View Full Version : ESPN Layoffs
AtlantaDan
04-26-2017, 12:48 PM
ESPN is swinging the ax today to reduce payroll after losing about 12 million subscribers (at $7 per month) with cord cutting over past 5 years
Trent Dilfer (who I loathe) and Ed Werder (good guy who focused on Cowboys) among cuts who disclosed their terminations so far
http://deadspin.com/a-running-list-of-espn-layoffs-1794664091
Would not be surprised to see the Bus and Ryan Clark let go
steelreserve
04-26-2017, 01:18 PM
ESPN is swinging the ax today to reduce payroll after losing about 12 million subscribers (at $7 per month) with cord cutting over past 5 years
They had it coming. Cable companies are notorious for ripping you off, and ESPN was notorious for even managing to rip the cable companies off (and of course, when that happens, the rip-off gets passed along to you, the consumer). They charge something like $6-$8 per subscriber per month, and strongarm their way into all packages, so everyone subsidizes them even if they're not sports fans. People are not happy about paying $100 a month for standard TV, and ESPN and their practices were a big part of why that came about. We dropped cable TV about a year ago and have no regrets at all. If I really want to watch a game, it's not too hard to stream it legally, or go somewhere else to watch it.
Dwinsgames
04-26-2017, 01:24 PM
I couldnt tell you the last time I tuned in to bspn
Rotorhead
04-26-2017, 02:02 PM
Well, after they got all political they lost a lot of subs. Nobody wanted to hear that crap on a sports channel, it was everywhere else. On top of that some of the BS those morons were endorsing just ruined watching it for me several years ago. Good riddance.
tube517
04-26-2017, 02:08 PM
I couldnt tell you the last time I tuned in to bspn
This.
I didn't mind Ed Werder so I'm surprised he got canned.
But yeah, BSPN sucks and I don't watch it anymore unless it's Sunday Night Football and the Steelers are on or college football/Va Tech.
pczach
04-26-2017, 02:16 PM
Well, after they got all political they lost a lot of subs. Nobody wanted to hear that crap on a sports channel, it was everywhere else. On top of that some of the BS those morons were endorsing just ruined watching it for me several years ago. Good riddance.
You are absolutely right. They have gotten so political, and their employees spew their political leanings all over the TV and radio broadcasts.
I watch and participate in sports to escape reality. Nothing pisses me off more than getting politics stuffed down my throat. I'm sick of it, and I'm sure many, many more are too.
Stick to sports....or I'm going somewhere else.
DesertSteel
04-26-2017, 03:11 PM
They should've started with Dan LebRetard. And then Bomani Jones.
st33lersguy
04-26-2017, 03:17 PM
Well, after they got all political they lost a lot of subs. Nobody wanted to hear that crap on a sports channel, it was everywhere else. On top of that some of the BS those morons were endorsing just ruined watching it for me several years ago. Good riddance.
Exactly. People don't go to a sports channel to watch some guy's liberal rants
Mojouw
04-26-2017, 03:19 PM
Just curious - haven't had cable for almost 6 years now. Catch Sportscenter or one of the other yelling and highlight shows on the road sometimes, but what is the politics aspect of all this? ESPN radio personalities tend to avoid that arena with like a 25 foot pole.
steelreserve
04-26-2017, 03:28 PM
Well, after they got all political they lost a lot of subs. Nobody wanted to hear that crap on a sports channel, it was everywhere else. On top of that some of the BS those morons were endorsing just ruined watching it for me several years ago. Good riddance.
No joke. I also think they're almost entirely responsible for the idiotic practice of microanalyzing every facet of everything that athletes say and do on and off the field - then focusing on that until the whole thing is more about the puke-inducing reality show drama than about sports. I mean, some of that is probably what people mean by politics too.
"Ooh, some guy on the Atlanta Hawks made an insensitive remark on Twitter - let's all be outraged and call for his suspension!"
"Some football player got in an argument with his girlfriend over money - let's get everyone fired up and demand an investigation!"
"One kid choked on a Dodger Dog. SAFETY!!!!! BAN HOT DOGS EVERYWHERE!!!"
And yeah, it didn't help crossing everything over into politics and social justice, so that talking about sports is like walking on eggshells, because you never know when some hair-trigger activist is going to jump in even though he (she (xim, xer, xem)) barely even cares about sports in the first place.
Why is this even a thing? Following sports does not need to be this hard. Like - what did you need to know about your favorite players and teams before all this BS?
Jose Canseco: Hits home runs. Not the brightest son of a bitch. Probably on steroids. Banging Madonna. Well all righty then. Are the A's winning?
Seriously, fuck all this shit.
tube517
04-26-2017, 03:31 PM
Wow, Jayson Stark (MLB analyst) got the axe too.
Werder should just write columns and charge money like Dejan K
I'm sure Dilfer will get picked up by NFLN or FOX/CBS somewhere or he can do Bucs/Stains/BitchPigeons radio games
Stark should just go to MLB network > BSPN
Mojouw
04-26-2017, 03:38 PM
No joke. I also think they're almost entirely responsible for the idiotic practice of microanalyzing every facet of everything that athletes say and do on and off the field - then focusing on that until the whole thing is more about the puke-inducing reality show drama than about sports. I mean, some of that is probably what people mean by politics too.
"Ooh, some guy on the Atlanta Hawks made an insensitive remark on Twitter - let's all be outraged and call for his suspension!"
"Some football player got in an argument with his girlfriend over money - let's get everyone fired up and demand an investigation!"
