|
Holocausplay posted:This is one of those things that makes me love and hate sabermetrics and wonky blogs about contracts and poo poo, because there are all these talented dudes with jobs as statisticians, market analysts and attorneys who really don't give a poo poo that they're turning in 2,000-word columns for $50. They don't need to care. Although this isn't exclusive to sports journalism. Almost all media review is dominated by happy fans who just want to share their opinions and will glut the market. You can write a smart 1,000-word review of a new history book and not only be on the hook for obtaining your own copy but be obliged to spend 10 hours reading it and cash a lavish $30 check for your troubles. At the same time, there are enough people out there that are super happy someone is basically letting them read and write about books for free.
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 13:28 |
|
|
# ? May 17, 2024 01:47 |
|
Holocausplay posted:
Not all of them
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 19:52 |
|
David Brooks wrote a column about Jeremy Lin, burn everything. EVERYTHING. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/17/opinion/brooks-the-jeremy-lin-problem.html?_r=1&ref=davidbrooks
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 19:59 |
|
leokitty posted:David Brooks wrote a column about Jeremy Lin, burn everything. EVERYTHING. David Brooks posted:Jeremy Lin is anomalous in all sorts of ways. He’s a Harvard grad in the N.B.A., an Asian-American man in professional sports. But we shouldn’t neglect the biggest anomaly. He’s a religious person in professional sports.
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 20:04 |
|
WHAT
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 20:05 |
|
stuart scott irl posted:WHAT WHAT?!
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 20:13 |
|
Tae posted:WHAT?! PLAYOFFS?!
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 20:16 |
|
leokitty posted:David Brooks wrote a column Any more details that you are reading are more retarded. If you are doing something about this other than making fun of it, you are being really retarded.
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 20:17 |
|
Holocausplay posted:I have just detected the retarded you are reading. But why does the Times keep letting him write things
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 20:24 |
|
How dead is radio btw
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 21:00 |
|
SWITCH HITLER posted:How dead is radio btw dunno but there seems to be a lot of guys named Mike
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 21:00 |
|
Holocausplay posted:This is one of those things that makes me love and hate sabermetrics and wonky blogs about contracts and poo poo, because there are all these talented dudes with jobs as statisticians, market analysts and attorneys who really don't give a poo poo that they're turning in 2,000-word columns for $50. They don't need to care. Although this isn't exclusive to sports journalism. Almost all media review is dominated by happy fans who just want to share their opinions and will glut the market. You can write a smart 1,000-word review of a new history book and not only be on the hook for obtaining your own copy but be obliged to spend 10 hours reading it and cash a lavish $30 check for your troubles. Yeah, I've ran into this. It's cool when they expect it to be for free, since "it's exposure." And if I back out, there's people willing to fill those inches. It's always a lot of fun to deal with those outlets: I once had to badger a guy for two months just to get a copy of a magazine I was published in. That column rules, it's hilarious how everyone is turning a perfect storm into a Horatio Alger story.
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 22:02 |
|
Mechafunkzilla posted:dunno but there seems to be a lot of guys named Mike Mike Dupp and Mike Zaun are numbahs 1 and 1-A.
|
# ? Feb 17, 2012 22:54 |
|
jeffersonlives posted:Mike Dupp and Mike Zaun are numbahs 1 and 1-A. I just noticed this week that the radio show formerly known as Mike Dupp changed to Mike Zaun. What's up with that?
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 05:13 |
|
OrangeKing posted:I just noticed this week that the radio show formerly known as Mike Dupp changed to Mike Zaun. What's up with that? NBC was going to sue because he stopped doing the Mike'd Up show for them I think
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 05:43 |
|
OrangeKing posted:I just noticed this week that the radio show formerly known as Mike Dupp changed to Mike Zaun. What's up with that? NBC owns the rights to the Mike Dupp name and wouldn't sell them to CBS because they're in a tiff. WFAN didn't want to redo the theme song so they made it Mike Zaun and did a lovely dub.
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 05:44 |
|
We Want Dupp
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 05:44 |
|
That was essentially the scenario I assumed, but thanks for clarifying guys. On this topic, I heard several callers today credit Mike with solving the Time Warner/MSG crisis; throughout the course of the day, his reactions changed from "that's silly, I clearly didn't do anything" to "hey, if you want to give me credit, I guess I'll take it" to "yes, I am the #1 radio show in this city, I suppose that Lin kid might have had some influence too though."
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 05:56 |
|
LtTennisBall posted:was it a school in Boston? I'm a journalism student at BU (granted I plan on doing music journalism because I enjoy pain) and I can see where sports journalism would really suck. My brother originally wanted to do sports journalism, but instead he's doing more PR (he's a sports media relations intern at The University of Maryland) and he absolutely loves it. Yes, school in boston, press pass, the works.
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 16:01 |
|
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 17:10 |
|
Umm, I'm not actually sure how that happened. I mean really, who signed off on that? IS someone going to be fired? Please tell me someone is going to be fired. How can that happen??
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 18:06 |
|
jeffersonlives posted:Hope he's got good unemployment LINsurance!
