Saturday, October 16, 2010

It's almost as if they have an agenda

Can you really be surprised that the company who relentlessly flogged the "LeBron's a free agent in 2010 OMG!!!" story for the past three years, aired LeBron's Decision, and created special Heat Index page to follow LeBron's new team would take a passing shot at the Cavaliers while promoting the upcoming season:


Does this happen to any other city? ESPN and Marvel team up to promote the 2010-11 season and they use one of their ads to disparage one of the NBA's 30 teams. I don't remember any baseball promos cracking on the Pirates or NFL spots ripping the Lions, but maybe I'm mistaken. 
It's a twist on Marvel's iconic moment from a Spider-Man issue published in 1967 when Peter Parker quits being a super hero and leaves his alter ego behind.
But Cavs season ticket-holder Brian Barney, a downtown ad executive who saw the images online, was upset at what he considered a cheap shot.
"It's belittling," he said. "It seems mean-spirited."
Especially after ESPN's burn this summer. The network staged James' prime-time revelation that the Akron native and two-time MVP was bolting for Miami, known as "The Decision."
The Cavs are the only team in the preview issue not illustrated by an image of a current player or owner.
Gary Belsky, ESPN the Magazine's editor in chief, said his staff was sympathetic to Cavs fans, but when ESPN writers and editors presented story lines for the season to Marvel artists, they decided this was the way to tell it.
"Honestly," he said, "we talked a lot about that and we didn't see it as kicking the city and Cavs fans while they're down." 
The thing that gets me is the fact that it's such a lazy move. This required no thought at all.  Instead of looking for positives in this Cavs team (plucky underdogs rejected by the MVP!) or simply an interesting angle (new coach!), they took the easy way out and went with "HARDY HAR, LeBron left!"

But this is really par for the course.  ESPN's most popular columnist, Bill Simmons, ranked the Cavs last of teams he'd like to see play and also went with the easy joke rather than anything substantive: 
30. Cleveland
You knew it was coming. Just remember, Cleveland: It could be worse. You could be Seattle.
Here's the thing with Simmons's (repeated) Seattle cracks. Cleveland lost the Browns. The Cleveland Fucking Browns left. Then the old Browns won the Super Bowl and we're stuck rooting the second worst team in the NFL (thanks, Detroit!). I'm pretty sure Cleveland was more upset losing the Browns than Seattle was losing the Sonics. And sure, it's not like Seattle has a basketball team, but we're stuck rooting for basically the Clippers of the NFL. We've been Seattle.

Anyways, as far as cracks on Cleveland go, "The Unamazing Cavaliers" is fairly tame. This is nothing. If you're surprised and/or upset by this, you obviously haven't been paying attention over the past five/ten/twenty years. "The Unamazing Cavaliers" is uninspired and lazy.

Which really about sums up most of ESPN, no?

3 comments:

Erik said...

ESPN is mean-spirited, but I think it's just an effect of mass-media in general.

Your celeb-honking mass media types are mean-spirited. Whether they're making fun of someone's drug habit or disability, or riding the Cavs like a jock-bully riding a nerdy kid in high school, it's really the same crap.

The only difference between ESPN, E! and VH1 is the subject matter. The OSU/Wisconsin game was the first time since spring that I watched more than 30 seconds of ESPN in one sitting.

Except for situations like the OSU game, I consider myself divorced from ESPN, and really all national sports media. I have better things to do than watch ESPN take mean-spirited potshots at my town for the sake of portraying us as the gum on LBJ's sole, just because it makes for good TV/web browsing.

Ben said...

I'm the same way. I simply don't watch ESPN. I used to be a regular viewer of PTI but I just don't care.

I'll call up friends and they'll ask me if I'm as upset as they are about ESPN's latest coverage (Brett Favre, The Heat Index, whatever) and I'm not.... because I don't watch ESPN anymore.

And why should I? First off, they don't ever show actual highlights or breakdown games. It's all opinion and predictions (Who will win? Who's the best in the league?) and no substance. I don't care about that stuff.

I can follow sports online without ever having to watch SportsCenter.

buds groove said...

Ultimate cinnamon crunch.

Where to order coco p near me.
Best place to buy cookies crisp online.

Where to order count chocula online.

Ultimate cup cake.

Best place to buy dimond og online.