Those guys have all the fun Inside the world of ESPN

James A. Miller, 1957-

Book - 2011

Presents the history of sports channel ESPN based on interviews with nearly five hundred current and former employees, featuring announcers and analysts as well as sports stars including LeBron James, Peyton Manning, and Jeff Gordon.

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2nd Floor 796/Miller Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Little, Brown and Co 2011.
Language
English
Main Author
James A. Miller, 1957- (-)
Other Authors
Tom Shales (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
xv, 763 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9780316043007
  • Introduction
  • 1. Blood: 1978-1979
  • 2. The Utility of Daring: 1980-1986
  • 3. Ripeness is All: 1987-1991
  • 4. Manifest Destiny: 1992-1994
  • 5. Jonah: 1995-2000
  • 6. The Garden of Forking Paths: 2001-2004
  • 7. Reconciling the Dream: 2005-2008
  • 8. Parade of Horribles: 2009 and Beyond
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

Miller and Shales's (Live from New York) second book wisely uses an oral history format to tell the inside story of multimedia sports broadcasting giant ESPN. They crafted their long but engaging narrative by interviewing over 550 current and former ESPN broadcasters, executives, and off-air staff who add their own unique insights into the network's 30-year history and illuminate the many behind-the-scenes personality and ego clashes. A few athletes and broadcasting competitors chime in as well. Tony Korn-heiser, Chris Berman, Dick Vitale, Jim Rome, Keith Olbermann, and others are candid in both their complaints and compliments. Matt McCarthy, Joan Baker, and coauthor Miller swap unremarkable narration duties. Recommended for anyone who takes sports media seriously. [The Little, Brown hc, published in May, was a New York Times best seller; the Back Bay pb will publish in December.-Ed.]-Douglas King, Univ. of South Carolina Lib., Columbia (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The massive, eagerly anticipated oral history of ESPN.Journalist Miller and Pulitzer Prizewinning TV critic Shales (Live from New York: An Uncensored History of "Saturday Night Live,"2003) chronicle the unfathomable growth of the self-proclaimed "Worldwide Leader in Sports." In 1979, the entrepreneurial father/son tandem Bill and Scott Rasmussen hatched a hair-brained business plan: a 24-hour cable "entertainment and sports programming network"or, as it came to be known, ESPN. The improbable rise from fly-by-night operation in the backwater of Bristol, Conn., to the world's most powerful sports brand is an epic tale, replete with scandals and skeletons the authors dutifully cover. Many of these will be old news to fans of blogs like Deadspin that are dedicated to bringing down the ESPN juggernaut, but it's the cutthroat negotiations with partners and sponsors, the ingenious (and occasionally disastrous) attempts to innovate and the ongoing clash of conservative company policy with flamboyant on-air talent that will hook readers. The intervieweeswho include former chairman Steve Bornstein, current president George Bodenheimer, fan favorites Chris Berman, Dan Patrick and Keith Olbermann, and dot-com star Bill Simmonsrange from closely guarded to bluntly self-interested in their commentary, requiring the authors to find the right mix of breadth of opinion and storytelling acumena balance they strike with admirable consistency over the course of nearly 800 pages. Inevitably, repetition creeps in as subjects hammer home the same themes, and the authors sometimes shift topics when more commentary is called for on the prior one. These are minor quibbles, however, in a definitive account that not only manages to offer insight into a pop-culture phenomenon's seemingly impossible success (sometimes in spite of itself), but also highlights how that success irrevocably altered the cable landscape.A championship effort by two men who can rightfully lay claim to having writtenthebook on ESPN.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.