Pa Golden Tate Fan
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Is it just me or has Sports Journalism especially ESPN has gotten worse over the years? Does there need to be stricter libel laws?
Is it just me or has Sports Journalism especially ESPN has gotten worse over the years? Does there need to be stricter libel laws?
Care to elaborate?
Like with Manti, Michael Sam, Jason Collins etc.
I think the slideshow Buzzfeed-type sites have contributed to the declining quality of mainstream sports journalism.
Like with Manti, Michael Sam, Jason Collins etc.
Manti DID get catfished and Michael Sam IS gay. Truth is an absolute defense against libel.
Like with Manti, Michael Sam, Jason Collins etc.
What perturbs me the most about news journalists today, compared to new journalists twenty years ago, is that they will often take a story and make it more than what it truly is.
Michael Sam is a perfect example. He has been gay for a long time. He made his sexuality known to his team a year ago. Nothing - no locker room turmoil - no hatred sent his way - nothing. Now, both ESPN and NFL Network cannot do a segment on the combine without mentioning him in some way. Is it really that big of a story?
I have basically turned ESPN off with the exception of watching live events. I catch SC every once in a while during peak times(Super Bowl, Bowl Season, World Series, etc), but for the most part do not watch or listen to them anymore because of the way they turn news into something more than what it truly is.
What perturbs me the most about news journalists today, compared to new journalists twenty years ago, is that they will often take a story and make it more than what it truly is.
Michael Sam is a perfect example. He has been gay for a long time. He made his sexuality known to his team a year ago. Nothing - no locker room turmoil - no hatred sent his way - nothing. Now, both ESPN and NFL Network cannot do a segment on the combine without mentioning him in some way. Is it really that big of a story?
I have basically turned ESPN off with the exception of watching live events. I catch SC every once in a while during peak times(Super Bowl, Bowl Season, World Series, etc), but for the most part do not watch or listen to them anymore because of the way they turn news into something more than what it truly is.
They've gone from reporting the news to making the news. If you watch ESPN, the story is not "Michael Sam is gay," the story is "ESPN analyst Mike Wilbon comments on Michael Sam's locker room impact."
It may be old news inside the Mizzou football program, but an openly gay NFL player is a really big story to a lot of people. Is there overkill in the coverage? Sure. But if people weren't interested, ESPN wouldn't be talking about it. And by the time October rolls around Sam will be just another linebacker making a living in the NFL, kind of like Teo.
I agree the professional blowhards like Wilbon are annoying and self-important. The 24/7 news cycle - without an attendant 24/7 increase in actual news - has made talking heads a bigger piece of the news media ecosystem (and this is not just true in sports; it's CNN, CNBC, across the board). They've got to fill that air time somehow. If you don't like them, don't watch. I don't. But they're not really hurting anybody, which was the OP's contention.
They are kind of "hurting someone" though in the grand scheme. When ESPN (a "news" entity) launches their own SEC Network, it matters if their "reporting" is completely biased towards their other financial stakes. This is my main issue with the way things are these days... ESPN devotes such a large chunk of their energy towards pimping their other products and such little of their effort towards actual investigative journalism or reporting. That's a shame, and my main grip with reporting.
Sports "journalism" is now far more about opinion, sensationalism, and agendas than actual "reporting"... because there is scarcely a need for any real investigative journalism with how everything breaks instantaneously over Twitter.
Thanks guys for this thread and comments that make me feel better about my loathing for this mess which is now called sports media. what they did to Teo last year really bothered me and now with some of the recent issues I think he almost needs an apology-but that will never happen. I remember being in a major league locker room as a player in 1979 (first year of female open locker room ) and seeing this circus begin. What a freaking cluster _____. If I were playing today the first thing I would do would be to say that I am not comfortable with interviews for whatever made up reason and never do any. Just put my clothes on after a shower and go home.Is not journalism, it's "How can I get famous?" Most of these guys are hacks and are trying to make a buck.
It may be old news inside the Mizzou football program, but an openly gay NFL player is a really big story to a lot of people. Is there overkill in the coverage? Sure. But if people weren't interested, ESPN wouldn't be talking about it. And by the time October rolls around Sam will be just another linebacker making a living in the NFL, kind of like Teo.
I agree the professional blowhards like Wilbon are annoying and self-important. The 24/7 news cycle - without an attendant 24/7 increase in actual news - has made talking heads a bigger piece of the news media ecosystem (and this is not just true in sports; it's CNN, CNBC, across the board). They've got to fill that air time somehow. If you don't like them, don't watch. I don't. But they're not really hurting anybody, which was the OP's contention.
Sports "journalism" is now far more about opinion, sensationalism, and agendas than actual "reporting"... because there is scarcely a need for any real investigative journalism with how everything breaks instantaneously over Twitter.