BSM Writers
The Wrong DVD Launched Ashley Adamson’s Career
“I just kept thinking so many people have worked so hard for so long for this moment, I can’t let them down.”

Published
4 years agoon
By
Jack Ferris
It’s 3:00 pm. At least that’s what the digital clock on her aunt’s 2000 Buick LeSabre tells her.
It’s February of 2008 and 25-year-old Ashley Adamson spends about as much time staring at her gas gauge as she does the road. Such is life when you’re barely living paycheck to paycheck.
“The gas station attendant around the corner from my place knew my name from all the trips I’d have to make with my little portable tank,” Adamson recalls. Her expression stuck somewhere between humor and horror.

Relief is the emotion that would best describe Ashley on this winter day nearly 12 years ago. The Denver native had just spent the last 13 months working as an overnight Associate Producer for a television station in Albany, but her days of re-writing stories off the AP wire appeared to be numbered. She had just spent the afternoon interviewing for a reporter position in Syracuse and she was sure she’d get the job, her first on-air role.
The lifelong athlete and Notre Dame football fan had aspirations to work in sports, but a full-time on air gig doing news would be just fine. She was tired, almost defeated. She was ready to settle for just about anything. Sports was always a bit of a pipe dream. Besides, why would any sports director hire her?
A second ring from her phone in a matter of 30 seconds brings Ashley back to 2019 and downtown San Francisco.
“I’m sorry, I have to grab this,” the 37-year-old answers the phone while shooting me an apologetic glance. Her half-eaten peach berry scone laying neglected on our table.
“Hi, this is Ashley.”
In a matter of hours Adamson will be on a plane to Denver. She won’t be visiting home, in fact the Mile High City hasn’t been her home for a while. Rather, she’ll head straight to Boulder to prepare for her pre-game show Saturday at Folsom Field. For the next 9 months, Ashley will always be a few days removed from a flight. Such is life for the face of the PAC-12 Networks.

“Yeah, he did. That’s right. Ok, yeah I think there was some spinach in there as well.”
Ashley didn’t interrupt our conversation for a production call or an inquiry from an Athletic Director. It was much more important than that.
“Sorry, that was Collins’ school,” she takes a deep breath as she places her phone back face down on the table.
“I guess he vomited and they saw some peanut butter in there. They wanted to know what else he had for breakfast because the whole school is peanut-free.” explained the mother of two, not hesitating to give herself a quick bite of scone.
“This is my life now,” she smiles, shrugging as if to admit defeat.
Ashley Adamson is a lot of things. Defeated, she is not.
The long road that lead her through Upstate New York and ultimately to her current position in the Bay Area started at Denver’s Mullen High School. Even today, it doesn’t take more than a handshake and an introduction to believe she was a multi-sport athlete in her high school days. She loved basketball, but it was track and field that she could continue at the next level. As for that next level, that was pretty much pre-determined.
“It was always Notre Dame. My dad is an alum, I’ve been a fan from birth, my older brother went there. I always knew I would end up in South Bend.”
That is, until it actually became time to make the decision. With hours to go before she had to accept her admittance to Notre Dame – Ashley had second thoughts.
“I guess I just wanted to carve my own path,” Ashley explained. “I wanted to do my own thing. I loved Notre Dame but that wasn’t mine, it was the path my dad and brother took.”

Ashley communicated her dilemma to her father, who didn’t try to sway her in either direction, but made sure she was confident in her choice.
“He told me wherever I go, it was going to be the decision that had the greatest impact on my life. I didn’t fully understand in the moment, but he was so right.”
In the 11th hour, Ashley decided on Boston College, much to the disappointment of her brother Alex, who was entering his Junior year in South Bend.
“I was really bummed,” admits Alex today. “I tried to remind myself that on the bright side of things she’d be further away from my sketchy college friends and I figured I’d probably have a better and more interesting job than her. The first part really worked out.”
Ashley was still a long way from landing any job, let alone one you could classify as cool. For the first time in her life, she moved to a strange city intent on forging a place for herself. It wouldn’t be the last.
“I knew within a couple weeks I made the right choice. I loved the campus, the city, it felt like home almost immediately.”
As for the track and field career? Adamson successfully walked on her Freshman year, but things got a bit complicated.
“My dad was also right when he told me that between academics, athletics and a social life, I could only pick two to be successful with in college,” Ashley smirked. “So, obviously my grades suffered.”
And with that, the track and field career was over with the start of her Sophomore year. Proving dad prophetic, Ashley went on to thrive in the classroom and on the social scene. Among her new network of friends was Kate Coakley, a fellow Colorado native with whom Ashley grew especially close.
“I spent so much time with Kate that I actually fell in love with her parents. We would joke that I would marry her little brother Chris just so I could join the family and be their daughter-in-law.”
Smelling an opportunity, Chris worked up the nerve to “propose” to Ashley towards the end of her senior year at BC. In lieu of a ring, the quick thinking Freshman ripped the plastic top off a Busch Light can and offered it as a symbol of his commitment. It would be roughly a decade before that seemingly empty gesture developed into one of Ashley’s favorite stories.
With a well established life in Boston, complete with her 2nd family, Ashley opted to spend two more years in her adopted city. She enrolled in grad school at Boston University and finished up in January of 2007 with her degree in journalism.

