th, 2006 at 8:56 am
1123
Jeff says:
I’m very sensitive to the Katrina thing, since I grew up about an hour away from New Orleans. And I’m sick of the media exploitation too. I’ve spent days there, and you cannot even comprehend how bad it is down there. But the media is only there when it fits their agenda. The media thought it was the biggest story in the world on the anniversary. How much time have they spent out there since that day? The only time they talk about it now is when the mayor says something stupid, like comparing the city to the media’s Sacred Cow (New York City).
ESPN is going to do the same thing. New Orleans will be the biggest sports story of the year this week. Then, starting one week from today, they won’t be back until the Sugar Bowl, when it will suddenly become the “story of the year” again.
And when you are going to use your stupid puns as story headlines, please make sure that they don’t have double meanings or could mislead the viewer. Specifically, don’t call Jevon Kearse’s injury a “Freak Accident.” First, not all of us realize that his nickname is “Freak.” Second, it sounds like it was the result of a Big Ben-like motorcycle accident or something.
September 19th, 2006 at 9:00 am
1124
Jeff says:
And one more thing. ESPN had better not have President Bush in the booth next Monday. That man has completely ignored the city, except when he knew he could get a photo op. He actually said that he “turned his back” on the city and its residents on the one-year anniversary. He cares more about rebuilding Iraq than he cares about rebuilding New Orleans. And I GUARANTEE YOU that ESPN will be kissing his ass like they did with Jamie Foxx and Dwayne Wade in the second quarter of next week’s game.
And if you choose to criticize me because I’m playing politics on a sports blog, so be it.
September 19th, 2006 at 9:11 am
1125
Mike says:
One more note on the Jaguars coverage that I forgot last night. When talking about the lack of coverage, Suzy Kolber actually noted that the Jags don’t get much publicity or respect from the national media, but did so with a tone that seemed to indicate that the national media meant something other than the network she was currently airing on. It amazing how one can go from constantly harping about being the “Worldwide Leader in Sports” to not being counted when there is a perceived media slight (despite the fact that ESPN is the “Worldwide Leader” in ignoring teams like Jacksonville). Jacksonville hosts the game, and yet 90% of the coverage was about Roethlisberger, Bill Cowher, and how great the Steelers are. No media slight at all.
It’s also good to know what teams in the MLB playoff races have to do in order to be the top story on SportsCenter ahead of a 9-0 MNF snorefest. All you guys have to do is hit 4 consecutive homers to tie a game in the 9th and then hit a walk-off shot in the 10th. That’s not too much to expect, right? After all, there’s only 2 weeks left in the MLB regular season (and 6 weeks overall) while the NFL has 15 weeks left plus the playoffs. It’s easy to see why the Jags/Steelers is more important.
September 19th, 2006 at 11:52 am
1126
Jeff says:
ESPN’s story about the New Orleans Saints selling out the Superdome with season tickets for the first time in history has the following title on ESPN.com: “Bush Effect?”
Typical ESPN.
I have Saints season ticket holders in my family. They know that if they don’t do it, Tom Benson will move the team to L.A. or San Antonio. They are proving once and for all that New Orleans is still a major league city. They are sending a “thank you” to the NFL for giving the city a second chance in the face of a natural disaster. And, yes, for the first time in years, fans are optimistic about the future of the team. But that has more to do with firing Jim Haslett and dumping Aaron Brooks.
And ESPN thinks it happened because they drafted Reggie Bush.
September 20th, 2006 at 12:29 pm
1127
Dylan says:
You can tell that ESPN does not want to rock the boat on College Football. On PTI a topic was is this enough complaining from Bob Stoops, on M & M in the morning they also stated that Stoops should leave it to the AD and the conference athletic comissioner and concentrate on the conference schedule.
They are obviously being fed this agenda (like the invented animosity between Salisbury & Clayton) to keep their conference viewing at a maximum. Keep controversy at a minimum (see Reggie Bush’s powderpuff coverage). The network will continue to downplay the Bush scandal until the epic contest Monday night plays out.
This is a as bada call as the ‘85 Series Denkinger call blew; but that was a BAD judgement call before any replay (it was disastrous for the Cards). Although not in a Championship game, OK is likely out of any shot at a National Championship. This was clearly poor use of replay and should be covered as incompetent or biased officiating by an alleged sports NEWS outlet, rather than a promotional/marketing tool for network promotion. At least ESPN.com has some coverage, but most are links to AP stories, not those of ESPN’s “insiders.”
By the way, I don’t know if any of you have kids, but now Disney is promoting their Famly Phone that tracks your kids cell location, schedules their minutes, etc. I hope this bombs as badly as ESPN Mobile.
