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🎤 QUICK START ✍️

Credit: John Fanta

🎤 Fanta-sy gig. Fan-favorite John Fanta is adding NBA play-by-play to his already packed résumé. The NBC Sports college basketball voice will call his first NBA game for the network next Tuesday when the Minnesota Timberwolves visit the Portland Trail Blazers, Front Office Sports reported on Wednesday. Fanta will work alongside Jamal Crawford and Grant Liffmann, with the game airing on Peacock and NBCSN.

🏀 Rose returns. Jalen Rose was one of the longest-running NBA commentators in the history of ESPN before his layoff in 2023. On Friday, according to Sports Media Watch's Jon Lewis, Rose will appear as a fill-in panelist on Inside the NBA in place of Shaquille O'Neal as part of the network's agreement to license Inside from TNT Sports.

🦚 Saturday night livelier. According to Front Office Sports, NBC is pushing for the NBA to evolve Saturday night’s activities during All-Star Weekend, as the Slam Dunk Contest and Three-Point Contests have gotten stale. Among the changes NBC may propose, according to the president of production, Sam Flood, is a fourth event. Front Office Sports listed a 1-on-1 or 2-on-2 tournament as a potential option.

🎬 McAfee goes Hollywood. Sports media superstar Pat McAfee has hired superagent Ari Emanuel for representation in Hollywood. Emanuel's goal, according to Bloomberg, is to "turn Pat McAfee into the next Sylvester Stallone."

Every headline satisfies an opinion. Except ours.

Remember when the news was about what happened, not how to feel about it? 1440's Daily Digest is bringing that back. Every morning, they sift through 100+ sources to deliver a concise, unbiased briefing — no pundits, no paywalls, no politics. Just the facts, all in five minutes. For free.

🚨 LEADING OFF 🚨

10 years ago, the sports longform boom died

Credit: SB Nation

Online publishers are constantly grappling with the whims and trends that shape how readers consume content and how advertisers respond. Some of the more substantial shifts we’ve seen include social media’s reshaping of the industry and numerous pivots to video over the years.

In the early to mid-2010s, online outlets observed audiences shifting their reading habits from laptops to smartphones. With that came a perceived desire to engage with more complex subjects and to scroll for additional context and perspectives. While so much had been made (even more so now) about shortening attention spans and quick-hit content, there seemed to be renewed interest in “longform” journalism and the kind of stories that could keep you reading for 10 or even 20 minutes at a time.

According to a 2015 study by the Pew Research Center, longform articles were receiving twice as much engagement as short articles on smartphones. Publishers had noticed. So had advertisers. The longform boom had arrived.

Outlets across every genre and vertical amplified the trend in a way we had not previously seen in the online space. Longform.org became a go-to destination each week for curated reads during lunch and bathroom breaks. This wasn’t just the domain of The Atlantic, New York Magazine, and GQ anymore (though they continued to shine). The sports world was particularly primed to take advantage of the trend, with sites like Deadspin, Grantland, and ESPN jumping on board.

Few outlets embraced the longform trend quite like SB Nation. The Vox Media sports arm officially launched its longform division in 2012, in conjunction with naming college sports blogger Spencer Hall as its first editorial director and Glenn Stout as the longform editor. And for years ahead, SB Nation Longform was one of the crown jewels of the space. Pieces like “The Many Crimes of Mel Hall,” “Unclimbable,” and “Two Lanes to Accokeek” remain among the best of the era.

(I should also disclose that I ran an SB Nation blog for 10 years and worked for SBNation.com as an editor and writer between 2009 and 2011.)

The genre was humming along in February 2016 when SB Nation published a 12,000-word story on Daniel Holtzclaw, a former Eastern Michigan football player and Oklahoma City police officer convicted of raping multiple Black women (Holtzclaw is half-white, half-Japanese) and sentenced to 263 years in jail.

The sprawling piece was “a nuanced portrait that never loses sight of the fact that women were victimized,” according to a forward by Stout. “I think people will be talking about this one.”

He was more right than he could know.

Almost immediately, the article, written by freelancer Jeff Arnold, received intense pushback and criticism for attempting to paint Holtzclaw sympathetically, relying heavily on his teammates’ and parents’ beliefs, and offering up the possibility that he was only accused due to outside forces, such as movements like Black Lives Matter. It also wasn’t noted until the very end of the piece that Arnold had covered Holtzclaw’s college football career, providing a staggering potential conflict of interest.

“[Arnold] appeared to paint Holtzclaw in a sympathetic light by spending the bulk of the article talking to the people who naturally would take his side, mainly his father, his defense team, and his former Eastern Michigan teammates,” wrote The Washington Post’s Matt Bonesteel. “Holtzclaw’s victims were given two paragraphs, with quotations taken from transcripts of his sentencing hearing.”

