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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1251
T Dog says:
Regarding “Black Ice” : So ESPN finally found out there’s racism in Canada, eh? This reporting even makes Fox News look smart by comparison. Idiots.
March 2nd, 2007 at 4:10 pm
1252
az Sports Hub - Arizona Sports - Blog - Podcasts - Forums » Blog Archive » Time for CNNSI to get their story straight says:
[...] knows I hate espn, but any gross error in content, particularly from a national attention grabber, should be noted [...]
March 3rd, 2007 at 6:40 pm
1253
az Sports Hub - Arizona Sports - Blog - Podcasts - Forums » Blog Archive » Those pigfuckers have gone too far this time says:
[...] EDSBS’ list of why TFLN sucks. [...]
March 3rd, 2007 at 6:46 pm
1254
az Sports Hub - Arizona Sports - Blog - Podcasts - Forums » Blog Archive » And so it begins… says:
[...] worldwide leader in sports, but I’ll leave my personal comments aside for now and let the boys at EDSBS and MGoBlog enlighten you. Not that Fox Sports is any better, unless of course your name is Tom [...]
March 3rd, 2007 at 7:05 pm
1255
Brandon says:
NO HABLO ESPANOL! GODDAMMIT!!!
March 4th, 2007 at 3:03 pm
1256
Mike says:
Couldn’t be more sick of:
* Over-the-top NFL and NFL Draft coverage. Specifically how seemingly every draft note has to include Brady Quinn.
* Randy Moss “trade rumors.” Anything to mention Moss and T.O. (who has done nothing since Parcells resigned, and yet remains in the “headlines”). Amazing that most other news sources have reported Moss trade possibilities as being “extremely remote,” and yet it is a top story in nearly every SC.
* The Big East Tournament being given priority, even in highlights. No joke – Maryland had been picked off while UCLA was being taken to OT by Cal. What led off the postgame highlights after the ND game? Georgetown holding serve against Villanova and ND beating Syracuse (in a game that one would assume people just watched!).
* ESPN’s college hoops “analysts.” Aside from maybe Andy Katz, this collection of smug jerks is a laughable crew. Bilas and Digger are in bed with the Major conferences, Gottlieb is an unctuous dick (which is a shame, since he actually knows a little about basketball), Tom Brennan makes everything about himself, Majerus and Vitale are real-life clowns, Hubert Davis tries but is unfortunately stupid, and Joe Lunardi is remarkably condescending for someone whose “job” consists of creating a fake NCAA bracket for a couple of months a year.
* All Clemens, Bonds, A-Rod, and Matsuzaka (sorry, Dice-K. Forgot that the American public is too stupid to learn his real name, first or last) all the time. Amazingly, Ozzie Guillen let off another offensive tirade that got completely overlooked since he isn’t one of the “only” four storylines that MLB apparently has.
* The myriad of conflicts of interest regarding ESPN and the Arena League. Simply sickening.
* NASCAR coverage. If poker re-runs aren’t on, then odds are that a racing show is airing in its place.
* Why has Kobe smacking another player in the face received more coverage than Ron Artest getting arrested for assault?! Making mountains out of molehills is one thing, but ignoring real stories is quite another.
* Oh, and enjoy the sob story about Central CT State’s top player. If you haven’t heard it yet, trust me, you will hear plenty about it up until CCSU gets drubbed in the NCAA’s. Nobody here in CT cares about CCSU, but I’m certain that ESPN will try to force the nation to.
* Michelle Bonner. The new Linda Cohn – untalented, sell-out, soulless hack. No wonder she’s a new anchor.
* ESPN the Weekend. *Vomits*
March 8th, 2007 at 10:16 pm
1257
T Dog says:
Another “offensive” rant from Ozzie Guillen? That rant happened to be against Steve Phillips from the Eastern Seaboard Programming Network. You must be a Cubs fan. Like those losers, you should get your facts straight before posting anymore nonsense.
March 9th, 2007 at 8:25 pm
1258
Mike says:
I hadn’t even seen Guillen’s comments about Phillips which appear to be unnecessary at best. I was referring to Guillen’s unprofessional comments about Brandon McCarthy, although perhaps I should have said “clownish,” “immature,” and “pathetic” instead of “offensive.”
