When did ESPN become ESPN!!11!!!

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Songbird

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Jun 17, 2005
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Was just in a chat with someone and one thing leads to another ... I show the person the Miracle on Manchester when the Kings were down 5-0 to the Oilers, in the 3rd, but scored 5 to tie it and won it in overtime and how I was the happiest 11-year-old on the entire planet. And I was. In this video, Al Trautwig opens ...




... and the person I'm talking to said he worked with Al and how Al's health isn't so hot these days. I said that I grew up watching Al Trautwig doing national sports, before ESPN became ESPN. Got me wondering ... when exactly did ESPN become ESPN!!!11!!!11!

Was there a single moment? A game? A highlight? A SportsCenter soundbite?
 
Not sure when, but the question hit me in the last couple of days, when they paraded guest after guest on ESPN Radio to talk about the XFL.

Every one of them seemed to repeat "I'm not just talking this way because we are showing their games," followed by some of the most passionate fellating in the history of the world.

Embarrassing, and made me want to tune into the XFL less and less with every guest.
 
Not sure when, but the question hit me in the last couple of days, when they paraded guest after guest on ESPN Radio to talk about the XFL.

Every one of them seemed to repeat "I'm not just talking this way because we are showing their games," followed by some of the most passionate fellating in the history of the world.

Embarrassing, and made me want to tune into the XFL less and less with every guest.

You're kidding, right? This is what ESPN does, what it has been doing for years and what it will continue to do for the rest of its existence.

When it has broadcast rights, it is highlighted. When it has been outbid - looking at NASCAR and the NHL - it suddenly turns into background noise except for major - i.e., off-ice or away from the track issues - news.

Remember that they used to have highlight shows and discussion for NASCAR and the NHL. Now ... next to nothing. Pure coincidence, right?

Just when you think it really takes itself too seriously, the WWL finds a way to move the BS bar ever-so-slightly higher. It's like watching Sergei Bubka inching up the pole vault record.
 
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There was definitely a sea change when shows like PTI came online in the early 2000s. Those years certainly mark a different direction taken by the four letter network.
 
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Probably about the time ABC/Capital Cities influenced things with the buyout in 1984. Berman, particularly paired with Ley and Leonard, was way more on point in the years when Bill Rasmussen and Chet Simmons were in charge. But like anything, someone in marketing/sales decided if fans liked a little Berman schtick, then they'd really love a lot of Berman schtick.
 
84 - they were able to broadcast multiple college football games, and yes they became a part of ABC.
87 - they got the NFL
92-3 - they added ESPN Radio, ESPN2 and became "a brand."
 
Probably about the time ABC/Capital Cities influenced things with the buyout in 1984. Berman, particularly paired with Ley and Leonard, was way more on point in the years when Bill Rasmussen and Chet Simmons were in charge. But like anything, someone in marketing/sales decided if fans liked a little Berman schtick, then they'd really love a lot of Berman schtick.
tenor.gif

Everybody knows you never go full Berman.
 
ESPN went from something good, something remarkable even...to trash when it got the MNF contract and simultaneously opened the LA Live West Coast HQ...and decided it needed to fill all its talking heads shows with the same five topics pulled out of Skipper's ass every morning.
 
NFL Primetime is one of the best things ESPN ever produced.

For me the network jumped the shark ca. 2002-03, right around the time it got itself in hot water with shows such as Playmakers.

Which I also don't think the league has ever forgiven ESPN for.
 
Mark Shapiro did great work with SportsCentury - got him the big chair in programming and they started doing movies, dramas and game shows. It's worked out well for him, he's now the head at Endeavor one of the top agencies in LA.
 
NFL Primetime is one of the best things ESPN ever produced.

For me the network jumped the shark ca. 2002-03, right around the time it got itself in hot water with shows such as Playmakers.

Which I also don't think the league has ever forgiven ESPN for.

Primetime should have evolved over the years. We didn't need Berman yelling "DAH RAIIIIIIIIIIIIDAS!!!" and all his other catchphrases for 30-plus years.
 
NFL Primetime is one of the best things ESPN ever produced.

For me the network jumped the shark ca. 2002-03, right around the time it got itself in hot water with shows such as Playmakers.

Which I also don't think the league has ever forgiven ESPN for.
I adored Playmakers. What a great show.
 

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