“Aside from the fact that Arnold had this specialized knowledge, it’s hard to understand why it’s relevant, why this story was written, why it was published, and what lessons we’re supposed to glean,” wrote Jezebel’s Kara Brown.

“Basically, this is the local news interviewing the shocked neighbors — ‘He always seemed like such a nice kid’ — over and over again for 12,000 words,” wrote Deadspin’s Barry Petchesky.

Five hours after “Who Is Daniel Holtzclaw?” was published, it was taken down and replaced with an editor’s note from Hall. (An archived version of the article is available here.)

“The publication of this story represents a complete breakdown of a part of the editorial process at SB Nation,” he wrote. “There were objections by senior editorial staff that went unheeded. It was tone-deaf, insensitive to the victims of sexual assault and rape, and wrongheaded in approach and execution. There is no qualification: it was a complete failure.”

In the days that followed, the story shifted from “Why was this written?” to “How could this have ever been published in the first place?” Over the next two weeks, SB Nation put its longform vertical on hiatus and severed ties with Arnold; Vox Media announced it would conduct an internal review; Arnold released a statement saying he made a “grave mistake” by not speaking to victims; and Stout was fired.

Deadspin’s Greg Howard wrote a thorough breakdown of how the piece was published and all of the processes that broke down in order for that to happen, including the unheeded concerns raised by several senior female editorial staffers, as well as the biases that were inherent in an editorial staff that was overwhelmingly male and white.

Within his write-up, Arnold also offered an analysis of the longform vertical at-large.

“There is no such thing as longform writing,” he wrote. “There is such a thing as features writing—profiles, investigations, essays—and if it’s prestigious, that’s mainly because of its association with careful selection of subjects and with vigorous research, reporting, editing, copy-editing, and fact-checking. A feature carries an implicit assertion that a publication has invested money, time, talent, effort, and care to produce something of depth. Longform is a variant of feature writing—a branding strategy, really—that confuses a secondary indicator (length) for the thing itself (quality). As the name implies, it asserts nothing more than that a certain mass has been attained.”

The Daniel Holtzclaw story wasn’t the first longform feature to fall headfirst into this kind of controversy. In 2014, Grantland published “Dr. V’s Magical Putter,” a 7,000-word “case study on how get-the-story tunnel vision can blind journalists and editors to grave failures.” In 2015, Rolling Stone retracted a 9,000-word article about a brutal gang rape at a University of Virginia fraternity after it was roundly discredited, and was later sued by some of its subjects.

The Holtzclaw piece and the ensuing fallout felt like the end of an era. Longform reporting and articles are still written in great supply, but the days of promoting them as an audience-grabbing vertical subsided in that wake. Beyond the catastrophic editorial problems and the inability of fast-moving online publishers to properly handle weighty stories like these, the market had become oversaturated, and the overall quality of published work was declining.

You can see the bones of so many other recent (and current) trends in the rise and fall of longform. There’s no doubt that hard lessons were learned by the individuals involved. Lessons about listening, accountability, differing points of view, bias, toxic masculinity, power dynamics, cults of personality, and journalistic ethics.

But looking out at the media and business landscapes in front of us now, it’s hard to see if many of those lessons are being heeded on a larger level. In some ways, revisiting this story makes one realize we’re probably stuck in a loop waiting for the next Daniel Holtzclaw story to drop.

🗣️ NOTABLE QUOTABLES 🗣️

Credit: CBS Sports Golazo

“Viní Junior and Kylian Mbappé said there was repeated racial abuse. Gianluca Prestiani said they misheard, but he covered his mouth to hide what he said from the cameras, and hopefully we can all agree that if what you’re saying on a football pitch is shameful enough to have to hide it from the public, then you’re wrong.” - CBS Sports’ Kate Scott’s powerful response to Vinícius Júnior incident.

“I believe that ESPN is a big part of the Walt Disney Company’s strategy and future.” - ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro on the possibility of being spun off from Disney.

“We gotta stop victimizing and publicizing and putting the players on blast, but everybody else gets to hide. He’s not hiding. Who’s the woman that would do that to her sister? Is somebody gonna bring that up? Who’s the woman that would do that to her sister? That’s all I’m trying to say.” - Stephen A. Smith reacting to former MLBPA Tony Clark’s affair that caused him to step down.

“I’d get rid of the draft. No draft. You still have the salary cap. If you want to go give Cooper Flagg $45 million a year coming out of college, do it; he’s a free agent. Everybody coming out is a free agent. With no draft, there’s no incentive to lose, there’s none at all.” - Stan Van Gundy on how to prevent tanking in the NBA.

