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Carnage at ESPN

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  • #16
    Originally posted by HEREisAKERS View Post
    I'd argue that LeBron James' THE DECISION set this is motion, as it was one of the first major, MAJOR non-event sports moments of the Twitter, Facebook reporter era that demonstrated how well hype and sensationalism would sell. When every moment is a reportable sports moment, no moment is a reportable sports moment and everything seems behind. People want to see the event and hear it from the players themselves.
    This article by Tom Ley lays it out well.

    http://deadspin.com/espns-latest-lay...ime-1794678629

    It's more about the changing media landscape and the money that the networks have to spend to air actual sporting events.

    The side-show stuff was just done to keep them relevant for the hours they're not showing sports. It's a result more than a cause of what's happened.
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    Your Retarded

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    • #17
      Originally posted by TerpEagle View Post
      This article by Tom Ley lays it out well.

      http://deadspin.com/espns-latest-lay...ime-1794678629

      It's more about the changing media landscape and the money that the networks have to spend to air actual sporting events.

      The side-show stuff was just done to keep them relevant for the hours they're not showing sports. It's a result more than a cause of what's happened.
      I agree with his general take. ESPN overpaid for live sports content, and they got caught in a bad spot when people started cord cutting en-mass. MLB-TV and similar services certainly hurt them big time.

      Didn't former Eagles reporter Sheil Kapadia move to ESPN? I wonder if he was affected.He probably didn't have a large enough salary to be a major target.

      I never have cared for ESPN but a new complete PPV model could suck though. On a game by game basis I could accept it but subscriptions sort of have the same problem ESPN presents.
      --------
      "We choose to go to the moon."

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      • #18
        Originally posted by IronEagle View Post
        I agree with his general take. ESPN overpaid for live sports content, and they got caught in a bad spot when people started cord cutting en-mass. MLB-TV and similar services certainly hurt them big time.

        Didn't former Eagles reporter Sheil Kapadia move to ESPN? I wonder if he was affected.He probably didn't have a large enough salary to be a major target.

        I never have cared for ESPN but a new complete PPV model could suck though. On a game by game basis I could accept it but subscriptions sort of have the same problem ESPN presents.
        It seemed like ESPN hired beat reporters for most NFL (and probably other leagues) teams. Obviously I don't know their finances but I doubt that is as expensive, especially if they're teams that generate a lot of pageviews.

        In general, media is moving away from the TV. I know cable news and SNL are having a good year due to politics, but if you look at the Trump-free era where Fox dominated, its demographic was skewed much older. As younger generations become the primary consumers I think it's going to get harder and harder for TV to be lucrative.

        I haven't really watched ESPN for something other than a live sporting event in over a decade. 30 for 30 is entertaining but they're on Netflix. I don't know if I mind a PPV model IF you can avoid packaging. Depending on the price, I'd be inclined to pay to watch a game or sign up for a team.
        Last edited by TerpEagle; 04-26-2017, 07:56 PM.
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        • #19
          Olbermann was funny...until he wasn't.

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