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Jason Kelce: ‘Mind-Blowing’ to See ‘Thursday Night Football’ Operation
“The closest thing it felt like was ‘Saturday Night Live,’ but on a much different scale because there’s more things that are uncontrollable.”

Published
2 weeks agoon
By
BSM Staff
This past Thursday, Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce appeared on Amazon Prime Video’s Thursday Night Football. Jason’s brother, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, made mention of the unique experience his brother had on the latest edition of their hit podcast, New Heights.
The schedule lined up where both teams had concurrent bye weeks and were slated to play one another in the upcoming Monday Night Football matchup, but that did not stop the Kelce brothers from discussing their lives and continuing to bring fans content.
Jason Kelce described the broadcast as “an unbelievable experience” and expressed his gratitude towards Prime Video for allowing him to appear on the air. In describing the night, he stated that much of it was partaking in interviews in answering questions, but he took a particular interest in seeing how everything operated behind the scenes.
Kelce described the various different monitors within a broadcast booth – including the telestrator; replay and primary feed displays. Upon his brother saying that the scene sounded like “chaos,” Kelce recounted his journey into the broadcast truck and how he witnessed the telecast come together.”
“It was mind-blowing to see the operation that happens for a game and how seamless and professionally it all is done,” Kelce said. “It was really just cool to watch and see. I can’t imagine the amount of data that is flowing through those trucks in a given game.”
Kelce acknowledged that the matchup between the Chicago Bears and Carolina Panthers was not the most exciting game, but that his occurrence was exciting and made easy for him by those working on the program. Travis Kelce, who was in Buenos Aires, Argentina watching his rumored girlfriend Taylor Swift perform as part of her world tour, reviewed his brother’s performance and shared that he did a good job.
“The closest thing it felt like was Saturday Night Live,” Jason Kelce articulated, “but on a much different scale because there’s more things that are uncontrollable. But it kind of gave that same vibe of, ‘Holy cow, there are so many people involved in making this thing happen and having it be the product that it is,’ so [it was] really, really cool to witness.”
Since knowledge of his appearance became public, people have been wondering whether Kelce will consider a move to television at the conclusion of his National Football League career. After all, before the start of the season, Kelce mulled retirement before committing to his 13th season in the league, all of which have come with the Philadelphia Eagles. Travis decided to ask his brother what he was thinking as it pertained to pursuing a career in sports media down the road, prompting him to elicit his perceptions on the varying roles.
“I could do the desk pre/post-show [and] have an opinion on the teams and the games and stuff like that,” Jason Kelce surmised. “I think any former player could do that – you just have an opinion on [the teams] – not to [discredit anyone because] those guys are much better at it…. That part isn’t that hard of having an opinion on something.”
Kelce shared that he was fascinated by how things worked in the booth and explained that the job is inherently more difficult. He specifically referenced a side conversation he had with Herbstreit in the midst of the game and marveled at his ability to toggle between the topics in real-time.
“That’s an art form that would take a long time to foster and try and be good at,” Kelce said of working in the booth. “Kirk was – he was sitting there having a conversation with me; he’s just like, ‘Yeah, what do you have going on?’ Not only are you having a side conversation with me in between; then you’re back here; then you’re circling this.”
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Sports Online
Sports Illustrated Union Responds After Accusations of AI-Generated Articles by Fake Writers
The letter was signed as “The Humans of the SI Union”.

Published
10 hours agoon
November 28, 2023
Sports Illustrated faced backlash across social media from readers and employees alike on Monday following a report from Futurism that found AI-generated articles and writer profiles were published on its website.
The report spotlighted instances where the misplaced, often oddly worded listicles were peppered across SI.com, even shuffled around with different fake author attributions. The article even traced the photo used for the fake author profiles to an AI-generated headshot site which could be purchased online.
It turns out that SI’s parent company, The Arena Group, claims it licensed out a third-party company called AdVon Commerce to create product reviews for not just SI but its other owned sites. When Futurism questioned The Arena Group about the use of the AI content, the articles and author profiles quickly disappeared. The company put out a statement Monday afternoon but has not offered any other explanations since.
“Today, an article was published alleging that Sports Illustrated published AI-generated articles. According to our initial investigation, this is not accurate,” a statement from The Arena Group read. “A number of AdVon’s e-commerce articles ran on certain Arena websites. We continually monitor our partners and were in the midst of a review when these allegations were raised.”
“AdVon has assured us that all of the articles in question were written and edited by humans,” the statement continued. “According to AdVon, their writers, editors, and researchers create and curate content and follow a policy that involves using both counter-plagiarism and counter-AI software on all content. However, we have learned that AdVon had writers use a pen or pseudo name in certain articles to protect author privacy – actions we strongly condemn – and we are removing the content while our internal investigation continues and have since ended the partnership.”
The SI Union offered a response itself, condemning the parent company for agreeing to publish the content.
“If true, these practices violate everything we believe in about journalism,” the union statement read. “We deplore being associated with something so disrespectful to our readers.”
“We want to be very clear: What is described in this Futurism story does not represent the hardworking journalists who make up the SI Union,” the statement concludes. “For nearly 70 years, SI staff members have held themselves to the highest possible ethical standards. As members of the SI Union, we are proud to be part of that legacy and work every day to protect it. We expect management to do the same.”
Our response to today’s story from @futurism reporting that The Arena Group has published AI-written stories by fake people under the Sports Illustrated name: pic.twitter.com/QcR4iGOi5w
— Sports Illustrated Union (@si_union) November 27, 2023
The statement was signed, “The Humans of the SI Union.”
Several current and former SI employees echoed the union’s sentiments.
Co-sign. https://t.co/f8c3yPxyEC
— Pat Forde (@ByPatForde) November 27, 2023
As SI copy chief, I stand by my hardworking @si_union colleagues https://t.co/vCBK3fWUgy
— Julie Kliegman (@jmkliegman) November 27, 2023
as a former human of SI, I furiously second: https://t.co/YslRJJjYH7
— S.L. Price (@bySLPrice) November 27, 2023
I'm really proud to follow in the legacy of a lot of great journalists I grew up reading in @SInow, which influenced me, just as great sports reporters of the @BostonGlobe did, to do what I do for a living.
— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) November 27, 2023
What's happened here is certainly not that. https://t.co/HlL4aoYfso
The story even got national media attention on The Pat McAfee Show.
WHAT IS GOING ON SPORTS ILLUSTRATED#PMSLive pic.twitter.com/w6dKkVzUW6
— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) November 27, 2023