Ask Ashley to tell you her story, and this is where you feel a seismic shift in tone and expression. Like any new aspiring journalist, she was ready and willing to take any job that came her way. This is what lead her to Cable News 9 in Albany. As an overnight AP, Ashley wouldn’t spend much time out during daylight hours – and when she was it was to shoot stand ups for her reel. The days were melting into weeks. The ever optimistic Ashley was reaching her breaking point.
“One day I was driving home, it must’ve been noon, and my dad asked me how my day was,” Ashley remembered with a stoic face. “I just lost it. I broke down and cried. Those were some dark days”
“There I was,” she continued “a college grad with a graduate degree making $20,000 a year writing copy all night. It didn’t feel like there was a way out.”
Ashley wasn’t getting the best professional feedback at the time either. When she showed an Albany producer a stand up, she was told her chin was too pointy for TV. All this negativity nearly drove Ashley to abandon hopes of an on air career entirely.
“I was close. I had connections at NESN, I could’ve gone back to Boston and figured something out there. A job producing, a marketing job, something. Anything was better than what I was doing. It just felt like there were no opportunities to be on air.”
She had chosen a path with no paved road to success. There was no playbook to guide her one direction or the other and there certainly weren’t any guarantees she’d even make it out of Albany if she kept pushing forward. But she did.
“What’s known is always known. I knew Boston. I also could probably map my life out if I went that route. That was the safe choice. To do what I really wanted to do, I knew I had to keep pushing into that unknown.”
Ashley narrowed her focus. She started building her news reel. She knew for every one sports position there were five news opportunities. Soon, she got a bite from the CBS affiliate in Syracuse – and she couldn’t pop into her LeSabre fast enough to interview.
Ashley walked out of WTVH-5 after a couple hours on that February 2008 afternoon confident she’d receive an offer within a day. Her on air career would begin in a matter of weeks. It was a good day. She had no idea it was about to be an incredible day.

“My friend called me when I was still in Syracuse to tell me there was an opening at WSYR-9, the market’s number 1 station. So then she’s trying to feed me directions through the phone as I’m driving through town, and I just had to end the conversation. I appreciated the call, but I knew I was gonna get the other job,” Ashley reasoned. “Plus it’s the number one station in the market, they’re not gonna hire someone who has never been on TV. All that and I wanted to beat traffic,” she offered with a smile.
“Then, out of nowhere from the freeway I see the station’s call letters. I remember that moment so vividly. I realized in that moment, I had to pull off. I’d at least walk in. If nothing comes from this, fine, but this would be a great story if it worked out.”
Ashley couldn’t have scripted the next 45 minutes better.
“I parked, grabbed a hard copy of my resume and a DVD of my reel from the trunk and just handed both to the receptionist. I told her I heard about an opening, feel free to have someone call if they want to chat.”
The whole errand took less than five minutes, and within the hour she was well on her way back to Albany when she received a call from a Syracuse number. The man on the other end introduced himself as Steve Infanti, Sports Director at News Channel 9.
Ashley was immediately confused as to why she was speaking with the sports director – and in an instant she realized she made the greatest mistake of her life. In her trunk was an unlabeled sports reel she made specifically for her dad back in Denver. She had no intention of handing it over professionally, she cut it just for him.
“Like a great daughter, I still hadn’t mailed it. It was back there for weeks,” claimed Ashley, still having a tough time recalling the beautifully strange day.
Ashley handed over the wrong DVD, but she wasn’t about to explain herself in the moment.
“Steve told me they were looking for a number 3 in the sports department and asked how far out of town I was. It was crazy.”
Within a month Ashley was a full time member of the top sports department in market 81. Her luck didn’t stop there. A few weeks into her role with WSYR, the weekend sports anchor decided to leave the business, giving Ashley an outside shot at his position.

