Writing advice: How to cut your story

When we teach students to write, we rarely teach them how to delete.

But it is arguably one of the most important skills a writer has. My students are learning this this week. They've been assigned to write a 600-word column, and many of them are struggling. They've written drafts that are 750 words, 800 words, 1,000 words. Now, how to cut it down to the required length?

Read more

Tiger Woods and the Sport Ethic

To understand the way Tiger Woods’ victory at The Masters is being covered and described in sports journalism, the Sport Ethic is the perfect lens:

To review, the Sport Ethic can be seen as the worldview that elite athletes (professional, Olympic, high-level college) and coaches ascribe to. Sociologists Robert Hughes and Jay Coakely came up with this idea in a landmark 1991 paper. The four elements of the Sport Ethic are as follows (all quotes are from Coakely’s 2009 book, Sports in Society: Issues and Controversies.)

  1. Athletes are dedicated to “the game” above all other things. “Athletes must love ‘the game’ and prove it by giving it top priority in their lives. They must have the proper attitude.”
  2. Athletes strive for distinction. “Winning symbolizes improvement and establishes distinction.”
  3. Athletes accept risks and pay through pain. “Athletes are expected to endure pressure, pain and fear without backing down from competitive challenges.”
  4. Athletes accept no obstacles in the pursuit of success in sports. “Athletes don’t accept obstacles without trying to overcome them and beat the odds; dreams, they say, are achievable unless one quits.”

One of my operating hypotheses as a sports media researcher has been that sports journalism perpetuates the Sport Ethic, primarily through its reliance upon players and coaches as sources for stories. And understanding the Sport Ethic is a key to understanding the significance of Tiger Woods’ victory. In fact, Woods’ entire career can be reflected in the four elements of the Sport Ethic. Woods, throughout his life, was shown to be dedicated to the game above all else. His last victory at a major before this weekend came in 2008, when he won the U.S. Open while playing with stress fractures in one of his legs (Accept risks and pay through pain).

Woods’ comeback is an elegant example of the refusal to accept obstacles in the pursuit of success. From the self-inflicted pains of adultery and drug abuse to the series of injuries and surgeries that have derailed his career the past few years, the Tiger Woods story is one full of obstacles overcome and odds beaten. It’s not coincidence that Nike’s post-Masters ad revolves around the theme of dreams:

But it’s the second thread that has me thinking the most. The importance of winning in sports and the Sport Ethic. That life has a scoreboard and we are measured by our wins and losses.

If there’s one thing that has bothered me a bit about the Tiger Woods coverage (aside from the “this is the greatest story in sports history” hyperbole), it’s the notion that he completed his comeback, vindicated himself, proved himself, because he won. To me, that ties personal vindication far too closely with success. As if his comeback would have been any less impressive personally if a ball had bounced an inch to the right on Sunday. As if his value as a person depended on his score, as if his hug with his son only mattered because he had the lowest score on the golf course.

But of course, that’s sports, right? There’s a scoreboard, and there are winners and losers. And if you aren’t a winner, you are a loser. And if you are a winner, you are distinct. You are good.

That is the essence of the Sport Ethic.

Jackie Robinson Day and sticking to sports.

So, today is April 15.

Which means all Major League Baseball players are wearing the same number. You know which one, right?

42.

You know why, right?

Of course you do. It’s became today is Jackie Robinson day.

Why is it Jackie Robinson Day? Of course you know this. It’s the day, in 1947, that Robinson first played for the Brooklyn Dodgers and became the first African-American to play in Major League Baseball’s modern era.

It’s a day that is widely, and rightfully, celebrated in baseball.

It’s also the day that puts an end to any “stick to sports" argument.

It is fundamentally and intellectually dishonest to celebrate Jackie Robinson Day, to honor what Robinson did and what he meant, and to also insist that professional athletes not speak out out social or political concerns. Robinson’s debut was one of the most epochal moments in American history, because it was a formative step in the Civil Rights Movement. The breaking of the color barrier was a political act.