Jordan Bondurant is a features reporter for Barrett Sports Media. He’s a multimedia journalist and communicator who works at the Virginia State Corporation Commission in Richmond. Jordan also contributes occasional coverage of the Washington Capitals for the blog NoVa Caps. His prior media experiences include working for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, the Danville Register & Bee, Virginia Lawyers Weekly, WRIC-TV 8News and Audacy Richmond. He can be reached by email at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter @J__Bondurant.
Sports Online
Sports Illustrated Accused of Attributing AI-Generated Stories to Fake Human Authors
Futurism reports that “Sports Illustrated” and other publications from The Arena Group have been attributing AI-generated articles to fabricated human authors.

Published
16 hours agoon
November 27, 2023By
BSM Staff
As the prevalence of artificial intelligence continues to grow within the evolving media marketplace, there have been discussions regarding the ethics of the practice. A report from Futurism asserts that Sports Illustrated has been using the technology to publish articles written by the software, purchasing automatically generated profile photos from an online marketplace in order to give the author a human identity.
Within the report, it was averred that the publication routinely alters the AI personas on the website by changing the faux name and author photo, with there being no explanation towards the move. When Futurism reached out to The Arena Group – the publisher of Sports Illustrated – with questions about the practice, the AI personalities were hastily removed from the website.
Several industry professionals have commented on the matter through social media, expressing their dismay and concerns about the purported revelation. Outside of Sports Illustrated, Futurism discovered that many other publications have engaged in the practice, including CNET, Gizmodo and BuzzFeed. When the authors were changed on Sports Illustrated, there was no editorial note describing the rationale behind the decision. An anonymous source told Futurism that the content is “absolutely AI-generated no matter how much they say it’s not,” leading to dismay and interest in how the company will respond.
“Our staff works so hard to carry on Sports Illustrated’s tradition of great journalism,” senior writer Michael Rosenberg said in a post on X. “It’s so disappointing when people* in our own company undermine our work.”
After some time, the magazine eventually added a disclaimer that outlined the content being created by a third party and that Sports Illustrated editorial staff were not involved in its creation. There was no explicit mention, however, of the third party being AI technology, which is ostensibly being used across different publications throughout The Arena Group’s portfolio such as theStreet and Men’s Journal.
“Along with basic principles of honesty, trust, journalistic ethics, etc., I take seriously the weight of a Sports Illustrated byline,” magazine staff writer Emma Baccellieri said in a post on X. “It meant something to me long before I ever dreamed of working here. This report was horrifying to read.”
In a statement from a spokesperson for The Arena Group, the company disclosed that it is not accurate based on an initial investigation. These articles in question were product reviews supplied by AdVon Commerce, whose e-commerce articles ran on certain websites under the ownership of the company.
“We continually monitor our partners and were in the midst of a review when these allegations were raised,” the statement read. “AdVon has assured us that all of the articles in questions were written and edited by humans.”
AdVon’s writers, editors and researchers create and curate content while following a policy that utilizes counter-plagiarism and counter-AI software. The Arena Group has ended the partnership after discovering that the company had its writers use contrived identities to protect the privacy of the authors, actions it claims to “strongly condemn.” An internal investigation is continuing looking into the matter.
Sports Online
Shannon Sharpe: Charles Barkley and Michael Strahan Showed Me I Can Do Media
“When I saw Charles Barkley could be himself, could talk with the dialect that he had, was unapologetically not afraid to make fun of himself, I said, ‘I could do that.’”

Published
20 hours agoon
November 27, 2023By
BSM Staff
Shannon Sharpe has built a successful sports media career after his Hall of Fame NFL career. He said seeing Charles Barkley and Michael Strahan work on television gave him the green light.
During his Nightcap podcast alongside another former NFL star, Chad Johnson, Shannon Sharpe said seeing other former athletes be themselves on television showed him he could do the same.
“When I saw Charles Barkley could be himself, could talk with the dialect that he had, was unapologetically not afraid to make fun of himself, I said, ‘I could do that.’ I’ve got just as good as sense of humor, I could tell stories, I can do that,” Shannon Sharpe said.
“I see Michael Strahan on Good Morning America, I see Stephen A. doing what he’s doing, I said, ‘I could do that’ … I just wanted someone to give me the opportunity,” Sharpe continued. “Be prepared when the opportunity presents itself.”
Sharpe turned working for The NFL Today into a role with Skip Bayless on FS1’s Undisputed. He now appears frequently on First Take in addition to his podcast with Johnson for The Volume.