"One kid choked on a Dodger Dog. SAFETY!!!!! BAN HOT DOGS EVERYWHERE!!!"
And yeah, it didn't help crossing everything over into politics and social justice, so that talking about sports is like walking on eggshells, because you never know when some hair-trigger activist is going to jump in even though he (she (xim, xer, xem)) barely even cares about sports in the first place.
Why is this even a thing? Following sports does not need to be this hard. Like - what did you need to know about your favorite players and teams before all this BS?
Jose Canseco: Hits home runs. Not the brightest son of a bitch. Probably on steroids. Banging Madonna. Well all righty then. Are the A's winning?
Seriously, fuck all this shit.
So (I agree by the way) what you are saying is that there is NOT 24 hours of sports "news" per day let alone enough for 4 (or whatever they are up to now) different ESPNs?
They gotta fill airtime, so now I have to know that Jeter gives woman gift baskets after he enjoys some quality time with them. Why did I need to hear that? I just want to know who won last nights game.
AtlantaDan
04-26-2017, 03:39 PM
No joke. I also think they're almost entirely responsible for the idiotic practice of microanalyzing every facet of everything that athletes say and do on and off the field - then focusing on that until the whole thing is more about the puke-inducing reality show drama than about sports.
The problem is what to program when you are not running live sports
I am old enough to remember when getting long highlights on ESPN was a breakthrough after 5 minutes of sports on the local news
Once you could get highlights online and on demand that blew up the business model for Sports Center, which was the signature program other than live sports going back to the glory days of Olberman and Patrick
So then you were left with gossip and "hot takes" in addition to live programming such as the NFL, for which ESPN has a greater need, as subscriber revenues plunge - not good
More than any other network, ESPN needed N.F.L. games to help sustain its monthly subscriber fees, the foundation of its financial structure.
So, in the contract that began in 2006, ESPN agreed to pay $1.1 billion annually, nearly twice NBC’s $600 million. When it came time to renew the deal through 2021, the price rose to $1.9 billion a year. NBC is paying $950 million.
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/28/s...ings-espn.html
(https://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/28/sports/football/monday-night-football-tv-ratings-espn.html)
Mojouw
04-26-2017, 03:56 PM
The problem is what to program when you are not running live sports
I am old enough to remember when getting long highlights on ESPN was a breakthrough after 5 minutes of sports on the local news
Once you could get highlights online and on demand that blew up the business model for Sports Center, which was the signature program other than live sports going back to the glory days of Olberman and Patrick
So then you were left with gossip and "hot takes" in addition to live programming such as the NFL, for which ESPN has a greater need, as subscriber revenues plunge - not good
More than any other network, ESPN needed N.F.L. games to help sustain its monthly subscriber fees, the foundation of its financial structure.
So, in the contract that began in 2006, ESPN agreed to pay $1.1 billion annually, nearly twice NBC’s $600 million. When it came time to renew the deal through 2021, the price rose to $1.9 billion a year. NBC is paying $950 million.
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/28/s...ings-espn.html
(https://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/28/sports/football/monday-night-football-tv-ratings-espn.html)
The model is falling apart. What are the major sports leagues going to do when at the next TV deal auction the various networks say" Well, you know, we just can't do the levels we've been at. Gotta cut the rate we're paying you to about $500 million"? Owners going to take less? Fat chance! So then there is a CBA problem...I think unless the leagues get creative with how to deliver their content to PAYING digital customers, this is all over in like 8 years.
pczach
04-26-2017, 03:57 PM
Just curious - haven't had cable for almost 6 years now. Catch Sportscenter or one of the other yelling and highlight shows on the road sometimes, but what is the politics aspect of all this? ESPN radio personalities tend to avoid that arena with like a 25 foot pole.
Not at ESPN.
Here's an example from just a few days ago.
I turn on First Take with Stephen A Smith and Max Kellerman. There was a sports reporter on the show commenting on the controversy about the pictures comparing the Patriots' White House visits under the Obama administration, and the most recent visit under the Trump administration that were put out on social media by the New York Times.
In case you don't know, the New York Times posted both these pictures comparing the size of the group from the Patriots from both years, and made a point of stating how many more Patriots attended under while Obama was in office. The Patriots responded to the pictures, and stated that there was a difference in the number of people in the picture is because much of the staff was sitting in crowd as opposed to being in the picture of the entire organization like the picture at the Obama White House visit. The New York Times had to issue an apology.
When the guest on First Take engaged Max Kellerman and Stephen A Smith on this sports topic, Kellerman just goes completely biased, partisan, and borderline looney about the Trump administration. It's incomprehensible that a sports talk show goes from discussing a topic with some political ramifications because an NFL team is at the White House and a reporter is disingenuous about the pictures to create a bad look for Trump.......and one of the hosts of the show loses his mind because the guest has the audacity to comment on the New York Times intentionally publishing pictures to make the President of the United States look bad.
I'm no Trump apologist...but this is the same ESPN that you couldn't watch for 10 minutes without showing coverage of President Obama being at a sporting event, commenting on a sporting event, hanging out with a professional athlete, and basically fell all over themselves to always show Obama in a positive light. That's all well and good, but you can't then have ESPN employees acting like an arm of the Democratic Party with aggressive statements and accusations about the current President. It's just ridiculous.
Here's a video of some of the discussion:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjHui7MX6tU
Stuff like this just makes me want to turn the channel, and I did at the end of that segment. If someone attacked President Obama like that, it would be equally ridiculous and offensive. Can we please just see and hear sports at a sports network?
I can't stand that crap anymore.