To celebrate Robinson while insisting that Colin Kaepernick not kneel for the national anthem show that you do not want athletes to stick to sports. You only want athletes to speak out of you agree with them, or they can make you feel good about sports’ place in our society.

To celebrate Robinson while insisting Kaepernick stand is an act of utmost hypocrisy.

Passive journalism — the problem with "hearing"

The Buffalo Sabres are on the market for a new head coach, and Eric Duhatschek tweeted out the following on Monday afternoon:

My pal and podcast guest John Wawrow tweeted this response:

Now, it may very well turn out that Duhatschek is proven correct and that McLellan is hired as the new Sabres coach this week.

But there’s a word in his tweet that made my journalistic spidey sense tingle.

“Hearing.”

I wrote this a few years ago to describe Stephen A. Smith’s “hearing” in the Deflategate case, and it still feels relevant today:

“Hearing" is a word you hear a lot in sports media these days, especially in the realm of transactional journalism. It's a way of embracing process journalism. It's one step below reporting something.

And that's where it turns problematic for me. “Hearing" is not "reporting."

“Reporting" something connotes that you actually did some, you know, reporting. That you sought to verify and confirm the information. That you vetted its veracity, thought about why the source is telling you this, etc. Reporting is an active verb. If your reporting is wrong, incomplete or erroneous, it's on you and not your sources ...

“Hearing" is a passive verb. It gives the appearance of transparency but is really just a cover word. If you're wrong - hey, I never reported that. I just passed along what I heard. I don't know if it's true or not, I'm just passing it along. It’s reporting in the passive tense.

Telling the readers what you're hearing isn't a bad thing. I'd argue it's a fundamental part of process journalism. That's the way a lot of people are consuming news these days, and it's important to be in the conversation. Giving readers more information, not less, is a good thing.

But when "hearing" and "reporting" are used interchangeably, when a reporter/journalist/embrace debater begins and ends his or her job with telling me what they're hearing instead of reporting something, that's a dereliction of journalistic duty.

Transactions, sports journalism and the AAF

And so, we bid goodbye to the AAF.

Let’s be honest - this is no surprise. The sports media world kind of blew up after the league’s inaugural week, when it higher ratings than an NBA game between James Harden and Russell Westbrook. Of course, that was fool’s gold. And the league league faded from the sports conversation in less than two months.

It’s an interesting juxtaposition with the fact that football remains near the top of the sports headlines, with the Odell Beckham Jr. trade highlighting a month of free-agent news, trades, signings, etc. That interest would suggest that we can’t get enough football, and yet an actual football league folded due to lack of interest.

There are a number of reasons why this happens. The AAF was a minor league, filled with players who weren’t good enough to be in the NFL. If they were good enough, they’d be in the NFL. Its season was during the heart of an always-interesting NBA season and the NCAA Tournament, which evolved into one of the most compelling in a number of years. There’s a certain rhythm to the sports calendar, and football in the spring never feels right.

But I think the evolution of our sports media landscape, and what we focus on, is a big part of it.

One of the major changes in sports media in the past decade has been the emergence of the transaction as the dominant piece of sports journalism. Game coverage has been the centerpiece of sports journalism since its inception, but as game coverage has become more commodified and less valuable, reporting on transactions - actual and potential - has become central to sports journalism. (This is the general thesis statement of the research Michael Mirer and I are working on).

Taken in this view, the failure of the AAF makes perfect sense.

It’s not that people are interested in football. They’re interested in the NFL. And they’re not just interested in the NFL for the on-field action, but also the transactions and off-field news. There’s so much interest in where Antonio Brown would end up, with who the Cardinals are taking with the first overall pick, with the mock drafts and free-agent speculation and the breaking news of trades, the AAF never had a chance.

IACS 2019 Review (in Twitter form)

This past weekend, the 12th Summit on Communication and Sport, sponosred by the International Association of Communication and Sport, took place in Boise, Idaho. 

This is a very special conference to me. I've met many of my best friends in academia at this conference throughout the years. Unfortunatley, I wasn't able to make it there this year. But here is a look back at the weekend, in Twitter form:

Read more

Who will last longer: ESPN+ or The Athletic?

