Connect with us
Jim Cutler Demos

Sports TV News

Nick Wright: Some Shows Exist to Try to Go Viral

“I watch and I’m like, ‘You’re not doing the show for the TV show, you are doing it for the 90 [second] clip that will crush on the internet.’”

Jordan Bondurant

Published

on

Nick Wright on First Things First
Courtesy: FS1

FS1 host Nick Wright has his show First Things First in a great place, and it’s something he’s very proud of.

Wright was interviewed on the House of Strauss podcast with Ethan Sherwood Strauss, and Nick said he and co-hosts Chris Broussard and Kevin Wildes have managed to just find the perfect balance that works for their show.

“The reason our show is succeeding is because we have found this very fine line to straddle of taking the sports super seriously and not taking ourselves seriously at all,” he said. “People are tuning in because they love sports. So if you treat it like it doesn’t matter, you’re disrespecting the audience in my opinion.”

“Brou is great at really all of the stuff we need to do and so that’s why in my opinion our show works,” Wright added. “It feels like a good hang to people with some actual real information and substance.”

Strauss chimed in saying it’s clear how different their show is compared to other sports talk or sports debate shows on television.

“You guys have the best chemistry of any sports show right now, and I think it is resonating,” he said. “And it’s for those reasons that everybody seems to go home friends. Even if it’s a vigorous debate.”

Ethan added that while some shows gain better traction on social media in small chunks, Wright’s show is better observed as a cumulative work. He said there’s an aspect of self-awareness in the overall product Wright puts together.

Wright said it just varied how he’s perceived because what you see in clips on social media is different than what you get watching a full episode of First Things First.

“My approval rating is vastly different depending on how you consume the content I produce,” he said. “You know what I mean? If you’re someone that almost all the sports talk content you consume is via social media, here’s what you know about Nick: This f–king guy loves LeBron James, loves Patrick Mahomes, everyone else sucks and he’s never been wrong. Not everyone else sucks, but there is a kernel of truth in all of those things. But if you consume the show it’s very different.”

He did admit that things on social media with the most strident opinions that cut through end up getting more circulation, but that’s not the bulk of the show.

“Our show doesn’t do great on social media,” he said. “Does great on YouTube where it has full segments, but what’s interesting is I think a mistake that I know I made for a long time, and I see a lot of people make, is I watch and I’m like, ‘You’re not doing the show for the TV show, you are doing it for the 90 (second) clip that will crush on the internet.’ But it’s not part of an ecosystem within the show.”

“And sometimes I see things on Twitter, or I’m watching a show, and I see things and I’m like, ‘This was done for the clip, this wasn’t done for any other purpose than this will do well on the internet,’ he later added. “And I’m not saying there’s not a place for that, but I feel like that for some people has become the entirety of what they create.”

Sign up for the BSM 8@8

The Top 8 Sports Media Stories of the Day, sent directly to your inbox, every morning at 8am ET.

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Sports TV News

SEC Commissioner Tells Pat McAfee Someone at ESPN Leaked 2024 Schedule Without Permission

“We were trying to protect it. Someone at ESPN apparently leaked it.”

Avatar photo

Published

on

SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey isn’t particularly thrilled that his new top broadcast partner leaked a portion of next year’s schedule a bit early.

During an appearance on the Pat McAfee Show, which just so happens to be an ESPN property, Sankey mentioned his displeasure at the Worldwide Leader for leaking a portion of the 2024 SEC schedule early. According to Sankey, the league and the network agreed to release the schedule together in the near future.

“We were trying to protect it,” Sankey said. “Someone at ESPN apparently leaked it,” according to Yahoo Sports college football reporter Ross Dellenger.

While leaks in the media space are hardly a new phenomenon, especially when it comes to something as desirable as a football conference’s yearly schedule, a leak this early in the newly-formed ESPN-SEC relationship is less than ideal. Starting next season, ESPN will take over as the SEC’s primary broadcast partner, assuming the position CBS had long held for decades.

In the leaked portion of the schedule, the Georgia Bulldogs and Alabama Crimson Tide will play in the regular season for just the third time in the past 15 years. We also know the Bulldogs will play the debuting Texas Longhorns in Texas, while the Tide will play the other Oklahoma Sooners on the road.