Once again, this is not about me supporting one President or the other. This is a sports network that is supposed to be discussing sports and be unbiased in how they report things. This is just one example. I have been seeing lots of negative press from ESPN on both tv and radio talk shows.
Just trying to show just one example of what I'm talking about.
86WARD
04-26-2017, 04:03 PM
ESPN is nothing near what it used to be. Back when it was simple, it was best. I tried to watch it recently, but all the highlights are junked up and the format is just awful. Too many analysts and sideline/field reporters. Just stick Kenny Mayne and Keith Obermann behind a desk and let them do the highlights.
I haven't watched ESPN in years other then my recent attempt and when the Steelers are on.
Mojouw
04-26-2017, 04:03 PM
Not at ESPN.
Here's an example from just a few days ago.
I turn on First Take with Stephen A Smith and Max Kellerman. There was a sports reporter on the show commenting on the controversy about the pictures comparing the Patriots' White House visits under the Obama administration, and the most recent visit under the Trump administration that were put out on social media by the New York Times.
In case you don't know, the New York Times posted both these pictures comparing the size of the group from the Patriots from both years, and made a point of stating how many more Patriots attended under while Obama was in office. The Patriots responded to the pictures, and stated that there was a difference in the number of people in the picture is because much of the staff was sitting in crowd as opposed to being in the picture of the entire organization like the picture at the Obama White House visit. The New York Times had to issue an apology.
When the guest on First Take engaged Max Kellerman and Stephen A Smith on this sports topic, Kellerman just goes completely biased, partisan, and borderline looney about the Trump administration. It's incomprehensible that a sports talk show goes from discussing a topic with some political ramifications because an NFL team is at the White House and a reporter is disingenuous about the pictures to create a bad look for Trump.......and one of the hosts of the show loses his mind because the guest has the audacity to comment on the New York Times intentionally publishing pictures to make the President of the United States look bad.
I'm no Trump apologist...but this is the same ESPN that you couldn't watch for 10 minutes without showing coverage of President Obama being at a sporting event, commenting on a sporting event, hanging out with a professional athlete, and basically fell all over themselves to always show Obama in a positive light. That's all well and good, but you can't then have ESPN employees acting like an arm of the Democratic Party with aggressive statements and accusations about the current President. It's just ridiculous.
Here's a video of some of the discussion:
http://sport.ava360.com/new-england-patriots-white-house-visit-sparks-heated-debate-first-take-april-20-2017_d4abda816.html
Stuff like this just makes me want to turn the channel, and I did at the end of that segment. If someone attacked President Obama like that, it would be equally ridiculous and offensive. Can we please just see and hear sports at a sports network?
I can't stand that crap anymore.
Once again, this is not about me supporting one President or the other. This is a sports network that is supposed to be discussing sports and be unbiased in how they report things. This is just one example. I have been seeing lots of negative press from ESPN on both tv and radio talk shows.
Just trying to show just one example of what I'm talking about.
Yeah that got real ridiculous real quick. I think the problem is that there really isn't enough to talk about. I mean, there is - but most sports folks don't want to sit through a show that does detailed fine-grained analysis of a game or series of games. They want "hot takes" and "Tweetstorms" etc.
The best football shows on TV used to be that one on ESPN where Jaws just broke down the Monday night game. And the Showtime one that got into detailed analysis. Both those shows are now on at like 3 in the morning last I checked. NBC started Football Night in America to kinda fill that gap and that lasted all of 3 weeks. Now their "analysis" is about how star players and good playcalling are important.
It seems people just want to watch the TV equivalent of a car wreck.
pczach
04-26-2017, 04:18 PM
Yeah that got real ridiculous real quick. I think the problem is that there really isn't enough to talk about. I mean, there is - but most sports folks don't want to sit through a show that does detailed fine-grained analysis of a game or series of games. They want "hot takes" and "Tweetstorms" etc.
The best football shows on TV used to be that one on ESPN where Jaws just broke down the Monday night game. And the Showtime one that got into detailed analysis. Both those shows are now on at like 3 in the morning last I checked. NBC started Football Night in America to kinda fill that gap and that lasted all of 3 weeks. Now their "analysis" is about how star players and good playcalling are important.
It seems people just want to watch the TV equivalent of a car wreck.
Mojouw, I changed the link in my post to a video of the entire segment. I didn't edit it in time for your response. Here's the link if you want to see the whole thing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjHui7MX6tU
When Stephen A is the voice of reason and keeping it about sports, you know Kellerman lost his mind. That's the kind of thing that could and possible should cost him his job. Totally unacceptable in that setting.
Sorry, just wanted you to see the whole thing for context.
Born2Steel
04-26-2017, 04:19 PM
Yeah that got real ridiculous real quick. I think the problem is that there really isn't enough to talk about. I mean, there is - but most sports folks don't want to sit through a show that does detailed fine-grained analysis of a game or series of games. They want "hot takes" and "Tweetstorms" etc.
The best football shows on TV used to be that one on ESPN where Jaws just broke down the Monday night game. And the Showtime one that got into detailed analysis. Both those shows are now on at like 3 in the morning last I checked. NBC started Football Night in America to kinda fill that gap and that lasted all of 3 weeks. Now their "analysis" is about how star players and good playcalling are important.
It seems people just want to watch the TV equivalent of a car wreck.
There was a show on NFLNETWORK, may be the same one you're referring to. Sterling Sharpe, Brian Baldinger's crooked finger, and others would break down the past week's game films. I think Jaws was on that one, maybe not. Anyway, I would DVR and rewatch all week. But then again, I AM a nerd.