March 10th, 2007 at 10:57 am
1259
T Dog says:
Oops. My bad. Somehow, I missed that story. As a single guy myself, I thought was Ozzie’s comments were kind of classless. But he’s still a good manager, though someday, he’s going to say something to cost himself his job. Anyway, here in Chicago, we usually use those words you said about Ozzie to describe ESPN, our political leaders, or Blackhawks management. Usually the latter.
March 10th, 2007 at 3:47 pm
1260
moretroops says:
Lot of negativity about Jason Whitlock on this thread, and I must say I disagree. He’s no race bater. In fact, if anything, he gets flack (from other AAs) for not being “black” enough. All of that aside, he can actually write.
So what does ESPN do? Fires him — for calling out that no-talent retard “Scoop” Jackson (Are you serious? Scoop?!? Horrible name.) So, to recap: fire people who can write, keep morons who cannot. Oh yes, and make Chris Berman and Stu Scott the face of you network. Swoosh!
March 10th, 2007 at 11:52 pm
1261
Jeff says:
In retrospect, I wound up being on Jason Whitlock’s side in his fights with Scoop Jackson and Mike Lupica/The Sports Reporters. But my biggest criticism of him up to now is not his occasional race baiting (compared to others, I agree). It’s his myopia. The guy often ignores real issues and topics to write columns about “my boy, Jeff George.” Jason, we never cared that you went to high school with him, and that you think he’s misunderstood. We don’t care about him. And we haven’t missed your at least once-a-month Jeff George lovefest column on Page 2.
It’s the same criticism I have of Bill Simmons. Why does ESPN and Simmons think that America cares what he and his dad think of the Celtics? Try writing a column and not somehow tying it in to one of Boston’s professional sports teams. You are a national reporter now, and a lot of America doesn’t live in or care about Boston.
March 14th, 2007 at 10:15 am
1262
moretroops says:
I agree, Jeff, on your comments about Whitlock and Simmons. But let’s take a step back, and examine how we got here.
Sports coverage today is best described as an oversaturated, obese, all-encompassing hype machine. With the popularity of “national” sites like ESPN and CNNSI, not to mention newspapers (online and available everywhere) and blogs, there are FAR too many national sportswriters. Add to that the ubiquitous sports commentary on ESPN, ABC, and everywhere — remember when Sports Reporters was the only real national “sports talk” TV show? — and the increased national weeklies like ESPN the Mag, and you have a cacophony of voices. Overwhelming.
So we have approximately 5 thousand times more sports commentators than we did, say, five years ago. The other trend worth mentioning is the disney-ification of sports: it’s corporate “entertainment” now, not mere athletic competition.
The result, predictably, is guys like Simmons and Whitlock. Both can write, to be sure. I’m not debating that point. But both of them must constantly struggle to come up with an angle, a style, a quip, an anecdote — ANYTHING — to seperate them from the universe of competing national sportswriters. Consequently, we get ridiculous 8-page encyclopedic rundowns of the major weaknesses of the 86 Celtics, or of the new 90210 DVDs, or — as you mention — of Jeff George’s high school performances.
Unfortunately this trend will continue. More writers, more outlets, more “unique viewpoints.” How do you stand out from the din? Other than making ridiculous and offensive claims (Scoop!), you must go for the “personality” angle.
Simmons will ascend. Further. He will be a guest host on VH1’s I love the 00’s. He will be the subject of a sitcom. He will run for Mayor of a mid-size California city.
We’re entering a dark period.
March 14th, 2007 at 1:43 pm
1263
Jeff says:
Got this nugget from profootballtalk.com . I posted something like this a year ago when an ESPN “expert’s” name was pasted onto an AP story (almost verbatim), with the network acting like they had some kind of “scoop” or something. This says it all.
SCHEIN RIPS ESPN
A funny thing happened on Sirius NFL Radio on Thursday. Shortly after 4:00 p.m. EDT, Adam Schein and Jim Miller were interviewing Eagles G.M. Tom Heckert. Not long into the session, Heckert announced that the team has agreed to terms receiver Kevin Curtis.
Thirty minutes later, the crawl on ESPN attributed the scoop to Len Pasquarelli.