Sign up for the BSM 8@8

The Top 8 Sports Media Stories of the Day, sent directly to your inbox, every morning at 8am ET.

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Continue Reading

Sports TV News

Jim Boeheim Making Analyst Debut on ACC Network, Joining The CW

Published

on

Jim Boeheim
Courtesy: Codie Yan, The NewsHouse

Former Syracuse Orange basketball head coach Jim Boeheim will make his debut as an analyst on Saturday, Dec. 2 on the ACC Network. Boeheim will be on the broadcast for the matchup between Florida State and North Carolina at 2 PM ET featuring play-by-play announcer Wes Durham and sideline reporter Cory Alexander.

Boeheim will make his studio debut on Tuesday, Dec. 5 during halftime of the men’s prime-time doubleheader games on the day – which consists of Central Connecticut against Boston College at 6 PM ET, followed by Cornell taking on Syracuse at 8 PM ET.

On the program, he will be joined by host Kelsey Riggs and analyst Luke Hancock, and he will also remain on the air for the 10 p.m. edition of Nothing But Net, the network’s signature basketball show.

Additionally, Jim Boeheim also joined Westwood One and is reportedly set to work on The CW coverage of ACC basketball, debuting this Saturday with pre-taped segments during halftime of two conference games. News of Boeheim working with The CW was first reported by Mike Waters of Syracuse.com.

Boeheim departed Syracuse University after 47 seasons as a coach and holding an overall win-loss record of 1,015-441. He has the second-most wins at the Division I level in the history of college basketball, only being surpassed by former Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski.

Sign up for the BSM 8@8

The Top 8 Sports Media Stories of the Day, sent directly to your inbox, every morning at 8am ET.

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Continue Reading

Sports TV News

Dan Le Batard: I Thought Pat McAfee Would Grow College GameDay, But That Hasn’t Happened

Le Batard said McAfee is playing under a different set of rules than others at ESPN.

Jordan Bondurant

Published

on

Pat McAfee
(Photo: ESPN Images)

Pat McAfee has checked all the boxes Disney and ESPN leadership had when the former NFL punter brought his daily sports talk show into the fray, but one area where it seems like the waters aren’t so smooth for McAfee is in his reception as an analyst on College GameDay.

GameDay viewers have not shied away from making their feelings known that they don’t like seeing McAfee on the show, and Dan Le Batard has found the criticism quite interesting.

On The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz on Thursday, Le Batard said he thought having Pat McAfee on GameDay would continue taking the show to the next level, but it turns out he was wrong in some respects.

“And so they get McAfee and they give him a new set of rules,” Le Batard said. “But I thought that would result in College GameDay getting bigger and better. More popular. I underestimated the allegiance that the viewer has to David Pollack.”

“I’m reading him and everyone around him saying he’s a good teammate, they all love him, they’re all getting along with him,” Le Batard added. “He is effusive, he is such a positive person. He is effusive in his praise for the people on that sat. But now the numbers are coming back, and this is something that McAfee couldn’t have expected.”

Executive producer Mike Ruiz chimed in saying that a contributing factor in the changing conditions at GameDay is due to the mass layoffs and non-renewals of more expensive talent over the last couple years. He said there was going to be a natural need to switch things up after cutting ties with the likes of Pollack, Tom Rinaldi, and Chris “The Bear” Fallica.

“The format of the show when you take someone like that, you’re changing it,” Ruiz said. “You’re changing the emotional stories that made you cry in advance of a Purdue/Ohio State game. All that stuff starts going away. And now it’s not just going away, some of that stuff is going to FOX.”

Dan Le Batard responded saying he wasn’t trying to blame Pat McAfee for Big Noon Kickoff closing the gap on GameDay and negative fan feedback. But all of a sudden now that FOX can tout its pregame show continuing to grow and be a successful alternative to ESPN’s product, the narrative shifts.

“I always say perception is not reality, but when all you have is perception and fudged numbers, FOX is saying, ‘We’ve caught College GameDay. We’ve caught one of the most popular shows in the history of sports television,'” Le Batard said.

Sign up for the BSM 8@8

The Top 8 Sports Media Stories of the Day, sent directly to your inbox, every morning at 8am ET.

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Advertisement

Barrett Media Writers

Copyright © 2023 Barrett Media.