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 18:17 |
|
jeffersonlives posted:I guess ESPN put out a statement this morning: "Last night, ESPN.com's mobile web site posted an offensive headline referencing Jeremy Lin at 2:30 am ET. The headline was removed at 3:05 am ET. We are conducting a complete review of our cross-platform editorial procedures and are determining appropriate disciplinary action to ensure this does not happen again. We regret and apologize for this mistake."
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 18:50 |
|
I guarantee someone involved in that decision was like, "Yeah... But only a racist would construe that as racist! It's a figure of speech - he just happens to be Chinese!"
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 20:07 |
|
ESPN employs subtle racists and then sometimes people that are there solely to compare everything to black people. Stephan A Smith is the front runner for this, but there's a couple writers that literally attribute anything and everything to black and/or religious people. One wrote the Detroit Lions as basically declaring war on Christians for doing the Tebow motion everytime they sacked Tebow.
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 20:12 |
|
There's a pretty good piece about Stephen A in the ESPN book that basically said that ESPN asked him to create a black persona and be over-the-top about race, and then when he did that, ESPN told him that he was too black and that they were no longer comfortable with him being featured so prominently.
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 20:21 |
|
BackInTheUSSR posted:There's a pretty good piece about Stephen A in the ESPN book that basically said that ESPN asked him to create a black persona and be over-the-top about race, and then when he did that, ESPN told him that he was too black and that they were no longer comfortable with him being featured so prominently. Is the ESPN book any good?
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 20:25 |
|
There are bits that are interesting but I thought it was too long and went into too much depth about mergers, acquisitions, MNF/SNF, etc. The best nuggets are from disgruntled commentators who don't really care what ESPN The Brand thinks about their comments. Stephen A was candid, anything about Olbermann was great, and the parts about the culture at early ESPN being incredibly sexist (and also basically one giant orgy) were interesting.
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 20:45 |
|
jeffersonlives posted:that is amazing
|
# ? Feb 18, 2012 21:26 |
|
Jon Heyman made a "best signings of the offseason" list. It's worse than I could have ever imagined. http://www.cbssports.com/mcc/blogs/entry/33714192/34892221 1. Francisco Cordero 2. Brad Lidge 3. Carlos Beltran 4. Ryan Madson 5. Alex Gonzalez 6. Joel Pineiro 7. Chris Capuano 8. Paul Maholm 9. Lyle Overbay 10. Jon Garland 11. Ryan Spilborghs 12. Mike MacDougal 13. Kosuke Fukudome 14. Micah Owings 15. Jonny Gomes 16. K-Rod
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:09 |
|
That's like not even Bleacher Report analysis holy crap
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:13 |
|
Nut Bunnies posted:Jon Heyman made a "best signings of the offseason" list. It's worse than I could have ever imagined. This is the worst thing I've ever read. Good god
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:16 |
|
Albert Pujols is literally not even on the list. I don't even know what is happening in this world.
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:31 |
|
Wow he really loves relievers/marginal starters. How do Pujols and Fielder not even crack the top twenty? I can only assume Johnny Damon would have been #1 if he had signed by now.
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:31 |
|
How are noted Boras clients Prince and EJax not the top two?
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:33 |
|
BackInTheUSSR posted:There are bits that are interesting but I thought it was too long and went into too much depth about mergers, acquisitions, MNF/SNF, etc. The best nuggets are from disgruntled commentators who don't really care what ESPN The Brand thinks about their comments. Stephen A was candid, anything about Olbermann was great, and the parts about the culture at early ESPN being incredibly sexist (and also basically one giant orgy) were interesting. I haven't finished it yet, but this is pretty much a perfect review. I get the feeling that they couldn't get as much juicy gossip as they had anticipated, so they had to fill space with some seemingly endless business stuff that populates much of the early part of the book. And yeah, the Olbermann stuff is great. The guy is a magnificent bastard.
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:49 |
|
Nut Bunnies posted:Jon Heyman made a "best signings of the offseason" list. It's worse than I could have ever imagined. Well that is certainly a thing. Jesus gently caress, Heyman. Kill yourself. BackInTheUSSR posted:There are bits that are interesting but I thought it was too long and went into too much depth about mergers, acquisitions, MNF/SNF, etc. The best nuggets are from disgruntled commentators who don't really care what ESPN The Brand thinks about their comments. Stephen A was candid, anything about Olbermann was great, and the parts about the culture at early ESPN being incredibly sexist (and also basically one giant orgy) were interesting. Having just finished it myself, I have to completely agree with you there. I suspect they couldn't get as much dirt as they hoped for and just started stuffing pages with business BS filler.
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:53 |
|
toadee posted:Albert Pujols is literally not even on the list. I don't even know what is happening in this world. It is "bargain signings" so it's tough to put super-rich contracts on there
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:53 |
|
No Safe Word posted:It is "bargain signings" so it's tough to put super-rich contracts on there You know that Prince Fielder is there, right?
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:54 |
|
|
# ? May 17, 2024 01:47 |
|
Mr. Funny Pants posted:I get the feeling that they couldn't get as much juicy gossip as they had anticipated, so they had to fill space with some seemingly endless business stuff that populates much of the early part of the book. This is the exact same thing I'd say about Extra 2 Percent
|
# ? Feb 19, 2012 02:55 |