From Awful Announcing today, an interesting roundtable discussion about which sports subscription service has the best chance of long-term success. The consensus among the writers was that ESPN+ has the best bet.

It's an interesting question to ponder, so a few thoughts:

  • Comparing ESPN+, B/RLive, DAZN Live and The Athletic feels a little bit like apples and desk chairs. The Athletic is written sports journalism, the other three are video based. However, subscriptions are subscriptions, and I don't think most people differentiate them in their minds. You look at the cost, you look at what's provided, and make the decision based on what kind of value you get.

  • It's the academic in me, but the article doesn't provide a key thing here — what do we mean by "long-term success"? Are we talking which is the last one in business? Which gets the most subscribers? Which brings in the most money? Which one drives the conversation in sports media? Which has bigger impact with readers? It may seem pedantic, but we can't pick which company is going to be the long-term success unless we know what that means.

Like the writers at Awful Announcing, I lean toward ESPN+ just because it has all the structural advantages. It certainly has the most potential of any of the services of being paradigm shifting. If we still accept the premise that live sports is keeping people subscribed to cable, anything that potentially changes that could have huge implications on the cable industry. But it's been slower growth than I had expected it to be, which leads me to believe that while it may last, it may not have a lasting impact.

On the other hand, The Athletic has surprised me. I was a loud doubter of the site for a long time, and those doubts were in large part my reaction to its bravado and its insanely rapid expansion a few years ago. But the site has settled into its place in the online sports journalism landscape, and while it hasn't shattered daily sports journalism like it promised, the site's writers are producing consistently strong work. To me, it's still the most interesting thing happening in sports media.

On the question at hand, I think I agree most with Matt Clapp

People will pay for good content. The Athletic has big names for every sport in seemingly every city/region now, and in-depth content. They continue to only add here, not subtract.

And building off that point, we already know what we’re getting with The Athletic. There’s certainty that it’s a good service immediately, and there’s no reason to expect that to change too much over the next year and beyond. The other subscription services have promising trends and additions (like B/R Live with The Dan Patrick Show), but just as many question marks, and people want certainty before they commit monthly/annually to a product.

Apple News+ revealed, adds WSJ

A long-awaited announcement from Apple today, the creating of Apple News+:

There will be over 300 magazines, such as The New Yorker, Esquire, The Atlantic, National Geographic, Men’s Health, and Vogue, and Apple News Plus will be “the only place” where you’ll be able to get all of them at once.

The Wall Street Journal will be the big new name that Apple adds to Apple News Plus from the newspaper business. An internal memo from Dow Jones, obtained by The Verge, notes that the WSJ will provide only “a specially curated collection of general interest news from The Wall Street Journal” to Apple News Plus subscribers. That leaves out the business reporting and analysis that’s at the core of the full subscription for the financial daily.

This is the closest thing we've seen so far to a "Netflix for News."

Is the offseason more important for sports journalists?

The interview that C.W. Anderson gave to Nieman Lab earlier this week has me thinking about ethnography in sports journalism.

The academic research of sports journalism is calling out for an ethnography of professional practices. There hasn’t been a large scale one, that I’m aware of anyway, since Inside the Sports Pages, Mark Douglas Lowes’ seminal work in 1999 (a book I’m revisiting and hoping to write more about in the co ming months). Good ethnography takes time, which is the challenge. I’ve wanted to do an ethnography of journalists covering the Buffalo Bills since I finished grad school. My first faculty grant application was to fund a season-long ethnography of Bills coverage, but that was unsuccessful and time and funding have made it impossible since.

It’s interesting, because when I think of an ethnography of sports journalism, I tend to think of in-season coverage. I bet a lot of you do, too.

But the more I read and think about the state of sports journalism in 2019, the more I wonder if off-season coverage might be more important to study. Michael Mirer and I are starting a series of research projects looking at this area of sports journalism. Think of NBA free agency, the baseball hot-stove league, the NFL combine and all the signings last week. The transaction has become such a focal point of so much pro and college sports journalism, that this feels more important to study than game coverage.

