I have no interest in seeing the fluff pieces they cram down our throats while showing them time after time after time again. They run the same stories three or four different nights in one week. None of the stories they do are that compelling they need to be repeated. The show has deteriorated from being top notch sports journalism to who can get the best one-liner in. Steven A. Smith sucks! He just bullies other analysts on ESPN and his show into taking his opinion as fact. He is style over substance. Chris Berman needs to go, his schtick is so old and boring. Can't you sell meat for a living? White boy Scott Van Pelt seems to be joining Stuart Scott in trying to find new catch phrases that annoy me and others. Poker needs to go, it's a travesty I get to witness a bunch of goofballs take 2 hours to decide what to call, and do we really need marathons of it? The shows are pathetic, at least in my opinion. Around the Horn comes off as disorganized. There's always people talking over one another, and they're forever changing the timing at the end of the show. PTI doesnt excite me at all either. It's Kornheiser making an opinion while Wilbon trys to bash it, or vice versa. The whole entire show. They need to stop leading off with the same crap. Only reason, and I repeat, ONLY REASON, I watch ESPN is for a game or baseball tonight. Ravech and Reynolds do put on a great show with solid baseball analysis.
It's pretty sad that a 23 year old like me understands what Sportscenter trys to do. Now a days, every thing revolves around teens and younger audiences. I think that's wrong because it's destroying the quality that these shows/stations used to have, but you have to remember that teens are the market where the money is.
It's pretty sad that a 23 year old like me understands what Sportscenter trys to do. Now a days, every thing revolves around teens and younger audiences. I think that's wrong because it's destroying the quality that these shows/stations used to have, but you have to remember that teens are the market where the money is.