AtlantaDan
04-26-2017, 04:20 PM
The model is falling apart. What are the major sports leagues going to do when at the next TV deal auction the various networks say" Well, you know, we just can't do the levels we've been at. Gotta cut the rate we're paying you to about $500 million"? Owners going to take less? Fat chance! So then there is a CBA problem...I think unless the leagues get creative with how to deliver their content to PAYING digital customers, this is all over in like 8 years.
The broadcast/bundled programming package model of TV is falling apart as well - cord cutting is due to steaming alternatives as well as cost
Cost was not the driving factor, with less than a third of respondents citing cost as a reason for wanting to cancel their service. Instead, the majority of respondents said they were satisfied with the proliferation of over-the-top streaming options like Netflix and Hulu.
"Skinny bundles" – or smaller cable packages that offer fewer channels – could be one way that cable companies can hold on to subscribers and combat the likes of Netflix (http://data.cnbc.com/quotes/NFLX) and Hulu.
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/09/20/intent-to-cut-the-cord-hits-new-high-survey-says.html
The NFL knows that alternatives to just bidding up rights with just ESPN, CBS, Fox and NBC are required, with experiments such as this to bring in new bidders.
Amazon is getting into the live sports broadcasting business. The retailing giant, which has spent hundreds of millions of dollars acquiring content for its subscription video business, has won the rights to stream "Thursday Night Football" games for this upcoming season.
Sources confirmed to ESPN that the deal to stream the games, which will be simulcast on the NFL Network and either CBS or NBC, is worth $50 million, up from the $10 million that Twitter paid for the streaming in the deal last season....
Unlike with Twitter, where anyone who logged on could see the games, only Amazon customers who pay for its Prime service will have access.
http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/19078771/amazon-wins-rights-livestream-nfl-thursday-night-football-replacing-twitter
Until recently it was unthinkable a major sporting event such as the college football championship or the Final Four would be on cable rather than a traditional network but that barrier has been crossed - sports packages online are the next step. The question is whether an Amazon, Netflix or Google (which owns YouTube) will pay enough to keep the sports rights bubble inflated
pczach
04-26-2017, 04:27 PM
Yeah that got real ridiculous real quick. I think the problem is that there really isn't enough to talk about. I mean, there is - but most sports folks don't want to sit through a show that does detailed fine-grained analysis of a game or series of games. They want "hot takes" and "Tweetstorms" etc.
The best football shows on TV used to be that one on ESPN where Jaws just broke down the Monday night game. And the Showtime one that got into detailed analysis. Both those shows are now on at like 3 in the morning last I checked. NBC started Football Night in America to kinda fill that gap and that lasted all of 3 weeks. Now their "analysis" is about how star players and good playcalling are important.
It seems people just want to watch the TV equivalent of a car wreck.
You're right. It's heading in a very bad direction IMO.
It's hard to name the exact moment it happened, but somewhere along the way they chose to move away from good ole' straightforward sports to hot takes and reality tv. It's getting closer to "ESPN Housewives of Bristol" than real sports in way too many cases.
Dwinsgames
04-26-2017, 04:55 PM
slightly off topic but remember back in the day where Jimmy the Greek would be on the Sunday pregame announcing his picks vs the spread ?
how the league has distanced itself from this sort of thing YET allows owners of real teams to own a big chunk of fantasy gaming on the same sport
but God forbid if they are involved with Horse racing
salamander
04-26-2017, 04:57 PM
Got way too political for my taste. Not surprised whatsoever.
Skinart82
04-26-2017, 05:18 PM
You can't even go the their website anymore, every article you click on is one their "Insider" articles that you have to pay to be a member of. I gave up on ESPN completely years ago.
SteelerFanInStl
04-26-2017, 05:36 PM
You can't even go the their website anymore, every article you click on is one their "Insider" articles that you have to pay to be a member of. I gave up on ESPN completely years ago.
Yep, they want you to pay for everything. That's why I never go to their site. I used to be an ESPN addict for many years. Watched Sportscenter multiple times every day, watched all of the college basketball and football games, etc. Not any more. This year I even finally gave up any kind of cable or satellite and the only time that I miss it is when I want to watch the Steelers on NFL Network or ESPN and the streams are shitty.
SteelMayhem72
04-26-2017, 06:58 PM
There is gonna come a time when cable and even tv is gonna become obsolete. Everything is at the click of a mouse or swipe of your phone...no tv needed
Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk
Dwinsgames
04-26-2017, 07:08 PM
Yep, they want you to pay for everything. That's why I never go to their site. I used to be an ESPN addict for many years. Watched Sportscenter multiple times every day, watched all of the college basketball and football games, etc. Not any more. This year I even finally gave up any kind of cable or satellite and the only time that I miss it is when I want to watch the Steelers on NFL Network or ESPN and the streams are shitty.
easy fix for that is go to the website and use a friends login password that still subscribes to cable , I use my sons because we cut the cable cord a few years ago and stream everything...
32inch 1080p smart tv as a pc monitor for both me and the MRS. and a 3rd pc hooked up to the big flat screen with kodi on that pc
SteelMayhem72
04-26-2017, 07:28 PM
easy fix for that is go to the website and use a friends login password that still subscribes to cable , I use my sons because we cut the cable cord a few years ago and stream everything...