“I probably didn’t deserve it, and the news director went out of his way to tell me he wasn’t going to hire me for it,” she laughed.
“Eventually, after a couple interviews they realized they could save money by continuing to pay me what I was making and just move me over to weekends without training someone else. So then the job was mine”
Ashley shutters to recall her early anchor days.
“I was terrible for a while, obviously, but Steve Infanti never gave up on me,” remembered Ashley with more than a touch of reverence in her voice. She earned her position in Syracuse by doing the work few in her position would do, but she’s quick to assign the credit to the people who helped her along the way – none more than Steve Infanti.
“He taught me how to do sports after I had pretty much given up on sports. No shot I’d be here today without Steve Infanti.”

With a full time gig and her confidence growing, Ashley could begin to see her hard work paying off. Opportunities were beginning to present themselves. In February of 2010 she was packing up the car again, this time the destination was Indianapolis.
“I’ve never had more fun covering sports than I did when I was working in Indianapolis,” professed Ashley.
Coming from a PAC-12 Networks Anchor who just started her 8th year as one of the conference’s most recognizable faces, this is hard to imagine. Her time in Indiana, though, was a pretty exciting stretch.
Just over a year in her new city, Ashley had followed Butler to two national championships, witnessed Peyton Manning’s last season with the Colts, and covered the Giants-Patriots Super Bowl at Lucas-Oil Stadium. She couldn’t have been happier with her career, but just like her dad told her back in Denver, sometimes the social life has to take a backseat in order to succeed in other parts of life.
In the Spring of 2012, Ashley was all set to attend her friend Brittany Diehl’s bachelorette party in Las Vegas. She had the time off requested – no small task for a local sports reporter – and was simply waiting on a little help from Uncle Sam in the form of a tax refund. Much to her disappointment, it turned out her taxes went the other way, and Ashley’s savings dried up in a second.
“I called Brittany and apologized. She worked for the Fox affiliate in Indy and kind of understood my situation. I had the time off and the flight booked but I just couldn’t go. Vegas sucks when you’re broke.”
With a long weekend off and no where to go, it was Ashley’s brother Alex, now in San Francisco, who came to the rescue.
“He told me to come out, we’d head up to wine country, and I didn’t hesitate.”
At this point in her career, Ashley was beginning to long for family. She had been out of Denver for over a decade and it had been years since she left Boston and her Busch Light in-laws. By 2012, her best friend Kate and husband Geoff had also moved to San Francisco, making the City by the Bay an attractive destination for her next adopted city. An added incentive was the PAC-12 Networks, which would launch that summer.
Ashley’s representation had already reached out to the conference, as did countless other candidates. Fortunately for the Indianapolis anchor, Ashley’s impromptu trip to the Bay Area afforded her the opportunity to get in front of the decision makers – and they happened to be expecting her.

“I watched thousands of broadcast reel submissions,” recalled Kristin Bredes LaFemina, the PAC-12 Networks’ first Director of Talent.
“When I watched Ashley’s, I remember rewinding and re-watching quite a few times. She was likable, relatable, witty, intelligent and drew me in. I remember thinking; ‘Ha, I bet we’d be friends. I think I want to know her.'”
Needless to say Kristin – who now works as a talent agent for ICM Partners – had no problem opening the doors of the Walnut Creek headquarters for their first meeting, a meeting Ashley remembers quite well.
“We just talked about everything. It started off with the vision of the Networks but from there we just talked about life, where we both came from. When it was time to wrap up, I remember we hugged at the elevator,” Ashley paused, submitting to the smile that was fighting to take over.
“Who hugs at the end of an interview? I’m a big hugger and I had never done that. I walked out thinking it went pretty well.”
Ashley’s intuition was correct. In fact, Bredes LaFemina was so impressed, she had just about made up her mind.
“I told Lydia Murphy-Stephans, my boss, that I wanted to hire Ashley without an audition. I felt it in my gut that she’d be the perfect fit. Lydia agreed with my assessment, supported my decision and we took a leap of faith.”
It was late May when Ashley received the news back in Indianapolis that she would be the female face of the PAC-12 opposite ESPN’s Mike Yam. When asked about the day she got the news, Ashley’s humility takes over.
“If I had to audition, I’m not sure I would’ve gotten the job. This is a subjective business and it takes finding your Steve Infanti or Kristin Bredes to see something and take a chance on you.”