I mentioned this on Twitter this week, and got responses from Joshua Benton from the Nieman Lab:

And from my friend, the incomparable Matt Traub.

What’s fascinating about this is that this idea of off-season coverage being more important runs counter to how we’ve traditionally conceptualized sports journalism. From my dissertation:

Game coverage is central to sports journalism. A reporter’s work schedule, story selection, and sourcing decisions are almost always centered around the games of the team(s) he or she covers. An editor's planning of his or her section—both in print and online—almost universally centers around game coverage. Sports themselves revolve around games—from the NFL to high school football—so it’s natural that sports journalism has its roots in games. In fact, it can be argued that no area of journalism is so intrinsically tied to a part of their coverage as sports journalism is to games.

Despite the evolving nature of game stories, covering games remains the core of sports journalism. Games are still the focal point of sports and of sports journalism.

But the data, anecdotally, are telling us that off-season coverage may be more vital. It certainly feels more interesting.

A few years ago, I wrote about off-season coverage and said this.

Maybe the day is coming when a sports reporters' job is focused on the off-season rather than the season itself.

At the very least, that’s where our research should be focused.

Rethinking free speech in the digital age

In light of the massacre in Christchurch, New Zealand, my friend Jeremy Littau wrote about free speech:

Clearly there are a lot of good things being done with live video. I can rattle off many, from Standing Rock to police shooting accountability. But at what cost when we’re talking about inflicting trauma on audiences via the acts of terrorists? I know “at what cost?” is loaded and cliche. But it strikes me we aren’t even having the conversation about costs. It often gets brushed off as the price of free speech. But that’s dismissive and disrespectful, and it discounts the lived experiences of those who have to deal with the consequences of ideological purity.

In my Mass Media and the Law class at SUNY-Oswego, we spend a week talking about the evolution of hate speech. When is speech protected by the First Amendment, and when does it cross the line into illegal incitement. The SCOTUS precedent in this case is Brandenburg v. Ohio, in which the court ruled that speech could only be punished if was directed at inciting imminent lawless action and was likely to produce such action. (I call this this License to IIL test, because I am corny). This decision is a victory for free speech, because the type of speech can be punished is extremely limited.

But thinking on the events of the week, and our digital and social media environment, I’m left wondering how well this precedent stands.

I’m thinking primarily of the modern media environment. The 1960s, when this case was adjudicated, were the heart of the mass media age. The broadcast age. One broadcast to many people. In order to be influenced by Brandenburg’s speech as the KKK Grand Wizard, you had to actually be in the crowd or you needed to watch it on TV live as it happened. In the mass media age, ideas spread more slowly. Now, we have the technology to watch the shooter film his crime as it’s happening.

Not only that we have the cumulative effects of hearing such speech. Milo, Alex Jones, etc., aren’t promoting imminent lawless action. But their speech marginalizes already vulnerable populations and empowers attitudes that leads to violence against those populations. It feels wrong to allow the kind of speech that fueled the Christchurch massacre simply because none of it specifically promoted likely imminent lawless action.

It is very easy for me to say that we should protect all speech unless it is likely to produce imminent lawless action. I’m a straight, CIS-gendered, white Christian male. In so many ways, my privilege allows me to see these words and this speech as an intellectual exercise. But for blacks, Jews, those in the LGBTQ community, these words have real consequences. All of us, if we’re honest, are evolving in this area.

And the law, and our conceptualizations of free speech, should evolve as well.

The culture of the click, 10 years later

C.W. Anderson has been one of the most influential scholars in my career. His ethnography of digital news in Philadelphia is the dissertation I wish I had written. His thinking on digital news is must-read for anyone interested in this field.

Over at Nieman Lab, he spoke with Livia Vieria about ethonography, business models and more. This passage, about metrics in journalism, stands out:

Any journalist who would claim that they don’t need to know what their audience wants to read is deluding themselves.