32inch 1080p smart tv as a pc monitor for both me and the MRS. and a 3rd pc hooked up to the big flat screen with kodi on that pc
This
Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk
tube517
04-26-2017, 07:50 PM
The broadcast/bundled programming package model of TV is falling apart as well - cord cutting is due to steaming alternatives as well as cost
Cost was not the driving factor, with less than a third of respondents citing cost as a reason for wanting to cancel their service. Instead, the majority of respondents said they were satisfied with the proliferation of over-the-top streaming options like Netflix and Hulu.
"Skinny bundles" – or smaller cable packages that offer fewer channels – could be one way that cable companies can hold on to subscribers and combat the likes of Netflix (http://data.cnbc.com/quotes/NFLX) and Hulu.
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/09/20/intent-to-cut-the-cord-hits-new-high-survey-says.html
The NFL knows that alternatives to just bidding up rights with just ESPN, CBS, Fox and NBC are required, with experiments such as this to bring in new bidders.
Amazon is getting into the live sports broadcasting business. The retailing giant, which has spent hundreds of millions of dollars acquiring content for its subscription video business, has won the rights to stream "Thursday Night Football" games for this upcoming season.
Sources confirmed to ESPN that the deal to stream the games, which will be simulcast on the NFL Network and either CBS or NBC, is worth $50 million, up from the $10 million that Twitter paid for the streaming in the deal last season....
Unlike with Twitter, where anyone who logged on could see the games, only Amazon customers who pay for its Prime service will have access.
http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/19078771/amazon-wins-rights-livestream-nfl-thursday-night-football-replacing-twitter
Until recently it was unthinkable a major sporting event such as the college football championship or the Final Four would be on cable rather than a traditional network but that barrier has been crossed - sports packages online are the next step. The question is whether an Amazon, Netflix or Google (which owns YouTube) will pay enough to keep the sports rights bubble inflated
Very True. Twitter has a partnership with NFL Network to broadcast the (usually lame) Thursday Night Games that also appear on CBS/NBC. 10 games a year.
(Off Topic) Netflix is getting more first run movies as opposed to the movie theater. They now have the rights to The Irishman (DeNiro/Pacino/Pesci/Keitel gangster movie directed by Scorsese) which should be huge.
Point is Netflix is gaining more and more power.
- - - Updated - - -
easy fix for that is go to the website and use a friends login password that still subscribes to cable , I use my sons because we cut the cable cord a few years ago and stream everything...
32inch 1080p smart tv as a pc monitor for both me and the MRS. and a 3rd pc hooked up to the big flat screen with kodi on that pc
:thumbsup:
SteelerFanInStl
04-26-2017, 08:49 PM
easy fix for that is go to the website and use a friends login password that still subscribes to cable , I use my sons because we cut the cable cord a few years ago and stream everything...
32inch 1080p smart tv as a pc monitor for both me and the MRS. and a 3rd pc hooked up to the big flat screen with kodi on that pc
LOL, everyone that I know has cancelled their cable. I've got Amazon Fire TV boxes with Kodi in the living room and bedroom and Kodi on my computer and tablet. That's how I watch everything that's not on local channels, which I get via antenna.
DesertSteel
04-26-2017, 09:40 PM
There was a show on NFLNETWORK, may be the same one you're referring t o. Sterling Sharpe, Brian Baldinger's crooked finger, and others would break down the past week's game films. I think Jaws was on that one, maybe not. Anyway, I would DVR and rewatch all week. But then again, I AM a nerd.
AFC/NFC Playbook
vader29
04-26-2017, 09:53 PM
857415314165911552
fansince'76
04-27-2017, 06:26 AM
No surprise they're keeping this waste of space.
857324444779397121
Still classy, I see - 100 people (most of whom being infinitely more talented than her) get the sack and she gloats about keeping her job? I would imagine the only reason she was spared the axe to begin with is that her salary is low enough to keep her off the "hatchet man's" radar (for now). However, considering the way ESPN is hemorrhaging cash, the joke's on her if she thinks that's the end of it.
And I pretty much stopped paying attention to ESPN after SB XL due to their role in the officiating controversy.
tube517
04-27-2017, 08:32 AM
No surprise they're keeping this waste of space.
857324444779397121
Still classy, I see - 100 people (most of whom being infinitely more talented than her) get the sack and she gloats about keeping her job? I would imagine the only reason she was spared the axe to begin with is that her salary is low enough to keep her off the "hatchet man's" radar (for now). However, considering the way ESPN is hemorrhaging cash, the joke's on her if she thinks that's the end of it.
And I pretty much stopped paying attention to ESPN after SB XL due to their role in the officiating controversy.
Who is she? I'm on Twitter alot but don't even recognize the name
fansince'76
04-27-2017, 08:33 AM
Who is she? I'm on Twitter alot but don't even recognize the name
This is the only reason I know anything about her, but I still remember it: http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/16/us/espn-reporter-britt-mchenry-tirade/
fansince'76
04-27-2017, 08:46 AM
It's hard to name the exact moment it happened, but somewhere along the way they chose to move away from good ole' straightforward sports to hot takes and reality tv. It's getting closer to "ESPN Housewives of Bristol" than real sports in way too many cases.
I'd say right around the time Disney bought the network. And I'm gonna laugh when it winds up being 4 hours of actual programming with 20 hours of infomercials a day...
Edman
04-27-2017, 08:57 AM
ESPN was bad for a long time now. The Krappernick controversy last year was the death knell. I've had enough of all forms of politics. I'm sick a hearing about Trump, CNN, Hilary, progressivism, illegals, immigrations, BLM. It's all a cancer.