Schein went bonkos. And justifiably so. The G.M. of the team had announced the move live on the air. There was nothing to “learn” or to “report” after Heckert declared to the word that the move had been made.
It’s the second time in less than a week that ESPN has pulled such a maneuver. Last Friday, Adam Caplan advised Sirius producer Nick Pavlatos that Browns running back Reuben Droughns had been traded to the Giants. No one else was reporting it at the time, so Pavlatos (as we hear it) called Droughns, and broke the news to the player that he had been dealt.
Not long thereafter, Droughns was interviewed on the air by Schein and Solomon Wilcots about the trade. Then, after the trade was thoroughly discussed on Sirius NFL Radio, the ESPN crawl announced the news — and attributed the scoop to Pasquarelli.
We’ve got no problem with a major media company relentlessly cross-promoting its assets, but when a national satellite service with the league’s official radio network is getting the information straight from the horse’s mouth, it’s just plain wrong for ESPN, or anyone else, to attempt to claim the story as its own.
March 15th, 2007 at 9:49 pm
1264
Jeff says:
Bobby Knight is gone. Duke has been eliminated. Syracuse didn’t even make the tourney. Cold Pizza’s self-proclaimed bracketbuster (Albany) got run out of the gym by Virginia.
If Notre Dame keeps losing to Winthrop, ESPN may stop covering the NCAA Tournament altogether. They’re probably already trying to figure out if T.O. or Roger Clemens is doing anything right now (or not–it really doesn’t matter to ESPN).
March 16th, 2007 at 2:46 pm
1265
drogue says:
Not to worry, there’s plenty of riveting, nonstop, NFL draft coverage.
March 19th, 2007 at 8:44 am
1266
T Dog says:
On the front page of ESPN.com today, in their headlines section, was a link to a story about that brawl in the crowd last night at a high school basketball game at MSG in New York that spilled into the streets and the subway. I wonder if this story would be mentioned on ESPN.com if this took place in Austin TX, Wichita, or Lincoln, Neb. Ah ha! It happened in New York! Instant ESPN.com exposure! Along with comments from 100 dopes! If it happens in New York, it’s a national story. Just more proof of big media bias.
March 19th, 2007 at 10:39 pm
1267
Brandon says:
SPORTSbyBROOKS (”SbB”)
REPORT – FOXSPORTS.COM TRAFFIC OVERTAKES ESPN.COM: The HOLLYWOOD REPORTER notes this week that FoxSports.com for the month of February “finished with more unique visitors in a month” than ESPN.com for the first time, according to Nielsen’s NetRatings.
ESPN.com had 13.2 million visitors, “more than 3 million fewer than in January.” Meanwhile, Fox Sports had 15.2 million unique visitors, about 13,000 more than the previous month.
March 20th, 2007 at 10:21 pm
1268
Jeff says:
Only ESPN would consider Kobe’s scoring night more newsworthy than the NCAA tournament.
And I can’t wait to hear Reggie Bush talk USC basketball on Cold Pizza today. Maybe if USC beats UNC, ESPN can start calling them the greatest college basketball team of all time, or run a story about how Pete Carroll deserves credit for this.
March 23rd, 2007 at 6:37 am
1269
Jace says:
ESPN Radio sucks as well. They pretty much a bunch of people on who are only there to irritate and antangonize people. No great insight or opinions. Doug Gottlieb, Ryan Rusillo, and Amy Lawrence (token female host) are among the people who suck. They have such and inconsistent host schedule at night and on weekends that it’s hard to remember who’s all there. The only good host is Colin Cowherd. It sucks because they used to have good hosts, but now they have to be “hip” and be in your face with their hosts. It sucks.
March 25th, 2007 at 7:04 pm
1270
moretroops says:
DING DONG JOE THEISMANN IS OUT!!!
March 26th, 2007 at 8:37 am
1271
drogue says:
Finally, a rational move by ESPN. Theisman is out of the MNF booth.
March 26th, 2007 at 12:03 pm
1272
St. Louis Game Time » Blog Archive » Top 11 Reasons the GT Site Went Down Friday Night says:
[...] Constantly saying that ESPN sucks apparently does have [...]