But I do think that journalism as a professional category needs to make decisions for itself about what it thinks is important. That’s what makes a professional community: It’s a group of people who have a certain amount of expertise and then can decide for themselves what the important thing is. Journalism as a professional community is highly threatened — and that’s a problem, because it’s important for journalists to be professionals.

So I don’t think clicks and metrics alone are terrible for journalism. But I do think that insofar as they contribute to a larger deprofessionalization of this very important occupation, they can be part of a bad trend. The short answer would be: Journalists need to know what their audience thinks, but they shouldn’t become slaves to what their audience thinks. And they need to continue thinking for themselves about what their audience needs.

Why did Bradley bother us so much?

On Saturday afternoon, after I (and virtually ever other sports media commentator) loudly condemned Bradley University’s ever-loving stupidity for restricting the local beat reporter’s access for not promoting the school better, Bradley issued a statement:

The Bradley situation was low-hanging fruit for all of us who comment on sports media and sports journalism. A school or a team denying access to a reporter simply because they are not “promoting” the school is the easiest thing in the world to criticize. It’s important to do so anyway - the low-hanging fruit still needs to be picked, and this is a message that still needs to be delivered.

But why is this such a cause? Why did this get all of sports media twitter in a tizzy on Saturday?

What Bradley did was wrong, there’s no doubt. But I think it’s interesting to consider some of the root issues at hand here, to understand just why this turned into such an explosive story in our little corner of the world.

At some level, any restriction of access feels wrong. Even when it’s a private institution doing so, it has the whiff of censorship. We can justify our need for access by saying we are the conduit between the team and fans, and that by denying us, the team is denying the fans.

Access is such a tricky tightrope for any journalist. To do the job properly, you need to interview people involved in making the news. You need people to return your calls, to trust you with information. Any reporter who has had any success in this profession will tell you that building relationships with the people you cover is the key. But that need for access comes with peril.

It’s usually not as as pernicious as a lot of the Twitter journalism mob would have you believe. It’s not doing positive stories to curry favor with your sources. But the damn-the-man, full-speed-ahead, publish-everything ideal doesn’t always fit in the real world. The situation can be a lot more nuanced than that. Do you hold back on pursuing a story that might be a big deal but probably won’t because it’s going to unnecessarily burn a bridge? Do you hold back an adjective or two? Do you not use a quote that could get a player in trouble with this coach with the hopes that he’ll trust you to tell you something bigger down the road?

Also, you’re a human being interacting with another human being, not a collection of pixels on a computer screen.

None of this is nefarious. It’s the often-instantaneous, on-deadline decisions you have to make as a reporter.

Those decisions, though, can give access in journalism a bad name. They can also make our stridency over a Bradley situation look self-serving.


I had my own mini-Bradley situation in my career.

In 2002-03, before the St. Bonaventure scandal broke, I was told after the team lost at Davidson that no players would be made available to me. This was a new policy, they said. No players interviews after losses. I stood my ground enough that I got to talk to players back at the team hotel that night. But a few weeks later, the team tried that again, this time after a home loss to St. Joseph’s. This caused a legit controversy, with the Buffalo News and Yahoo! crushing the school. Our columnist, who was also our sports editor, threatened in print to have us stop covering the team. Coach Jan van Breda Kolff, who came up with the policy, relented a day later.

But here’s the thing: The threats that always worked don’t carry as much weight anymore. The St. Bonaventure men’s basketball team doesn’t need The Times Herald the way it did even in my era. They publish everything on their own website, their own Twitter feed. They don’t need the local paper. Fans don’t need us the way they used to either. So journalists have to rely on that professional relationship they develop with schools, the school’s understanding of what’s right in the big picture, and the school’s wherewithal to do the right thing.


For me, the Bradley story became a thing because it struck right at the core of sports journalism’s great fears.

The fear that we’re homers. The fear that we’re not real journalists. The fear that we’re perceived as the toy department.