September 21st, 2006 at 9:03 am
1128
Joe says:
just now on espn
“the rumors of larry coker’s demise have not been greatly exaggerated”
followed by a story coming straight from espn’s joe shat..shapp, shad? whoever, which he heard from a “high-ranking miami board of trustee member” meaning some homeless guy near a dumpster just off of campus in exchange for a bottle of whiskey.
Lou Holtz’s top 4: Ohio State, Southern Cal, Florida, Auburn. because Auburn only gained 183 yards against LSU.
Mark May’s: Ohio State, Southern Cal, Auburn, some other team.
they both think Southern Cal deserves second spot, because of how talented their team is, and according to Mark May “they got everybody watching college football”
also, they clearly have the toughest schedule, look at this ranked opposition: no. 19 Nebraska, no. 22 ASU, no. 13 Oregon, no. 21 Cal, no. 12 Notre Dame
compared to auburn’s weak schedule: no. 6 LSU, no. 5 Florida, no. 9 Georgia, and a should be ranked Alabama
or Florida: no. 13 Tennessee, no. 10 LSU, no. 2 Auburn, no. 9 Georgia, no. 18 Florida State, and also Alabama
this all was followed by Lou Holtz jumping up and screaming something incoherently about mark may suddenly deciding to acknowledge Notre Dame as an actual football team.
I hate espn
September 22nd, 2006 at 10:45 am
1129
Keith says:
Probably covered in earlier posts but I heard him say it again and it irritates me to no end.
Berman and his “new sombrero” reference to the Bucs stadium in Tampa. The Bucs have been playing in Raymond James for years, who even remembers that old dump they played in except Berman? Honestly, find a focus group and have Berman deliver the “new sombrero” line and see if one person knows what he is referencing.
While they’re at it, have him drop an “NFC Norris Division” reference and see if they connect with that one. My burning hatred for this line knows no boundaries.
Other Berman-isms that need to be made illegal:
-Any “tundra” reference
-The Bay of Pigs line for Green Bay/Tampa games
-His Schwami segments. Who in the fuck cares what his picks are. My 15-year old daughter is more accurate and she doesn’t say NFC Norris.
-Bils/49ers pick for the Super Bowl. Okay, he didn’t make it this year (Eagles/Patriots) but you know he was thinking it.
-That fuckin’ Panama hat he wears when he’s in a celebrity golf tournament. I guess they can’t find a cap big enough to fit his engorged, sunburned pumpkin dome.
-And speaking of the dome, could the fat bastard actually get his hair coloring done professionally instead of DIY 15 minutes before he hits the set?
-The salmon colored sports coat he breaks out once or twice a season on Countdown. Nothing that big should be in salmon.
-Jim “Two Silhouettes on” Deshaies. I know the guy hasn’t played since 1995, but that name game bullshit peaked with this one. Berman’s death blow should come from Deshaies just firing baseball after baseball as his engorged head. His heater might not have the zip it did 11 years ago, but enough of them should do the trick. Think about it Jim Deshaies.
September 22nd, 2006 at 12:02 pm
1130
tzubear says:
Whoa,1130 posts! Almost a year later and Disney still sucks!
September 22nd, 2006 at 6:03 pm
1131
Jeff says:
Notre Dame is on the front page of ESPN.com again.
You’ll notice that it’s been two weeks since I made this post. I’m sure that it had nothing to do with Notre Dame having home games the last two weeks. On NBC.
Now Notre Dame goes on the road again, meaning that their games will now be on in primetime on ABC. I should have predicted this a couple of weeks ago. Of course, that isn’t really worthy of being a prediction anymore. Predicting that Notre Dame will be the front page story when they play road games is like predicting the sun will come up.
September 23rd, 2006 at 10:34 am
1132
Joe says:
this is only because notre dame has started to get back on the winning side of things. during willingham’s last two years, espn didn’t cover nearly as much on notre dame. except of course, when they played the greatest college football team of the 21st century–nay, the history of football itself, USC. it’s nice to know that espn doesn’t just jump on bandwagons, and instead chooses to spread it’s coverage equally. can’t wait for the usc-nd game this year. I don’t know about USC fans, but as a ND fan, i’m sick of hearing about them (ND).