Still classy, I see - 100 people (most of whom being infinitely more talented than her) get the sack and she gloats about keeping her job? I would imagine the only reason she was spared the axe to begin with is that her salary is low enough to keep her off the "hatchet man's" radar (for now).
She's sucking a good **** in that studio.
tube517
04-27-2017, 09:42 AM
This is the only reason I know anything about her, but I still remember it: http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/16/us/espn-reporter-britt-mchenry-tirade/
Ok, I remember the incident but not her name.
Pretty much what Edman said above. Because if they keep somebody like her over an Ed Werder or Jayson Stark? Laughable.
AtlantaDan
04-27-2017, 10:25 AM
857324444779397121
I guess they forgot to call her and her tweet was a reminder they had missed her:coffee:
857602447409201155
Mojouw
04-27-2017, 10:38 AM
None of it matters anyways. This is just re-arranging deck chairs on the Titanic. Unless the are cutting hundreds of millions of dollars in salaries, it can't reverse the death spiral they are in with regards to losing subscribers at a record rate at the same time their content costs for live games is going through the roof.
The sad part is the solution exists. Look at HBO GO. Just make an ESPN GO. It isn't hard, you already have an app. But TV networks and sports leagues are about where newspapers were at 15-20 years ago. Too locked into outdated business models and too conservative to really innovate.
The only reason I care, is that I truly believe that without 500 million to 1 billion plus dollar TV deals - the NFL as we know it goes away. Basketball and baseball shortly to follow.
Moose
04-27-2017, 10:47 AM
Well, after they got all political they lost a lot of subs. Nobody wanted to hear that crap on a sports channel, it was everywhere else. On top of that some of the BS those morons were endorsing just ruined watching it for me several years ago. Good riddance.
I agree 100% Nothing pisses me off more than sports people and athletes talking politics, of which they know NOTHING about. Fire them all ! It's getting to the point where most of them know NOTHING about sports either.
JimHarbaugh'ssoakedtissue
04-27-2017, 11:12 AM
Espn sux but does have 3 things going good. 1.30 For 30 series are entertaining. 2. Ryan Clark is really knowledgeable and also funny on the NFL shows. 3. Still have MNF Football.
DesertSteel
04-27-2017, 11:18 AM
ESPN rubs me wrong sometimes, but I'm thankful for any and all 24-hour sports programming. I really have no interest in other TV programming. So I don't want to cut my nose off to spite my face.
JimHarbaugh'ssoakedtissue
04-27-2017, 11:19 AM
Will say this too and think ESPN miss the boat not getting any NHL contracts and games ever.
teegre
04-27-2017, 12:15 PM
ESPN rubs me wrong sometimes, but I'm thankful for any and all 24-hour sports programming. I really have no interest in other TV programming. So I don't want to cut my nose off to spite my face.
^^THIS^^
fansince'76
04-27-2017, 12:28 PM
The only reason I care, is that I truly believe that without 500 million to 1 billion plus dollar TV deals - the NFL as we know it goes away.
To be honest, I don't really care anymore. The game I grew up with and loved died years ago anyway. My Steelers fanhood is the only reason I still pay attention at all.
fansince'76
04-27-2017, 12:31 PM
I guess they forgot to call her and her tweet was a reminder they had missed her:coffee:
857602447409201155
Wow - she's getting lambasted on that Tweet.
steelreserve
04-27-2017, 01:01 PM
None of it matters anyways. This is just re-arranging deck chairs on the Titanic. Unless the are cutting hundreds of millions of dollars in salaries, it can't reverse the death spiral they are in with regards to losing subscribers at a record rate at the same time their content costs for live games is going through the roof.
The sad part is the solution exists. Look at HBO GO. Just make an ESPN GO. It isn't hard, you already have an app. But TV networks and sports leagues are about where newspapers were at 15-20 years ago. Too locked into outdated business models and too conservative to really innovate.
The only reason I care, is that I truly believe that without 500 million to 1 billion plus dollar TV deals - the NFL as we know it goes away. Basketball and baseball shortly to follow.
Out of all those, baseball is the only one that's actually been preparing for what's coming. They've been testing out all kinds of streaming and pay-as-you-go subscription models quietly for several years now. Whereas the NFL's approach is to make access as restricted as possible and try to jam all potential viewers into a single, surly, take-it-or-leave-it package.
That kind of works if interest is so high that people are willing to overlook the cost or inconvenience or the general shitty attitude of the whole thing. But interest in the NFL is already declining from that peak. In baseball it already did, so they're trying to do the smart thing and be ready - trying out things that are actually helpful and which people want. You know, running it like an actual business with customers, not a monolith.
Eventually coverage could turn into some kind of hybrid model like you see with some European soccer leagues, where you've got varying levels of free and paid for varying levels of interest. But the network TV deal as a primary source of income is not going to be a thing much longer. The NFL will probably hold out longer than most trying to force "exclusive" deals and shit, but I do not think the public's interest level is going to support that for long either. They are going to have a rude awakening when they find out that the Millennial fantasy football fan and statmonger is not the same thing as a die-hard fan of the sport itself.
Edman
04-27-2017, 01:15 PM
This whole thing reminds me of NBC crying over their sagging ratings for the Olympics and blaming it on those lazy millenials. How dare people not line up and eat up our crap coverage and fluff pieces again and again?
I watch the olympics to see the olympics, not advertisements and inspirational fluff pieces on the athletes.
pczach
04-27-2017, 04:09 PM
Out of all those, baseball is the only one that's actually been preparing for what's coming. They've been testing out all kinds of streaming and pay-as-you-go subscription models quietly for several years now. Whereas the NFL's approach is to make access as restricted as possible and try to jam all potential viewers into a single, surly, take-it-or-leave-it package.