March 27th, 2007 at 1:58 pm
1273
Jeff says:
ESPN gave us yet another Roger Clemens non-update today:
The 44-year-old is no closer to deciding whether he’ll return for a 23rd season. He set no timetable, but repeated that he’ll choose among the Houston Astros, New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox.
If he hasn’t made a decision, there is no news to report. Saying there is no news is not news. If there is no news to report, then SHUT THE FUCK UP AND STOP TELLING THAT ROGER CLEMENS HASN’T MADE A DECISION YET!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
March 28th, 2007 at 2:19 pm
1274
Jeff says:
I enjoy fantasy sports, but calm down. When ESPN covers a significant injury these days, they are just as likely to run stories about how it will impact your fantasy team as they are to run a story about how it impacts the real team.
I’m sure glad the “real” news isn’t as stupid. We’d be seeing stories about how a celebrity’s sickness could have an impact on your death pool.
March 30th, 2007 at 5:56 pm
1275
Jeff says:
And now there’s a “countdown clock” for the women’s basketball championship. Yeah, assholes. We’re all on pins and needles for that. And you know what the saddest thing is? I never saw a men’s clock (somebody correct me if I’m wrong and I will admit it). What’s next? An Arena Football clock? A fishing tournament clock? God, I hate them for shit like this.
And somebody talked about New York bias. I saw on their webpage that New York City considering aluminum vs. wooden baseball bats was now newsworthy on the website. I think that’s what you were talking about in a nutshell. This kind of shit (like the basketball fights) happens in cities all over America. But if it happens in New York, then and only then will ESPN talk about it (and probably run an “Outside the Lines” on it).
And can somebody tell me how to keep their damn SportsCenter Minute from automatically running when I access their webpage? I am effing sick and tired of websites that automatically run their video. I can’t even bwose the web without turning off my speakers anymore.
April 3rd, 2007 at 8:56 am
1276
Todd says:
While watching Sportscenter, if you see an early commercial break led into by a promise that highlights of a certain game or feature is “coming up”, you can bet that it’s going to be at least another goddamn half hour before its seen.
Whenever Chris Berman narrates a St. Louis Rams game, he always hums the scarecrow theme of the Wizard of Oz when highlights feature QB Marc Bulger. Hey Berman, the guy who played the scarecrow was “Bolger” with an “o” – the Ram QB is Bulger, with a “u” – got it?
April 5th, 2007 at 6:03 pm
1277
Jeff says:
I wonder what would have happened on ESPN if Don Imus would have called LSU’s women’s basketball team what he called the Rutgers team. Would their reporters have been able to go “down the road” to give them non-stop interviews and responses?
April 10th, 2007 at 9:02 pm
1278
» Comment on 52 REASONS ESPN/ABC/DISNEY SUCKS by Jeff says:
[...] Nicole wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptI wonder what would have happened on ESPN if Don Imus would have called LSU’s women’s basketball team what he called the Rutgers team. Would their reporters have been able to go “down the road” to give them non-stop interviews and … [...]
April 11th, 2007 at 9:16 am
1279
Chris says:
Re: post 1277 — I wouldn’t say that Rutgers is “down the road” from Bristol. It’s about 150 miles, and given the sheer putridity of traffic in the I-95 corridor, you’d be hard-pressed to complete that drive in less than four hours at any time of day.
April 20th, 2007 at 9:55 am
1280
Mike says:
During at least one of last night’s SportsCenters, what did ESPN deem more important than the NHL Playoffs? If you said Notre Dame’s spring football scrimmage, you are correct. Very, very sadly correct.
April 22nd, 2007 at 10:23 am
1281
garydl says:
I’m so happy that ESPN continues to push Pacman Jones story up the news board on their NFL home page. When did that come out, last week? Never-the-less, there it is, story #4 under ESPN Headlines, while other, “less important” headlines continue to slide on by it (please see complaint #’s 1 and 6 at the beginning of this list). While Pacman’s problem’s aren’t a game (as listed in the complaints), ESPN continues to push this crap on us. I cannot say enough about my disgust at their attempts to make this story important for their own ratings while other sports news continues right on by, hardly mentioned. Truly awful but typical fare “The Worldwide Leader in Sports”.