September 23rd, 2006 at 12:17 pm
1133
Mike says:
ESPN regularly airs tape-delayed coverage of events, most often tennis matches. On these occasions, the network will not run the score of said matches with the other scores from the event, whether it be to not spoil the viewer waiting to watch the event on TV or for any other reason. Why do I bring this up? Well, as I went to quickly check NBC’s Ryder Cup coverage at 8 AM this morning before heading out (NBC aired tape-delayed coverage of the event from 8 AM-6 PM since there is a 5 hour time difference), I happened to come by ESPN. At precisely the time that the NBC coverage was to start, ESPN put up a breaking news stat bar listing the scores of the early Ryder Cup matches, thereby ruining it for anyone who was planning on watching the matches to find out the results. Truly a classy move.
September 23rd, 2006 at 9:12 pm
1134
Jeff says:
I’d actually argue that they deserved it this time, but Notre Dame was the front page story before I went to bed last night.
I couldn’t stand to watch ESPN’s college football post-game shows because of how I figured they’d glorify ND’s comeback (which had more to do with John L. Smith’s chicken-shit play calling in the 4th quarter than anything–who the hell kneels on a kickoff return at the 12 with 5 minutes left in the game only winning by 4). But I can’t wait to see how ESPN rationalizes USC’s “impressive” victory.
To recap. Several ABC/ESPN commentators said that Auburn deserved to fall behind USC because “Auburn struggled to beat LSU.”
Well, last night, USC struggled for 60 minutes to pull away from a team THAT LSU BEAT 45-3 TWO WEEKS AGO!!!!!! I’m guessing that “they played a much improved Arizona team than the one that played in Baton Rouge.”
September 24th, 2006 at 10:09 am
1135
Mike says:
Current ESPN.com headline: “Euros Trash U.S. At Ryder Cup.” With all of the synonyms out there for the word “beat,” ESPN classily opts for the one that, even when used in a headline about a European victory, can easily be misconstrued for a derogatory term used to describe some Europeans. Also, I can’t wait to hear ESPN spin these results to make it seem like the U.S. lost rather than noting how Europe won, or saying that at Tiger Woods (and his mediocre, by his standards, 3-2 record) showed up.
I wonder what it would have taken to make the Ryder Cup the main story on the front page over a Week 3 football game, though.
September 24th, 2006 at 11:54 am
1136
Jeff says:
I was going to let this comment from the Eric Kuselias show on ESPN Radio earlier this week slide:
“After his comeback last week against the Eagles, I can now say, for the first time, that Eli Manning is closer than Peyton is to reaching the Super Bowl.”
Nice call, Eric. 3 interceptions and a 35-0 halftime deficit to the Seahawks would tell me otherwise.
But thanks for more NEW YORK hype. We really appreciate it. Why don’t you people go back to giving us more “Everybody hates A-Rod” stories?
September 24th, 2006 at 5:50 pm
1137
Corliss says:
Hey Jeff, frankly it wouldn’t surprise me if ESPN interviewed President Bush AND Tom Benson like THEY were responsible for football coming back to the Superdome and the “rebirth” of New Orleans. Sadly, ESPN knows what Benson wanted to do w/the Saints after Katrina and as for Pres.Bush, well……..being from near N.O: Jeff, you know the rest.
September 24th, 2006 at 6:33 pm
1138
bdogg says:
I noticed on several occasions during the past 2 saturdays of college football coverage, that during the halftime segments of whichever game espn/abc was showing, that they would go out of their way to comment on how well the Big East teams were doing against stronger competion, and how maybe the Big East isn’t so irrelavent after all. Yeah, because you know, games don’t last 4 quarters. Of course, said Big East teams ended up getting crushed in the second halves of their respective games, though with no mention. Also, RUTGERS IS RANKED!!!!!!! Don’t you forget it. Ugh.
September 25th, 2006 at 12:37 am
1139
Vic says:
re: post 1129
If I don’t have these exactly right please forgive me but I’m sure you will understand my point;
Bermanisms
back,back,back,back, = Red Barber, Detrioit Tigers
he could go all the way! = Howard Cosell
Frozen Tundra = John Facenda, NFL Films
Bay of Pigs = Pete Axhlelm NBC Sports mid 80’s
Fuummbblle! = Keith Jackson
Look at that little meggett fly = Howard Cosell
rumblin, bumblin, stumblin,= Keith Jackson
NFC Norris division = Pete Axhlelm NBC
My point is Chris Berman has never had a original thought in his life, He just steals catch-phrases from other better journalists and hopes no one remembers who originated it. Well I do! If you are going to call it a “homage” to the past greats you have to give them credit for it at least once.
And by the way, is it possible for you to quote a song lyric from at least the 1980’s? That’s what I thought. What a joke.