That kind of works if interest is so high that people are willing to overlook the cost or inconvenience or the general shitty attitude of the whole thing. But interest in the NFL is already declining from that peak. In baseball it already did, so they're trying to do the smart thing and be ready - trying out things that are actually helpful and which people want. You know, running it like an actual business with customers, not a monolith.
Eventually coverage could turn into some kind of hybrid model like you see with some European soccer leagues, where you've got varying levels of free and paid for varying levels of interest. But the network TV deal as a primary source of income is not going to be a thing much longer. The NFL will probably hold out longer than most trying to force "exclusive" deals and shit, but I do not think the public's interest level is going to support that for long either. They are going to have a rude awakening when they find out that the Millennial fantasy football fan and statmonger is not the same thing as a die-hard fan of the sport itself.
They are also going to be surprised when they find out that all the people in the groups they have reached out to in the hopes of bringing them into the game, all the groups they tried to appease with rule changes, and all the Millennial fantasy fans and the Millennial soccer nerds are not going to follow and financially support the game the way the NFL hoped.......while they continued to shit on and ignore the traditional die-hard, avid fans of the game that supported the game and helped the NFL grow into the superpower it has become today.....and the very people they seems intent on pushing away from the game over the last decade or so.
If they lose a huge market share, it would serve them right.
The NFL version of Manifest Destiny gone wrong.
steelreserve
04-28-2017, 01:10 PM
They are also going to be surprised when they find out that all the people in the groups they have reached out to in the hopes of bringing them into the game, all the groups they tried to appease with rule changes, and all the Millennial fantasy fans and the Millennial soccer nerds are not going to follow and financially support the game the way the NFL hoped.......while they continued to shit on and ignore the traditional die-hard, avid fans of the game that supported the game and helped the NFL grow into the superpower it has become today.....and the very people they seems intent on pushing away from the game over the last decade or so.
If they lose a huge market share, it would serve them right.
The NFL version of Manifest Destiny gone wrong.
Yup. That pretty much nails it.
I can already see the fan-interest pendulum swinging away from the NFL and more toward basketball for the past couple of years already, and I don't see why it's going to stop any time soon. It's got the appeal for all the different types of fickle "casual" sports fans too - fantasy/stats appeal; superstar appeal; off-the-court drama appeal; dickhead "street" appeal; bitching-about-the-rules-and-the-officiating appeal; and a lot less dragged-out, manufactured BS during the games, and a lot less treating the fans like garbage.
The NFL should be looking at that and thinking about what they need to do to remain more engaging than that, but instead they always go the monolith route, and it's going to bite them. Sooner than they think, too.
tube517
05-02-2017, 11:07 AM
http://www.totalprosports.com/2017/05/01/ed-werder-says-espn-fired-him-then-asked-if-he-could-work-the-nfl-draft/
F BSPN
AtlantaDan
05-02-2017, 03:13 PM
http://www.totalprosports.com/2017/05/01/ed-werder-says-espn-fired-him-then-asked-if-he-could-work-the-nfl-draft/
F BSPN
More from Ed Werder's podcast comments
He also mentioned the names of some apparently laid-off colleagues who we hadn’t heard about previously.
It’s not the quality of your work that’s a factor. Well, it causes me to wonder, what is ESPN about? Because I thought it was about news and information and highlights, and I’m not sure that is the point of emphasis anymore. How is ESPN going to cover the NFL without all of the people who lost their jobs. What happens without Merril Hoge and Ron Jaworksi to NFL Matchup? What happens to NFL Insiders without a number of analysts, former general managers like Joe Banner and Mark Dominik.
http://awfulannouncing.com/espn/edwerder.html
No surprise if Jaworski and Hoge are let go since NFL Matchup has been an insightful show for a long time. Of all the people ESPN has let go, nobody has been screwed over more than Jaworski, who was forced off Monday Night Football because there was not enough time for anyone other Gruden to talk between plays. The ESPN business model for the NFL is the Monday night game and people shouting at each other.
86WARD
05-02-2017, 03:34 PM
NFL Network should pick Hoge and Jaws up and just do the same show.
DesertSteel
05-02-2017, 03:46 PM
NFL Network should pick Hoge and Jaws up and just do the same show.
Did they get laid off too?
AtlantaDan
05-02-2017, 05:06 PM
Did they get laid off too?
No announcement but Ed Werder (who understandably is not pleased he got axed) said this in his podcast
What happens without Merril Hoge and Ron Jaworski to ‘NFL Matchup?’
When asked if Hoge and Jaws are gone, a PR person for ESPN responded as follows
Bill Hofheimer with ESPN NFL PR would not confirm or deny any specific names regarding ESPN personnel moves, when asked about Hoge and Jaworski.
http://thebiglead.com/2017/05/01/are-ron-jaworski-and-merril-hoge-also-out-at-espn-ed-werder-says-so/
That is what is called a "non-denial denial."
ESPN has never issued a list - either the employee made the disclosure or a coworker did
86WARD
05-02-2017, 05:42 PM
That's a yes...lol
tube517
05-02-2017, 05:49 PM
NFL Network should pick Hoge and Jaws up and just do the same show.
I agree unless they got the same clause in the contract that Werder did
fansince'76
05-02-2017, 08:44 PM
Of all the people ESPN has let go, nobody has been screwed over more than Jaworski, who was forced off Monday Night Football because there was not enough time for anyone other Gruden to talk between plays. The ESPN business model for the NFL is the Monday night game and people shouting at each other.