April 23rd, 2007 at 11:49 am
1282
Otto says:
quote from post #161:
“heck, the way ESPN Classic is going, i’m suprised they haven’t shown classic episodes of AMERICAN GLADIATOR OR DOUBLE DARE!”
Good call! BSPN Classic now shows that crap!!
I’ll be honest, over the past 25 years I’ve been a loyal BSPN watcher…and now website visitor. However, they’ve gone too far. Is everything about A-Rod?? I’m a Yankees fan but damn!! Who cares if A-Rod farted next to Jeter on the plane and now they hate each other?? Sure the dude is on a tear but I didn’t even realize Pujols had an even better April last year…hmmm, I wonder why? Maybe because it got no coverage from BSPN.
Oh well, too bad there is no other sports channels I can watch. Watching BSPN is like wanting to fuck an ugly chick when your drunk…I know I shouldn’t like it but I have to have some anyway. When I get rich, I’m gonna start my own sports network….
April 23rd, 2007 at 5:06 pm
1283
Mark Breidenbach says:
Wow… I guess everyone has his or her own opinions but most of these comments are absolutely ridiculous. I’m not even sure it’s worth responding to this “list” which is mostly outdated or largely exaggerated. Why do all these people have so much anger, frustration and hatred toward anything let alone an inanimate company/brand that has nothing personal against any of you? What has ESPN done to you to make your life worse as a sports fan? They’re out there doing things no one else is to better serve the fan. I guess people are passionate about sports and at the end of the day, serving the sports fan better than anyone else is what it’s all about. No one can argue that if ESPN wasn’t what it was, this list would not exist… Well, I suppose it’s easy to sit-back, cast judgment, and criticize every single detail in things that most of these folks don’t have a clue about but, the bottom line is that the when you’re #1, people rationalize that they must find reasons to bring you down. The truth is; it doesn’t matter because for every one negative comment about the network, I’m sure there are 25 positive ones. Ratings and overall brand strength continue to prove that. Believe it or not, this company is growing and over 105 million Americans watch, listen, read, or log-on to ESPN branded media each week roughly 50% of all Americans. Add that to your lame list and stuff it…
April 25th, 2007 at 12:00 pm
1284
Brandon says:
Yet the above poster ’stumbled’ upon this blog… since it’s kinda old, the only way you could find it would be literally searching for “why espn sucks” on google or something… if you went as far as that, then you must agree, ESPN SUCKS
April 25th, 2007 at 11:55 pm
1285
Rondoman says:
ESPN is a freaking joke nowadays. Every few days I come back here to read if anything new is posted. I love to read this stuff!!!!
Well, I thought I’d add some of my own reasons why ESPN sucks, even though they probably were mentioned hundred’s of posts ago. Oh well . . . .
- Chris F’n Berman. I hate this guy with a passion. His stupid names he makes up (or steals). His stupid calls to games (too numerous to mention). He always shows up when the NBA Finals, or Super Bowl, or All Star Game, or World Series, or US Open Golf are on. Always loves to have that fat mug in front of the camera when the most people are watching. Sickening. Then, on his TOP TEN PLAYS of the week, he always has like 2 or 3 plays counting as one on the countdown!!!!! Just make it the goddamn top 23 plays of the week or some shit!!!!!!!
- ESPN breaks every news story!!!!! Did ya know that??? Yep they do. Ever watch ESPN and hear that according to Sal Palantonio, or Pedro Gomez, or Buster Olney, or some other shmuck and then they report some news that is hours old that you heard on another network. They act like their guy heard it first on everything. Trades, deals, suspensions. You name it, ESPN heard it first.
- Stuart Scott. I don’t really have to say anything here.
- Did I see a freaking Sunday conversation a few weeks back with Will Ferrell???? Are you serious???? Will Ferrell talking about his new movie!!!!! I wonder how ESPN/ABC was affiliated with making money off that movie.
- Cold Pizza. What a horrible show. This is what I heard one morning when they were going to commercial: “coming up next, are the Yankee’s in serious trouble?, Can Kobe lead the Lakers to victory against the Suns, and Barry Bonds, another homerun closer to Hank Aaron.” That’s all they cover on ESPN anymore. Yankees, Red Sox, Bonds, T.O., Clemens, Favre, Kobe it goes on and on with their favorite teams/athletes. That show is such a joke but then again, so is their whole network.