September 25th, 2006 at 8:11 am
1140
Joe says:
ugh.. my morning just got a whole lot worse. hoping to see some college football highlights, or maybe some pro football, I turn on espn and i’m greeted with Berman and TJ. okay, there’s gonna be some good stuff here, right? WHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOP!!!
i was wrong. Berman and TJ were actually recognizing the Bears as a good team, but Berman’s general dickishness forced me to go espn2. and I’m greeted with Sean Salisbury live on mobile espn, one and a half bags under his eyes, hairline receding further than ever, saying how the Bears are clearly not the best team in the NFC north, despite having the best offense and defense in the north, and with Rex Grossman actually showing some shades of being a QB. the reason? because their running game hasn’t been the same as it usually is. and clearly, despite having one of the best defenses in the NFL, Seattle is going to come in and destroy them. No reason as to why, they just are.
and great, they couldn’t leave the superdome reopening untainted, they have to bring in two abominations of literacy, Skip Bayless and Woody Paige. I can’t wait for Skip Bayless to start shrieking and slamming his fist on an imaginary table, followed by Woody Paige doing his best soggy bread Holtz impression and karate chopping his hand. that’s good tv
September 25th, 2006 at 10:07 am
1141
Joe says:
one good thing about skip bayless being on tv. It’s a windy day, so his hair has turned into a mullet.
business in the front, party in the back
September 25th, 2006 at 10:14 am
1142
Jeff says:
The Saints-Falcons game was the highest rated event in the history of ESPN. Not a Yankees game. Not a Notre Dame game. Not a Duke game. Not a USC game. Not a Cowboys game. Not a Lakers game.
But 24 hours later: BREAKING NEWS–T.O. was taken to the hospital. I’m glad to see it still won’t change.
Of course, ESPN will probably say it happened because America wanted to see Reggie Bush.
September 27th, 2006 at 8:54 am
1143
Jeff says:
I appreciate the relative restraint in ESPN’s telecast. It wasn’t blown out of proportion. But I want to make a few comments, which have as much to do with the way the NFL framed it as ESPN did:
1. New Orleans is still not okay. Major sections of the city are still completely abandoned.
2. New Orlenians are truly appreciative that the NFL did not abandon New Orleans (yet). But the NFL did not “save” New Orleans. Are they better off because of the NFL? Of course. But less self-promotion is more in this case.
3. In a city with a musical tradition that rich, you choose U2, Green Day and The Goo Goo Dolls as your musical acts? You couldn’t have picked Harry Connick, The Neville Brothers, or about a million other people?
4. Spike Lee is ESPN’s “celebrity du jour.” I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that ESPN chose a New Yorker to be the spokesperson for New Orleans. That way they can talk about Katrina AND the Knicks!
5. The Saints are probably still not a playoff team, so don’t go overboard.
6. Reggie Bush is a valuable decoy. But do you think you could give one iota of coverage on SportsCenter to Drew Brees, Deuce McAllister or Marques Colston? I’m guessing Colston will be a star soon. He’s from Hofstra. They can call him the “black Wayne Chrebet”!
September 27th, 2006 at 8:56 am
1144
Mike says:
Can’t something be done. All these people hating ESPN. We need a revolution.
September 28th, 2006 at 12:49 am
1145
Jeff says:
As I said before in other posts, indifference would be more devistating than anger. That’s what people don’t get. Next time the Disney Empire gives us a Notre Dame or Yankees game, DON’T WATCH. PERIOD. Don’t watch “because I hate them and I really want to see them lose.” That perpetuates the problem. The people who determine ratings don’t ask why you watched the game. They just notice that you did.
The reason why you get the Yankees, Lakers, Cowboys, Duke, Notre Dame, USC and Michigan is because people either love them or hate them.
You want to get rid of them? Make them irrelevant.
Anger and hatred empowers them. Take it away from them. They are people who do things out there because they know it pisses everyone else off. How many Yankee fans do you know that like to do that? They wear Yankee gear because they like getting a rise out of other people. If you ignore them instead, it takes away their power.
September 28th, 2006 at 9:09 am
1146
Jeff says:
And I didn’t want to talk about this one. But yesterday’s T.O. story is a perfect example of what I’m talking about.
You hate ESPN. You’re sick of them talking about T.O. and leading with him every night on SportsCenter.
And then this crap happens to him, and what is the first thing you do? You put it on ESPN, ESPNnews, ESPNRadio, ESPN.com, or whatever. AND YOU DON’T TURN IT OFF ALL DAY. ESPN’s numbers yesterday prove it. It was the biggest day of daytime programming for the network in terms of viewers, listeners, webhits, and so on.
So it’s partly your fault. And my fault.
ESPN doesn’t care that you tuned in just so that you could get pissed off, or so that you could validate your theory that ESPN shows too much T.O.. I told you before, and I told you again, ESPN is laughing at you, all the way to the bank.
