----Plaxico Burress’ hearing is delayed. Donte’
Stallworth is sentenced to jail time. Ryan Leaf (Ryan Leaf?) is eluding the police.
courtTV, right? Uh-uh. It’s the present day ESPN. (Note: courtTV is now
truTV.)
When Bill Rasmussen, the creator
of ESPN, developed the idea in 1978, was his idea to televise scofflaws or sports? I cannot state for certain,
but I naturally assume the “S” stands for the latter.
ESPN calls themselves the leading destination for American convicts, I mean sports. So
where’s the actual sports coverage?
Sports aficionados
don’t want to see the amiss in sports. They “witness” (No LeBron, I’m not talking
about you) society’s turmoil everyday when they get out of bed. They don’t need more bedlam
and they certainly don’t want it either. They want stats. They want scores. They
want actual sporting events.
We, as an aching nation, as a wounded world, want to see things like Michael Jordan’s game winner over
Bryon Russell in the Finals. We want to see things like Kirk Gibson’s limp-off home run over Dennis
Eckersley in the World Series. We want to see things like USA miraculously beating the Soviet’s in
the 1980 Winter Olympics. (“Do you believe in miracles? Yes!” – Thanks Al Michaels)
We want to see things that make our body succumb to horripilation
(goose bumps). The joyous feeling that begins in our thoughts but travels to our hearts; the feeling that
makes our eyes water and our speech stutter. That’s why we watch sports. That’s
why we love sports.
But what does ESPN give our
nation, our world, instead? Scandals. Trials. Convictions.
Imprisonments. All resulting in further defamation of our beloved sports.
Understandably, it’s a slow time for sports, the summer, it
always is. And I accept the fact that news is news and more significantly, this news does involve athletes.
Fine ESPN. Put it out there. Remind us of how atrocious our civilization is.
But please, oh please, not under the bleeping headlines of your website and not under the bleeping LEAD of your television
station.
Rather, install a section entitled:
“we must make money” and place these journalistic necessities under such.
Dear worldwide leader in sports, if you insist in altering the “S” in ESPN from sports to scofflaws,
then here are some revisions that may assist in further developing your new image:
Sportscenter to Convictcenter.
Jim Rome
is Burning to Jim Rome is in the Courthouse.
Around the
Horn to Around the Federal Penitentiary.
Sounds pretty
entertaining actually…but not, I repeat, not for a sports network.
Dude, head CEO man (I refuse to waste my efforts in researching your
name or title), change it up.
At precisely
12:32 pm on Tuesday, June 16, 2009: ESPN offered courtTV-esque stories as five of its top six headlines (on their website).
And the singular headline that differentiates itself from the rest: Brett Favre (but with all of his deception
and betrayal, he fits the bill). At least you're consistent, ESPN.
Shall we go through the headlines one by one? We shall: (Reminder: This is just in one
day. ESPN perpetually does this.)
1.
“Stallworth gets 30 days in jail in DUI fatality”
2. (The Lying Wrangler)
3. “Leaf
faces Thursday deadline to turn himself in”
4. “NASCAR says Mayfield expert lied about degree”
5. “Phelps gets first endorsement since scandal”
6. “Burress hearing
delayed to Sept. 23”
Get it? Got
it? Good. Because I don’t get it.