-They promote the hell out of the sports they cover, sometime even with a timer in the corner of the screen. But they push other sports to the back of the broadcast. For instance, last year, how much did ESPN mention NASCAR or Arena Football??? Hardly at all. Maybe a quick 2 to 3 minute recap of a race, and I don’t think they even showed Arena highlights. Now of course, we get all that, especially NASCAR, shoved down our throats since ESPN now covers the sport. Hmmmm…. they didn’t act like it existed a year ago. Plus they got a former Basketball player Brad Daugherty on their NASCAR show. Likes he’s some kind of an expert cuz he used to be a part owner or some shit!!!!!!
- Oh yeah, haven’t heard about Michelle Wie lately. She must still be hurt cuz that coverage could’ve had it’s own show!!!!!!
I got more, but will save it for another time.
Out.
April 27th, 2007 at 7:19 pm
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Jeff says:
Hey Mark, the telephone company had a hell of a racket going too. Then someone discovered that the only reason why they were so “popular” was because they were a MONOPOLY. ESPN has almost reached that status. They became a big deal because they gave people what they wanted. And now that they have cornered the market, they have become huge and unresponsive to its audience. They tell us what we want (such as arena football) instead of giving us what we want. That’s the difference.
And now for my latest gripe. It’s good to see ESPN hiring Keyshawn Johnson as an analyst. There’s a huge demand for that, I’m sure. But ESPN doesn’t care if there is or not. They found a loudmouth who represents (at different points in his career) USC, New York, and the Cowboys. Therefore, we’re going to get him no matter what we think. Sort of like the guy he replaced.
April 28th, 2007 at 10:19 am
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Dino says:
How is possible that ESPN is the “worldwide” leader in sports? Last time I was in Greece, you couldnt find someone within a thousand miles that has heard of ESPN. When I was in the UK, ESPN was the butt of an American joke. Secondly, in order to be the worldwide leader of sports, you actually have to show sports on your channel. Not what you think should or want to happen but what has actually happened. The only sports in existence to ESPN are the NFL, the NBA and Tiger Woods. All others need not apply.
April 30th, 2007 at 5:34 pm
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T Dog says:
Hey Breidenbach, what area of ESPN do you work at? This psychobabble you spew can only come from someone who works in Bristol… Do us a favor and go f*** yourself. Enjoy your arena football and World Series of Poker you loser.
April 30th, 2007 at 8:47 pm
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bdogg says:
The Yankees just signed a pitcher and all this network can talk about is the NBA and NHL playoffs?! Give me a break. Torre coming within a hair of getting canned last week barely got coverage, too. I’m going to have to start going to the New York tabloids for my news if this keeps up.
May 7th, 2007 at 10:10 am
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Jeff says:
I’m glad that Brady Quinn getting his Cavs jersey at the NBA playoff game made the SportsCenter highlight reel. We really needed to see that, and it had a huge impact on the outcome of the game.
May 7th, 2007 at 5:15 pm
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drogue says:
Clemens screwed ESPN out of at least a month of ‘Who will Roger sign with’ speculation.
And, Joe Theismann told BQ to get a haircut, and he did.
Now That’s reporting the important stuff.
May 8th, 2007 at 8:50 am
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Brandon says:
Because I’m bored, here’s more proof (like we need it) that ESPN is all about New York:
Latest Poll – Who’s SC’s King of the Night:
Carlos Boozer – for awesome game 7
Jimmie Johnson – winning Richmond
Street Sense – winning Kentucky Derby
Chien-Ming Wang – pitching a perfect 7 innings of baseball
OK, which one does not belong? Hmmmm… oh, hey, he’s a Yankee and almost pitched a perfect game! Hell, I should be on there, cuz I almost hit the trifecta at the Kentucky Derby. What’s worse is 20% of voters picked Wang… WTF!?
I’ll tell you, ESPN, what you can do with your Wang!
(on a side note: it’s King of the Night…. but we’re voting on several day old shit… shouldn’t it be last night’s games that count? Guess not.)
