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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Friday, December 22, 2006
Bob Ley says Outside the Lines did a good job reporting on Adam LaRoche’s ADD - even if the Atlanta Journal Constitution disagrees.
henryhecht
Posted: December 22, 2006 at 01:27 PM | 20 comment(s)
Related News: Atlanta, Television
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Best Regards
John
I liked OTL better when it was nightly, at like 12:20. Not that I don't like it now, but I think the combination of that extra eight minutes or so and the competition in that slot makes them spend time on "current headlines" more, which is NOT why I watch the show.
That said, I haven't missed more than a handful in the past year or so. I think they generally do a very good job stepping back and examining some aspect of the sports culture that hasn't really been covered before.
berman, obnoxious as he is, has a solid base of fans among blue collars. i have an uncle who loves him, and i'm sure there are thousands like that.
bob ley as a spearhead would have made espn the c-span of sports, which is good and fine, if anything i'd rather that, but it certainly would mean espn's effect and the spread of sports would be a lot less.
say what you will about berman, he actually has been kinda influential..
I don't really disagree; the core of that group (which includes Gammons and Mortensen) have such unabashed passion for the sport they're dealing with that I can overlook some of their flaws. I think it's safer to peg the "Stu Scott effect" for the stuff on ESPN which is unwatchable.
ESPN2 has largely been the "overflow" net recently. If there are two sports events going at the same time, an ESPN crew (there is absolutely no staffing or technical distinction between the networks) is sent there and given ESPN2 graphics to use.
both networks were trying to devise a way to fix the problem of the overextension of their programming, which had left some of their initial shows (in espn's case traditional sports and coverage, in mtv's case actual videos) without any timeslots.
it just so happens they both misused an otherwise good idea:
espn never developed espn2 to the potential it posed -- to me they just never effectively made 'extreme' sports engaging, and so they just sort of turned espn 2 into a 'whatever doesn't work in the espn ethos goes here' sort of channel.
meanwhile mtv just did it backwards -- left all the secondary shows on mtv and turned it into a pop culture channel, put the videos on mtv2.
Except, of course, that now the Deuce carries alot of crap programming other than videos, too.
Which means we can expect a 3rd channel that will only play videos....for a few months.
As much as most posters here prefer Vin Scully saying, "Picture in your mind's eye," we live in a world where programmers give jobs to John Kruk and Steve Lyons because they are perceived by a significant proportion of the population as talented.
"Sports polymath and genial dweeb Keith Olbermann in a motorcycle jacket?"
VH1 Classic runs about three hours of alt-rock music videos from the 80s-90s every Sunday, around midnight. It's one of the greatest things ever.
Every week, they'll play Joy Division's "Love Will Tear Us Apart" at least once.
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