Agree - Jaws is really a good analyst. Gruden is kind of a clown.
86WARD
05-03-2017, 09:35 AM
Kind of? Lol...
fansince'76
05-03-2017, 10:51 AM
Kind of? Lol...
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/AEMDn2I7jj8/hqdefault.jpg
:lol:
43Hitman
05-03-2017, 04:16 PM
easy fix for that is go to the website and use a friends login password that still subscribes to cable , I use my sons because we cut the cable cord a few years ago and stream everything...
32inch 1080p smart tv as a pc monitor for both me and the MRS. and a 3rd pc hooked up to the big flat screen with kodi on that pc
This
Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk
LOL, everyone that I know has cancelled their cable. I've got Amazon Fire TV boxes with Kodi in the living room and bedroom and Kodi on my computer and tablet. That's how I watch everything that's not on local channels, which I get via antenna.We're oing the same thing as soon as my contract with Directv ends in a few months. I have the Amazon Fire boxes ready to go. Kodi is an awesome app. If you give him like 5 bucks a month you can get pay per view stuff as well.
You guys probably know this already but I'll share it anyways. Make sure that you are using a program like IPVanish or your cable company could start throttling down your bandwidth. They know that you're connecting to Kodi and they know what Kodi is, so it's possible for them to limit your bandwidth. Just food for thought.
86WARD
05-03-2017, 05:38 PM
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/AEMDn2I7jj8/hqdefault.jpg
:lol:
Lol
SteelerFanInStl
05-08-2017, 07:56 AM
It sounds like Bettis is also out at ESPN.
AtlantaDan
05-08-2017, 09:12 AM
It sounds like Bettis is also out at ESPN.
No denial or other comment by Bettis ESPN to that report by the Sporting News, which is sort of a confirmation
http://www.sportingnews.com/nfl/news/jerome-bettis-espn-layoffs-steelers-hall-of-fame-nbc-sports-nfl-network-trent-dilfer-ed-werder-danny-kanell-nfl-live-sportscenter/m9n7ita0mfiq11m9cmnfdzmko
Probably means Ed Werder's comments that indiacted Ron Jaworski and Merrill Hoge are gone as well are accurate - ESPN decided not to make any announcement of who got cut and left it to those who were let go or co-workers to make the announcements. From a PR standpoint this just keeps the story going as news of each layoff leaks out.
Updated - confirmed by the Bus on Twitter
861650240537079808
861650465360150530
But no worries - Tim Tebow's contract with ESPN has been extended http://www.steelersuniverse.com/forums/images/smilies/doh.gif
Tim Tebow has signed a multi-year contract extension to remain with ESPN and work with the SEC Network's traveling pre-game show, the network announced.
https://www.si.com/mlb/2017/05/08/tim-tebow-signs-espn-contract-extension
DesertSteel
05-08-2017, 08:33 PM
Tebow draws ratings. Nothing hard to figure out there.
salamander
05-09-2017, 05:44 AM
If you go onto the ESPN NHL Twitter page right now, all they're posting are European soccer articles...on the hockey Twitter account. They are a mess.
Moose
05-11-2017, 12:47 PM
Gotta agree with most of all replies. I too tuned out of the sports channels and all the talking heads. Between false information, not knowing what the hell they are talking about, the yelling back and forth at each other, the one sided favoritism, and worst of all, their political views of which I couldn't care less of what they think, I just use the computer for all the info I need. Living close to Cincinnati, the only Sunday football is the damn bunghole games which I refuse to watch. There is a Steeler bar/restaurant about 45 min drive from my house so most of the time I drive there to watch/eat/drink on Sundays. So, screw sports channels and all the talking heads. And also screw all the athletes who think they have to tell US what the political views are.....just do your job and PLAY THE SPORT which you are getting paid to do. They sound so ignorant when the talk politics of which they know NOTHING about !
DesertSteel
05-12-2017, 06:21 PM
It's been several years since I've watched Sports Center with any regularity. It's all about PERSONALITY now, by design, which doesn't interest me. I don't mind watching the network if there's actual sports on or a show like NFL Live.
AtlantaDan
05-31-2017, 10:38 AM
Add John Clayton to the ESPN layoff list
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/early-lead/wp/2017/05/31/espn-is-reportedly-laying-off-john-clayton-the-face-of-perhaps-the-best-ever-sportscenter-ad/?utm_term=.ba09e1ca4d38
Clayton had a good run (I first read him when he covered the Steelers for the Pittsburgh Press (RIP) in the 70s) and still has his sports talk show in Seattle. ESPN reporting on the NFL is pretty much down to Adam Schefter tweeting rumors while everyone else on the ESPN web site and TV shows does "analysis."
tube517
05-31-2017, 10:41 AM
Add John Clayton to the ESPN layoff list
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/early-lead/wp/2017/05/31/espn-is-reportedly-laying-off-john-clayton-the-face-of-perhaps-the-best-ever-sportscenter-ad/?utm_term=.ba09e1ca4d38
Clayton had a good run (I first read him when he covered the Steelers for the Pittsburgh Press (RIP) in the 70s) and still has his sports talk show in Seattle. ESPN reporting on the NFL is pretty much down to Adam Schefter tweeting rumors while everyone else on the ESPN web site and TV shows does "analysis."
Damn, The Professor is part of Steelers history (1983 draft - Dan Marino for example). But, he was like Ed Werder and Sal Paolantonio IMHO. Old school type reporters.
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