• The KillerFrogs

ESPN Hemorrhaging

Peacefrog

Degenerate
So Romo, with no experience, gets a top broadcasting job and more qualified people are being fired at ESPN?
ESPN is not run well. They have an arrogance that they will always be on top. They overpaid for everything and they don't listen to their consumers. At some point it is not unreasonable to think that ESPN will be gone. And if that is hard to believe, history is littered with the corpses of companies that at some point seemed untouchable.

Unfortunately the mismanagement of the company has led to whatbrenpresimably good people losing their jobs. But you have to remember that most had contracts and will continue to be paid for the duration. Romo and CBS are unrelated to any of this. There may be more talented people now available but they weren't when Romo was hired. They hitched themselves to the wrong wagon. Happens all the time. If they are talented and flexible they will be fine.
 

Bizarro Frog

Active Member
Is the ACC Network still going to happen? Not sure where the money is going to come from? Are they going to strong arm the Satellite and Cable providers like they did with the SEC Network?

We shall see.
 

FBallFan123

Active Member
Here's your daily reminder that ESPN isn't political....

http://www.foxnews.com/entertainmen...s-poem-honoring-cop-killer-assata-shakur.html

ESPN yanks poem honoring cop-killer Assata Shakur

An ESPN site targeting female sports fans on Thursday removed a poem paying homage to a convicted cop killer after “an oversight in the editorial process” led to the poem being published several days ago, the embattled sports giant told Fox News.

DaMaris Hill’s poem “Revolution” had led the April 25 ESPNW.com feature “Five Poets on the New Feminism,” which was produced “in honor of National Poetry month…to reflect on resistance, redefining feminism and movement,” according to a site description. But Hill’s poem opened with the dedication “(for Assata Shakur),” honoring the one-time Black Liberation Army member who has been hiding out in Cuba to avoid finishing a prison term for her murder rap.

“There was an oversight in the editorial process for selecting the poems for the ‘Five Poets on the New Feminism’ feature on espnW,” a spokesperson told Fox News in an email. “Dr. DaMaris Hill is a respected professor and poet, who submitted this poem based upon her personal feelings toward Assata Shakur. While the editors welcomed a contribution from a notable writer and chose it as a reflection of this one poet’s experience, upon further review we have decided it is not an appropriate selection for our site and have removed the piece from the feature.”

Later Thursday, the title of the feature had been changed to “Four Poets on the New Feminism,” Hill’s poem was gone and an editor’s note at the bottom of the page informed readers of the changes.

Attempts to reach Hill for comment were not immediately successful.

Social media was abuzz with critics bashing ESPNW for publishing the poem in the first place, with The Federalist’s Sean Davis mocking the Connecticut-based power on Twitter as “The worldwide leader in praising cop killers.”

The poem debacle comes on the heels of ESPN’s massive Wednesday purge of about 100 television, radio and Internet personalities as part of the network’s attempt to emerge from a ratings plunge.

Shakur, aka Joanne Chesimard, the godmother of the late rapper Tupac Shakur, is suspected in a series of early 1970s incidents linked to black revolutionary groups in New York City, including a bank robbery, grenade attack and the ambushing of police officers in Queens and Brooklyn. She was convicted of fatally shooting a New Jersey trooper in the head in 1973, but escaped prison and, in the early 1980s, fled to Cuba, where she was granted political asylum. She is on the list of the FBI’s Most Wanted Terrorists.
 

Realtorfrog

Full Member
Too much excess fat......do they really need a reporter for every NFL team? NO!! Hire two, one AFC guy and one NFC guy and you've got it covered. Or if you want have one reporter for each division, still plenty of down time. I am surprised they did it before the draft though.
 

frognutz

Active Member
Corso and Holtz would be easy ones to cut but since they are old and in a protective class it might be a little more difficult

Not sure that is the case. They are axing the blacks and the women too. Not just the productive aged white males who are always the first to go. Besides, these guys need subtitles nowadays for their broadcasts. Loved them, but time for golf courses and boats.
 

FBallFan123

Active Member
Thought Mark May was one of the good ones. Sober analytical style and opinions.

I didn't care for May, so I can't say I'll really miss him.

When May was with Rece Davis and Lou Holtz, they were unwatchable...especially when they did that stupid segment where Davis would put on a judge's robe and they'd argue their "case" in front of him.

Embarrassing to watch. Total amateur hour.

When May was with Mack Brown and John Saunders, RIP, he was far more tolerable.....but it's hard to forget how bad he was with Davis and Holtz.
 

f_399

Active Member
Too much excess fat......do they really need a reporter for every NFL team? NO!! Hire two, one AFC guy and one NFC guy and you've got it covered. Or if you want have one reporter for each division, still plenty of down time. I am surprised they did it before the draft though.

Sometimes when they do an an event they will broadcast multiple people in the same event, one in each endzone, in the concourse, one in each locker room, one outside, one in parking lot 4, one in parking lot 6....
 
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