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I'm pretty familiar with TexAgs and how they operate. For years they don't tout themselves as a media outlet, but they get the best access in a North Korea-like atmosphere. They also are among the profitable content sites in all of college football.
From a media standpoint, this isn't a big deal aside from TexAgs cementing its status as a non-journalism outlet.
Your response reminds so much of what is wrong with journalism today. Everybody is a journalist these days, not just people who work for traditional news gathering companies. The reading or clicking audience determines who is practicing journalism by who they read. I've known Lucci for years and competed against him and he loves getting information out first. That's why subscriptions are through the roof. Trust me this is a threat, especially if kids decide to stop talking unless they are paid.
Your response reminds so much of what is wrong with journalism today. Everybody is a journalist these days, not just people who work for traditional news gathering companies. The reading or clicking audience determines who is practicing journalism by who they read. I've known Lucci for years and competed against him and he loves getting information out first. That's why subscriptions are through the roof. Trust me this is a threat, especially if kids decide to stop talking unless they are paid.
Your response reminds so much of what is wrong with journalism today. Everybody is a journalist these days, not just people who work for traditional news gathering companies. The reading or clicking audience determines who is practicing journalism by who they read. I've known Lucci for years and competed against him and he loves getting information out first. That's why subscriptions are through the roof. Trust me this is a threat, especially if kids decide to stop talking unless they are paid.
I think you are overblowing this. All of the athletes may want to get paid for media appearances, but not all of them will. There will always be someone available to talk. I would also bet that a bunch of "exclusive" media deals would conflict with the branding done by the university and other NIL deals that these athletes have. Even the athletes with media deals in the pros still show up to chat with the tradition outlets.
I've never read a full scholarship agreement. Is there a clause in there, similar to the pros, requiring them to do media interviews?
To specifically do interviews? Nah. But to do what the program asks of you? I could see there being some kind of language like that in there (but I don't know). I can't imagine that most of the athletes have been doing media availabilities and post-loss press conferences over the years because they wanted to.
I've never read a full scholarship agreement. Is there a clause in there, similar to the pros, requiring them to do media interviews?