There’s historical precedent here. Sports journalism began in large part as an economic engine for new daily newspapers in large cities. Michael Schudson has written about this extensively, how in an era when newspapers were overtly partisan, sports coverage was a way to appeal to a larger audience because conservatives and liberals still rooted for the home team. James Michener has written how the the most symbiotic relationship in media is between sports team and media outlet. The point is that historically, sports journalism has not been after truth and justice the way news reporting has. It’s always been much more promotional in nature.

That perception, the fear of it and fighting against it, lies at the heart of all sports journalism. I think it fuels so much of how we perceive ourselves and our work. It’s why we get so pissed off about election night pizza.

In the end, it comes down to agency.

The point is not whether or not Dave Reynolds could do his job covering Bradley without being able to interview players for his story. Of course he could. Any journalist worth their salt can write without being granted access.

The point is, that decision should not be made by the school because they don’t like the tone of the coverage. That’s part of the deal when you have an independent press. You can’t tell us what to do.

That’s why the Bradley story resonated so much in sports journalism circles. It was a heavy-handed attempt at forcing an independent press to act in certain way. It was asking the journalist to give up his agency for no good reason.

It also resonated on the long-standing fears and attitudes about how people perceive us.

The impossibility of St. Bonaventure

It’s impossible.

It’s been 15 years since I was the St. Bonaventure men’s basketball beat writer. That last season, 2004, was the first following the scandal that left the program for dead. The Bonnies went 7-21 that year, and those seven wins were mainly due to the singular talent of point guard Marques Green. But that team lost 12 of their its last 13 games, including 11 in a row (and a 51-point HOME loss to the Jameer Nelson-led St. Joe’s team).

That was just the start. The Bonnies won 24 games in four seasons. It was a program left behind, a program left for dead.

And yet, here they are. One game away from the NCAA Tournament. One win away from the first back-to-back NCAA Tournament bids in school history.

It’s impossible. Last year was the year, the team with two seniors and a strong supporting cast, the team that won at Syracuse, won 13 in a row to earn an at-large bid, and won an NCAA Tournament game. This was a rebuilding year, with three freshmen starting and a 4-10 start to the season that included an overtime home loss to Bucknell and a 34-point loss at Syracuse.

Being one game away from the NCAA Tournament this year? Impossible.

And yet …

Last weekend, my family was in the Southern Tier and made a detour to campus. There was a basketball game going on, but we just stopped quickly by the bookstore. My wife made some comment about “main campus” and I had to laugh because there is no main campus. There’s just campus.

It’s impossible that St. Bonaventure is this close to the NCAA Tournament again, because St. Bonaventure is impossibly small and isolated. You don’t happen by campus. It’s not a place you find by accident. Enrollment is 1,637. The school I teach at, which is Division III, is four-and-a-half times larger.

Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, as UMass and Temple and George Washington and Xaiver and Dayton grew into national basketball powers, as Davidson and St. Louis joined the conference, it was easy to view St. Bonaventure as the program that the sport forgot. Every now and then, there was talk of whether Bona should leave A-10 for the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. After the scandal in 2003, there was so much talk in the national media of the school being kicked out of the A-10 that the league put out a statement affirming Bona’s place in the conference.

From that point, from Tony Kornhieser calling for the program to get kicked out of the A-10 in the lead segment on PTI, from 24 wins in four years, to the brink of back-to-back NCAA Tournament bids.

It’s impossible.

And yet …

Bradley University spits in the face of sports journalism

UPDATE: Bradley issued the following statement Saturday afternoon, a few hours after I wrote this:

Several years ago, I attended my first International Association of Communication and Sport summit at Bradley University.

To see an institution that celebrated all things sports media spit in the face of sports journalism is disgusting.

But they’ve done just that, recently preventing longtime beat writer Dave Reynolds from attending a media event.

From Dave Eminian and Nick Vlahos of the Journal Star, quoting a conversation between Reynolds and the Bradley SID:

“He responded by saying, ‘You don’t promote the Bradley brand, and basically we don’t want you here.’ I said, ‘Jason, that’s not my job to promote the Bradley brand. You know that.’ “He said, ‘That’s what we decided.’ I said, ‘Who’s we?’ He said, ‘Bradley University.’

