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More Cuts at ESPN

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by Doc Holliday, Mar 7, 2017.

  1. Doc Holliday

    Doc Holliday Well-Known Member

    Wow. Talk about racist.
     
  2. Alma

    Alma Well-Known Member

    Some salaries were out of hand, yes. ESPN overpaid for many things
     
  3. LanceyHoward

    LanceyHoward Well-Known Member

    I have trouble believing it also but here is the link from Deadspin. And Stein is represented by CAA. I am not sure what the minimum contract that CAA will negotiate is but I think it must be pretty hefty.

    http://deadspin.com/adrian-wojnarowski-finally-won-his-war-against-espn-1794817931

    The article notes that Stein is still filing stories though and he is still on Twitter..
     
    Last edited: May 5, 2017
  4. TheSportsPredictor

    TheSportsPredictor Well-Known Member

  5. BTExpress

    BTExpress Well-Known Member

    This is what I just don't get.

    Yes, at one point money was flowing like water from a fire hose around there.

    But still, do the beancounters still not want the best value they can get? As in, why pay someone $600K when we can get the same job done for $120K? Why pay $1.9 billion for rights to XYZ when we can get the games for $1.1 billion?

    Are there people with full-time jobs to make those value judgments?
     
  6. Alma

    Alma Well-Known Member

    Sure there are. But they were arrogant. Hell, they green-lighted Grantland, for goodness sakes, which grew to ludicrous size and was becoming a site of navel-gazing essays with inconsistent, questionable journalistic value. How many millions got poured into that? And then they shuttered it! There was so little useful management insight into this giant undertaking that no one could reasonably refashion it!

    The Undefeated, instead of being a lean, powerful entity that prioritizes producing excellent, impactful journalism is instead unwieldy, complete with a fellowship program that files briefs on a HBCU quiz bowl team. Instead of, say, examining race the way the New York Times did in its 2000 series, it desires to a create a far more expensive and unfocused community of mile-wide, inch-deep conversation.

    ESPN was, at one time, on the cutting edge of sports journalism. It's not now. It just made a lot of money off of its cable bill that people unwittingly paid for years and years, a cable bill possible because American can't figure out an ala carte system for TV.

    ESPN is as poorly and sloppily managed as any organization out there. Money is thrown at stuff. Even worthwhile projects - and I think the Undefeated is worthwhile in ways the vainglorious Grantland never was - don't have the right kind of tenacity to them. The preview shows are bloated and full of loud, annoying radio commercial bombast. The storylines have been flattened out to the extent that LeBron James is mainlined into the veins of ESPN consumers at every waking moment. Great journalists have been reduced to shills for the NBA, probably because the paycheck lines up. ESPN still sucks at the teat of college football, yet can't cobble together a reputable recruiting coverage operation and laid off the only expert they had - the one with all the contact - a few weeks ago.
     
    HanSenSE likes this.
  7. Max Garcia

    Max Garcia Member

    Free market. People allowed to make mistakes. People allowed to negotiate higher contracts.

    Communism sucks.
     
  8. paris trout

    paris trout Member

    Journalism: the only field where workers advocate for the suppression of wages within the profession.
     
  9. cisforkoke

    cisforkoke Well-Known Member

    Except the experts keep talking about how quality and content have nothing to do with these cuts. It's all due to cord-cutters. Nothing else. Absolutely nothing.
     
  10. tapintoamerica

    tapintoamerica Well-Known Member

    I saw or heard somewhere -- I think it was on Bruce Feldman's Fox podcast -- that ESPN went from 42 college football writers to 17. The original number shocks me. The new one still seems high for a business model.
     
  11. Vombatus

    Vombatus Well-Known Member

    Impactful? Is everybody ok with that word?
     
  12. Michael_ Gee

    Michael_ Gee Well-Known Member

    It is the nature of every business to make bad revenue allocation decisions. Good ones too. But when the revenue starts dropping, well, it's like the old Warren Buffett saying. It's only when the tide goes out you see who's swimming without a suit.
     
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