September 28th, 2006 at 11:23 am
1147
garydl71 says:
YEAH! Looks like they gave up!!!!
Found This on Forbes today
“The Walt Disney Co.’s ESPN subsidiary said Wednesday that it has decided to shut down its Mobile ESPN service and instead seek out opportunities to license its content to major wireless carriers.
“With a redefined approach, we have a greater opportunity to reach millions of fans while achieving our strategic and financial goals,” ESPN Enterprises Executive Vice President Salil Mehta said in a statement.
Despite that artful spin, it was clear that Disney (nyse: DIS – news – people ) was shuttering Mobile ESPN because of its inability to draw more customers. During a conference call in August, Disney Chief Executive Robert Iger acknowledged that “sales have been slower to develop than we had hoped.”
Mobile ESPN was one of the most prominent Mobile Virtual Network Operators, which include Mobile ESPN, Disney Mobile, Amp’d Mobile and Helio. They pay wholesale rates to use a wireless carrier’s network to sell their own branded phones and services.
Mobile ESPN made a high-profile splash during a Super Bowl ad in January and was launched nationwide the following month. But the service stumbled out of the gate with phones and service plans that were too pricey. In July, Merrill Lynch analyst Jessica Reif Cohen called on Disney to pull the plug, expressing skepticism that the service would draw many subscribers.
But not everyone is applauding the early demise of Mobile ESPN. Adam Guy, managing director of the wireless practice at Boston research firm Compete, argues that Disney should have given the service a chance to operate through the National Football League season and the holiday shopping season before determining whether customer demand was sufficient to continue.
Because of the onerous fines imposed on customers who switch wireless carriers before their contracts have expired, operators can’t expect large numbers of customers to switch immediately to their service, Guy notes. He also observes that Mobile ESPN traffic had jumped 33% in August from the previous month, as it likely benefited from fantasy football players preparing for the start of the NFL season.
Still, Mobile ESPN’s inability to gain traction faster than it did was notable, given its established brand name and its parent company’s deep pockets and marketing expertise, Guy says.
Sales of Mobile ESPN phones and service plans will stop immediately, but current customers will continue to receive billing and customer support for the time being. In addition, customers can opt to terminate the service without penalty and will be eligible for a full refund of the purchase of their phone once they pay off their final bill.”
September 28th, 2006 at 2:36 pm
1148
Jeff says:
Amazing. According to ESPN, Jose Reyes isn’t “The best shortstop in baseball.”
He’s “The best shortstop in New York City.”
Assholes.
September 29th, 2006 at 12:58 pm
1149
Jeff says:
And if you don’t believe me about not watching and making them irrelevant, get a load of the new baseball playoff promo campaign they’ve begun. The one with Tom Lasorda. The gist of the commercial is this: Your team lost. Your team can’t compete. That’s okay. October is for you too. You can watch the playoffs to see those hated Yankees lose.
You’re sick of New York favortism? You’re sick of big-market, big-money teams? You’re sick of the prospects of another unbearable Subway Series? Then don’t watch. At least until the New York teams lose. The world won’t end.
And then, if by some miracle, the Padres play the Twins in the World Series, tune in like there’s no tomorrow.
The same thing happened with the Final Four. ESPN predicted a ratings disaster because there was no Duke, UConn, North Carolina, etc.. And they were right. Which only proved to them that even though George Mason, Florida and LSU deserve attention, they won’t get it because nobody cares. People would rather watch Duke lose and bitch about how ESPN plays favorites than would watch Florida. So you’ll get Duke.
September 30th, 2006 at 9:24 am
1150
Jeff says:
From the MLB.com website that is part of the post-season ad campaign:
Rob Pulsifer, Devil Rays fan, St. Petersburg, Fla.
I want to watch Johan Santana no-hit the Yankees. To watch a team with a $50 million payroll beat a team with a $200 million payroll. I could go on forever. I’ll always watch the playoffs, just to hopefully see the Yankees lose.
Thanks Rob. And the Devil Rays thank you. Thanks to you, the Yankees will still always be on television. Thanks to you, the Devil Rays will always be irrelevant. Because “fans” like you would rather see the Yankees lose than watch the Devil Rays play, period. So don’t complain next year when the Yankees play on ESPN something like 79 times, and the D-Rays never come on (unless they play the Yankees). And don’t complain that the Yankees have more money and get all the good players. Yes, I’m being hard on him. And that’s not completely fair. Market size plays a big factor too. But until there’s a demand for Devil Rays baseball, and less “contrived” demand for Yankees baseball, you will always be the have-not.
September 30th, 2006 at 12:04 pm