While Ashley handled the news about as well as possible, her older brother Alex had a tougher time containing himself.
“I’ll never forget when I found out. I was at a casino in Georgia for a ‘work event.’ I went bonkers and was telling everyone in the place and at one point a very nice dealer told me ‘we know you’re excited about your sister but you need to tone it down.’”
August 15, 2012 was launch night for the PAC-12 Networks, and the scariest evening of Ashley’s life. A reasonable person would be nervous for any number of reasons, but Ashley’s nerves were inspired by something else entirely.
“I just kept thinking so many people have worked so hard for so long for this moment, I can’t let them down.”
Since that August night 7 years ago, Ashley’s sense of responsibility has only grown – both professionally and personally.
“I can’t say enough about who I work with here, on air and off. I honestly think of Mike Yam as a brother. What I’ve experienced with people like JB Long, Yogi Roth, Kate Scott and Guy Haberman? Those people are much more than my coworkers.”
As for the family life, Ashley and then LA-based Chris began dating shortly after she accepted the PAC-12 position, finally making Pam and Peter Coakley her in-laws in 2015. Their first born, Collins, turns 3 this November and enjoys starting his day with a peanut butter smoothie. Their daughter Cora was born earlier this year with JB Long and Boston College Kate chosen as her god parents.
As for older brother Alex, he lives down the street from Ashley and Chris with his family. Nearly 20 years after the fact, he’s come to terms with his younger sister choosing Boston College over his beloved Notre Dame.
“If she went to Notre Dame she’d probably be a catholic school teacher with a weird YouTube channel or something so I think it worked out for the best.”
Ashley finds the question “would you do it all over again,” difficult to answer. She’s torn. She can’t imagine her life any different than it is, but she refuses to discount how hard her journey was at times.

“I can just say I’m so grateful to my younger self who rose up through local television, who grinded through the unknown. I uprooted my life three times and started over three times. When you do that you feel like you can do anything.”

Jack Ferris writes feature stories for BSM and serves as an update anchor for iHeart Radio in San Francisco and as a freelance contributor for the PAC-12 Network. Previously he has worked as a sports anchor for KXLY-TV in Spokane and as the co-host of the Don West Show on KPQ in Central Washington. You can find him on Twitter @JFerris714 or reach him by email at FerrisJack54@gmail.com.
BSM Writers
Is There Still a Place for Baseball Talk on National Sports Shows?
“Its struggle has been the same since the beginning of television. There is too much baseball for any regular season baseball game or story to have national significance.”

Published
9 hours agoon
March 29, 2023
Last week at the BSM Summit, I hosted a panel focused on air checks. I wish I could say we covered the topic thoroughly, but we got derailed a lot, and you know what? That is okay. It felt like real air checks that I have been on both sides of in my career.
Rob Parker of The Odd Couple on FOX Sports Radio was the talent. He heard thoughts on his show from his boss, Scott Shapiro, and from his former boss, legendary WFAN boss Mark Chernoff.
Baseball was the topic that caused one of our derailments on the panel. If you know Rob, you know he is passionate about Major League Baseball. He cited download numbers that show The Odd Couple’s time-shifted audience responds to baseball talk. To him, that proves there is not just room for it on nationally syndicated shows, but that there is a sizable audience that wants it.
Chernoff disagrees. He says baseball is a regional sport. Sure, there are regions that love it and local sports talk stations will dedicate full hours to discussing their home team’s games and roster. National shows need to cast a wide net though, and baseball doesn’t do that.
Personally, I agree with Chernoff. I told Parker on stage that “I hear baseball talk and I am f***ing gone.” The reason for that, I think, is exactly what Chernoff said. I grew up in Alabama (no baseball team). I live in North Carolina (no baseball team). Where baseball is big, it is huge, but it isn’t big in most of the country.
Now, I will add this. I used to LOVE baseball. It is the sport I played in high school. The Yankees’ logo was on the groom’s cake at my wedding. Then I had kids. Forget 162 games. Even five games didn’t fit into my lifestyle. Maybe somewhere deep down, I still have feelings for the sport, but they are buried by years of neglect and actively shunning the sport.
Its struggle has been the same since the beginning of television. There is too much baseball for any regular season baseball game or story to have national significance.
Me, and millions of sports talk listeners like me, look at baseball like a toddler looks at broccoli. You probably aren’t lying when you tell us how much you love it, but damn it! WE WANT CHICKEN FINGERS!
A new Major League Baseball season starts Thursday and I thought this topic was worth exploring. I asked three nationally syndicated hosts to weigh in. When is baseball right for their show and how do they use those conversations? Here is what they had to say.
FREDDIE COLEMAN (Freddie & Fitzsimmons on ESPN Radio) – “MLB can still be talked nationally IF there’s that one player like Aaron Judge or Shohei Ohtani can attract the casual fan. MLB has definitely become more local because of the absence of that SUPER player and/or villainous team. I wonder if the pace of play will help bring in the younger fans that they need, but the sport NEEDS that defining star that is must-see TV.”
JONAS KNOX (2 Pros & a Cup of Joe on FOX Sports Radio) – “While football is king for me in sports radio, I look at baseball like most other sports. I’m not opposed to talking about it, as long as I have an angle or opinion that I am confident I can deliver in an entertaining manner. A couple of times of any given year, there are stories in baseball that are big picture topics that are obvious national discussions.
“I think it’s my job to never close the door on any topic/discussion (except politics because I don’t know anything about it).
“But also, if I’m going to discuss a localized story in baseball or any other sport for that matter – I better have an entertaining/informed angle on it. Otherwise, I’ve let down the listener and that is unacceptable. If they give you their time, you better not waste it.”
MAGGIE GRAY (Maggie & Perloff on CBS Sports Radio) – “While I was on WFAN there was almost no amount of minutia that was too small when it came to the Mets and Yankees. On Maggie and Perloff, our baseball topics have to be more centered around issues that can be universal. For example, ’Is Shohei Ohtani the face of the sport? Is Ohtani pitching and hitting more impressive than two sport athletes like Bo Jackson and Deion Sanders? Do you consider Aaron Judge the single-season homerun king or Barry Bonds?’ Any baseball fan or sports fan can have an opinion about those topics, so we find they get great engagement from our audience.”