“Listen, he’s gonna be motivated to chase a Super Bowl. Hasn’t sniffed one in Tampa.” - The Herd’s Jason McIntyre on Mike Evans, who won a Super Bowl in Tampa.

“I know you’ve gotta ask these questions, but I’m not going to get into Twitter nonsense. I’m just here to focus on the season, keep it pushing.” - Kevin Durant responding to a question about whether the story about his alleged X burner account is true.

📺 INDUSTRY INSIGHTS 🎬

Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

  • In the coming months, NFL Network will formally transition to the ESPN family of networks as part of the recently approved transaction, under which ESPN will take ownership of several NFL Media assets in exchange for the league taking a 10% equity stake in the network. As a result, NFL Network will now be included as part of ESPN’s new direct-to-consumer offering, ESPN Unlimited. The network will also be included when ESPN negotiates distribution deals with pay-TV operators such as Comcast, DirecTV, or YouTube TV. For all intents and purposes, NFL Network will now be treated just like ESPN2, SEC Network, or any other cable channel under the ESPN umbrella.

  • MLS and Fox are looking to capitalize on this summer’s World Cup momentum. On Wednesday, Fox announced its 34-game MLS schedule as the 2026 season prepares to kick off on Saturday. It’s the final year of Fox’s current non-exclusive media rights agreement to broadcast a select number of MLS games each season. The league is scheduled to resume play on July 17, two days prior to the World Cup Final, and Fox Sports, the English-language World Cup broadcaster in the United States, will air a doubleheader that Friday as a showcase.

  • The strike zone box on MLB broadcasts is about to look different this season, and Jeff Passan says it’s because the league is still terrified of another cheating scandal like the Houston Astros’. The ESPN reporter appeared on The Rich Eisen Show this week and confirmed a Chicago Sun-Times report that the on-screen pitch-location graphic will no longer indicate whether a pitch was called a ball or a strike. Passan explained that the strike zone box will still appear on screen, but the visual distinction between balls and strikes is being eliminated.

🎺 AROUND AA 🎺

Credit: Yahoo Sports

Yahoo is one of the only outlets still striving to serve all sports fans, all the time, on every platform.

With Yahoo Sports Daily, its recently launched, two-hour live digital sports news show, it is melding an old format with a new sensibility.

“Given the speed at which sports move, we wanted to have something that was really going to anchor our discussion of what was going on in sports every day beyond those deeper dives on our (other) shows,” Sam Farber, head of Yahoo Sports content, told Awful Announcing at the company’s San Francisco offices in early February.

“We wanted something that people could, sort of, appointment view and watch on a daily basis, at the same time, and have some predictability to the viewership.”

Click to read Brendon Kleen’s deep dive into Yahoo Sports Daily and how its familiar format can still reach sharp, passionate audiences online.

️‍️🔥 THE CLOSER 🔥

10 years ago, ESPN tried a midcourt floor-seat camera. It did not go well.

Credit: ESPN

This week also saw a much lighter 10th-anniversary celebration in the sports media world.

As part of its Super Tuesday college basketball coverage in February 2016, ESPN debuted a new camera angle: The Midcourt Floor Seat camera. “Viewers will get a close-up and personal look at the speed, physicality, and skill from the highly competitive players,” they said in a press release.

The network aired nearly the entire Ohio State-Michigan game from a sideline camera rather than the traditionally elevated view.

Along with making it harder to tell what was happening as play approached the rim on either end of the court, views were often obstructed by a referee’s backside.

“This game is unwatchable at any camera angle,” wrote Detroit News columnist Bob Wojnowski. “But [ESPN’s] floor level look is the worst innovation since the blue puck.”

“This ESPN camera angle actually eliminates sight of the basketball. What an idiotic decision,” wrote Ohio State writer Tony Gerdeman.

Hey [ESPN], it's ok to admit this camera angle is a bad idea. We all have bad ideas,” added Columbus radio host Jonathan Smith.

Dear [ESPN], you've done the impossible,” wrote Michigan fan Stacy Evans. “You've united Michigan fans and Ohio State fans. All together in hatred of this camera angle.”

To their credit, ESPN acknowledged the intense negative reaction to the camera angle during the following week’s game between the Buckeyes and Michigan State. While they went back to the floor seats for the opening tip, announcer Mike Tirico offered up a cheeky mea culpa before they returned to their normal camera angles for the remainder of the game.

“Last week, the Ohio State-Michigan game gave you floor seats. And it was so popular with so many fans, especially those of you in Columbus,” he said. “Your response, social media, conversations on talk radio, we thought we’d bring it back this week… before tip-off.  Now we’ll go back to regular coverage of the game…”

Credit due, as always, to ESPN for experimenting with something new. Sometimes it pays off. Other times, you get the BoogerMobile and the Midcourt Floor Seat cam. They can’t all be winners.

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