May 8th, 2007 at 1:47 pm
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T Dog says:
At about 5:40 pm on SportsCenter, two of Chicago’s most reviled “sportswriters” showed up via split-screen at the same time – former Tribune columnist Skip Bayless and current Sun-Times columnist Jay Mariotti – to talk about banning alcohol in MLB’s clubhouses.
I promptly flipped back to the “Malcolm in the Middle” episode I was watching.
I’d rather watch a rerun of a fourth-tier sitcom rather than two assclowns on a sports show that used to be credible.
May 9th, 2007 at 1:15 am
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drogue says:
And don’t forget last night’s poll:
“Will you celebrate when Barry F. Bonds breaks Aaron’s HR record?”
May 9th, 2007 at 8:06 am
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Brandon says:
Oh sure, I’ll celebrate… I’ll celebrate the fact that the countdown is over.
Check out this I saw on Deadspin today, not surprising really…
“Anyone who has watched “Baseball Tonight” in the last few years, when it has transformed from an entertainingly wonky baseball fan’s fever dream into yet another chapter in ESPN’s ongoing “People Screaming At Each Other” novel, suspects that the “panelists” often make ridiculous claims on air just to have some sort of effect, whether or not they actually believe them. This is, after all, how the network breads its butter these days.
But it’s still surprising to see John Kruk step up and admit it.
‘You may or may not have caught John Kruk’s act on Baseball Tonight last week. In a Q/A session with the other hosts, Kruk answered “the Pirates” when asked “who will be leading the NL Central at the end of the month?” Whatever, just another ESPN guy trying to look smart if it actually comes true. Big deal, right? Wrong. A couple days later, Kruky was on “The D-List” radio show here in Madison to discuss his pick. Kruk admitted that he really wanted to pick Milwaukee as his answer. Apparently, the ESPN brass tried to stiff arm him into saying he thought the Yankees would be leading the AL East by June. Kruk refused, so they made him make one bold selection, thus the Pirates pick. And this was all admitted on the radio by Kruk!’
Expect a memo, Mr. Kruk; your dissemination of unauthorized opinion and retelling of fact-based events will be noted in your personnel file.”
May 9th, 2007 at 4:57 pm
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drogue says:
I like Kruk on the nightly baseball show. He’s pretty funny and throws in some pretty good baseball insight if you can sift your way down to it.
He’s the clown jester of the bunch to be sure, but I find him interesting. I also find it refreshing that of all the ESPN clowns, he is about the only one that isn’t a pompous ass and in love with himself.
It’s fairly obvious when he’s saying what he means as opposed to he’s spouting the company line or following a predetermined theme spelled out in the production meetings.
Phillips is pretty much unbearable.
May 10th, 2007 at 7:18 am
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Brandon says:
How many times are they going to ask us, thru an espn.com poll, where we think the Yankees are going to finish this season? This is like the third time in two weeks they’re asking us. The answer is always the same. Do they honestly think if they keep asking, they’ll get the answer they’re looking for? Heck, if that’s the case, then just cheat and change the results around, and tell us what we should be thinking.
May 21st, 2007 at 5:29 pm
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Mike says:
For those hoping for a grace period from loud-mouthed, ill-informed, self-aggrandizing former WR’s posing as NFL analysts, you might want to avoid ESPN this coming NFL season. In a incredibly stunning move (…), ESPN has already signed Keyshawn Johnson to help ruin its broadcasts.
May 23rd, 2007 at 1:17 pm
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Jeff says:
Yesterday, SportsCenter had an interview with Keyshawn, another interview with Danica Patcick (who has STILL never won a race), and a montage of the “greatest dances” in sports history, just in time for the “Dancing With the Stars” finale!
Who has time for “news” when you have important information like this to cover?
May 24th, 2007 at 3:07 pm
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Jeff says:
I know I’ve commented on “stories” like this before, but now ESPN’s talking now about how the Yankees have “expressed interest” in Todd Helton. Gee, you don’t say. A team with no first baseman is “interested” in acquiring one of the best-hitting first basemen in baseball? Wow! What a scoop! I bet the Yankees are the only team “interested” in acquiring him! I bet that they’re “interested” in acquiring Albert Pujols too! When are we going to get a story about that?
May 25th, 2007 at 8:57 am