Bradley University tweeted out the following statement:

During the 2018-19 season, the amount of access granted to Peoria Journal Star reporter Dave Reynolds was reduced. At the time his access to the Bradley Basketball program was limited, we discussed the issues that led to the policy change with Peoria Journal Star Sports Editor Wes Huett and the level of access has remained consistent for the last several weeks. Our focus is on preparing for the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship.

Notice there is no accusation against Reynolds, a respected journalist of nearly 30 years. No insinuation of wrongdoing or malfeasance.

It should go without saying, but let’s say it anyway: The job of a sports journalist is not to promote a team. It’s not to make them look good. Nor is it to trash them. The job is to accurately report on what is happening with a team - good, bad, indifferent.

Look, access is kind of a dirty word in a lot of media circles these days. The second a news organization publishes a story that someone doesn’t like (usually something that makes the Trump administration look slightly less evil), there are cries online that reporters are only doing those stories because they are trying to maintain their access.

That’s true sometimes. But not all the time.

Access to sources is not critical to journalism but it is vital - especially to primary journalism. The kind of local reporting that feeds the national commentary stream. A core part of the job is interviewing sources.

This is not to say that Reynolds can’t do his job because his access has been limited. But it makes that much more difficult, for no reason. His job is not to promote Bradley University. It’s to report on it.

And Bradley University denying him access simply for doing his job is inexcusable and wrong.

Subscribe to the Sports Media Guy newsletter

In my Sports Writing and Reporting class at SUNY-Oswego, my students have started their own newsletters. Over the next three weeks or so, they are acting as beat writers and aggregating newsletters on a team of their choice. (You can find their work on the JLM312 tag on Twitter)

And since one of the precepts I live by in teaching is that I never want to ask my students to do something I’m not willing to do myself, it’s time to restart this newsletter.

So welcome back to the Sports Media Guy newsletter.

Here’s what you can find here:

A brief essay

I’m trying to get back into the habit of writing regularly. This will give me both the chance and the deadline to do so.

The top five pieces about sports journalism from this week.

The idea of this newsletter is to be a central place for news about sports journalism. Not necessarily sports media (there will rarely be any talk of TV ratings here), but sports journalism. If sports journalism is my scholarly beat, then this is the place to aggregate news on this.

To paraphrase Will Leitch, if you’re subscribing to my newsletter, I figure there’s a decent chance you’d be interested in my other work I do. So I’ll include links to posts on Sports Media Guy and to episodes of The Other 51 and The Flip Side. If you enjoy them, I’d be honored if you considered subscribing at the links provided.

You can subscribe to the newsletter here.

powered by TinyLetter

Mark Thompson on the subscription models and being indispensable

At Nieman Lab, Ken Doctor had a fascinating interview with New York Times’ CEO Mark Thompson. Some highlights that I didn’t see making the Twitter rounds:

I think there were good reasons to believe the benefits of advertising typically accrue at the platform level. They used to accrue to newspapers, where newspapers — because they control printing and distribution — were essentially platforms, with near monopolistic reach and therefore colossal pricing power. Once you take those advantages away, the model collapses, and instead it’s the major digital platforms who have the same kind of quasi-monopolistic advantages of distribution.

This is a really eloquent description of the situation facing newspapers, and I haven’t heard it put like this before. In the pre-digital era, newspapers were platforms. But today, Facebook and Google are platforms. Advertising works at their level, which explains in part why the digital ad market for newspapers has cratered.

More from Thompson:

But overall it’s the indispensability of The New York Times, and The New York Times being the center of lots of conversations. I think that’s very good for the indispensability of the brand in many people’s lives.

...

I think, firstly, I’m definitely an optimist on the level of consumer demand for quality content. In other words, I believe that if you’re producing journalism of value, there is no reason to expect that consumers wouldn’t be prepared, in some way, to support that — potentially to pay for it.

This fits with my theory of subscriptions. The key, as I’ll say again and again, is to provide readers with something they can’t live without.

Not something you think they can’t live without, or something you think they shouldn’t live without. Something that is truly indispensable to them.