Just so we're clear, you do know that ESPN was basically exposed for doing exactly this with Tebow, right?
In their production meetings they were explicitly instructed to talk about Tebow because ESPN was finding that you "could not have too much Tebow."
In this case we're talking about two different things. Talking about the SEC more than other conferences is not bias, it's just how TV works. The producer saying "Herbstreit, talk about the SEC" is much different than the producer saying "Herbstreit, talk about the SEC and how awesome they are and how Nick Saban should have sole authority to modify the decisions of the CFP committee." Obviously, the production meetings set the slate of what topics are going to be discussed. But the analysts are out there giving their honest opinions on those topics (unless something is obviously staged like Lou Holtz versus Mark May).
This is basic business. Radio hosts complain about it all the time... both literally and metaphorically. "Playing the hits"... when ESPN fluffs the SEC, it's both because it explicitly and implicitly benefits their business interests. They have a channel that they need to drive eyeballs to, but they have that channel in the first place BECAUSE there are eyeballs for it. In large, ESPN is simply catering to what the viewers want... SEC fans that watch ESPN shows greatly outnumber PAC12, ACC, and Big 12 fans. It makes no sense for ESPN to run a special on Idaho or Wake Forest when no one is going to watch... that is bad business.
I think this is the basis of the larger disagreement. ESPN (the company) has minimal incentive to drive eyeballs to SECN because most of those eyeballs are coming from ESPN (the channel) itself. It's cannibalistic to their own flagship station, and the flagship eyeballs are worth more dollars than the SECN eyeballs. Given the choice of a college football viewer watching an ACC game on ESPN or an SEC game on SECN, it's much more beneficial to have them watching ESPN.
But then there is the whole discussion of whether ESPN intentionally or unintentionally inflates the strength of the SEC because of the SEC network. There is little evidence that they pull a "Tebow" for the SEC. However, when you have tertiary rights to games you need to get them as hyped up as possible. Hypothetically, more people will tune in to see #13 Tennessee play #10 Arkansas then will tune in to see unranked Tennesee play unranked Arkansas (assuming that's the #3 game that day that would then go to the SEC Network). Both Arkansas and Tennessee were 7-6 last year yet find themselves near the top 10 on account of a formula that weights subjective recruiting rankings. Recruiting rankings that benefit from oversigning, and count players that never even end up enrolling in the school or soon transfer. It's rather nonsensical.
But nobody is talking about specifically hyping games that will air on the SEC network. They're talking about hyping the SEC
as a whole. When you hype the SEC as a whole, it has a disproportionate effect on the #1 SEC game of the week, which is on CBS. By hyping the SEC, ESPN would be driving more viewers to CBS than they would be picking up on SECN. That's
bad business. In your example, the incremental viewership of hardcore Tennessee and Arkansas fans who wouldn't have had the game televised in the first place is where the net pickup lies.
I respectfully disagree as his show is sponsored by espn and paid by espn-so its an outlet of that network. I have no particular beef with espn , my beef is with anyone that wont let my Irish alone. IF Notre Dame is never allowed to chart its own course this whole deal ( industry ) is in a ton of trouble. Pinkle referred to the NFL as to having no independents-what the hell does that have to do with anything except to say that its professional and that's the problem-college football is not professional. (except to sec coaches)
Who cares what Gary Pinkel says? I obviously disagree and think his comment is ludicrous. But it's equally ludicrous to hold ESPN responsible for every dumb comment any guest they've ever had makes.