Demetri Ravanos is the Assistant Content Director for Barrett Sports Media. He hosts the Chewing Clock and Media Noise podcasts. He occasionally fills in on stations across the Carolinas. Previous stops include WAVH and WZEW in Mobile, AL, WBPT in Birmingham, AL and WBBB, WPTK and WDNC in Raleigh, NC. You can find him on Twitter @DemetriRavanos and reach him by email at DemetriTheGreek@gmail.com.
BSM Writers
Who Can Sports Fans Trust Once Twitter Ditches Legacy Verified Blue Checks?
The potential for Twitter chaos after April 1 is looming.

Published
1 day agoon
March 28, 2023
As of April 1, Twitter will finally make a dreaded change that many will view as an April Fools’ prank. Unfortunately, it won’t be a joke to any user who cares about legitimacy and truth.
Last week, Twitter officially announced that verified blue checkmarks will be removed from accounts that have not signed up for a Twitter Blue subscription. Previously, accounts whose identity had been verified were allowed to keep their blue checks when Twitter Blue was implemented.
On April 1st, we will begin winding down our legacy verified program and removing legacy verified checkmarks. To keep your blue checkmark on Twitter, individuals can sign up for Twitter Blue here: https://t.co/gzpCcwOpLp
— Twitter Verified (@verified) March 23, 2023
Organizations can sign up for https://t.co/RlN5BbuGA3…
But shortly after Elon Musk purchased Twitter and became the social media company’s CEO, he stated his intention to use verification as a revenue source. Users would have to pay $8 per month (or $84 annually) for a Twitter Blue subscription and blue checkmark verification. Paying for blue checks immediately set off red flags among users who learned to depend on verified accounts for accredited identities and trusted information.
The entire concept of verification and blue checks was simple and effective. Users and accounts bearing the blue checkmark were legitimate. These people and organizations were who they said they were.
As an example, ESPN’s Adam Schefter has faced criticism for how he framed domestic violence and sexual misconduct involving star NFL players, and deservedly so. But fans and media know Schefter’s tweets are really coming from him because his account is verified.
Furthermore, Twitter took the additional step of clarifying that accounts such as Schefter’s were verified before Twitter Blue was implemented. He didn’t pay eight dollars for that blue checkmark.

The need for verification is never more vital than when fake accounts are created to deceive users. Such accounts will put “Adam Schefter” as their Twitter name, even if their handle is something like “@TuaNeedsHelp.” Or worse, some fake accounts will create a handle with letters that look similar. So “@AdarnSchefter” with an “rn” in place of the “m,” fools some people, especially at a quick glance when people are trying to push news out as fast as possible.
Plenty of baseball fans have been duped over the years by fake accounts using a zero instead of an “o” or a capital “I” instead of a lowercase “l” to resemble Fox Sports and The Athletic reporter Ken Rosenthal. That trick didn’t get me. But when I covered Major League Baseball for Bleacher Report 10 years ago, I did fall for a fake Jim Salisbury account that reported the Philadelphia Phillies traded Hunter Pence to the San Francisco Giants. Capital “I,” not lowercase “l” in “Salisbury.” Pence was, in fact, traded to the Giants two days later, but that didn’t make my goof any less embarrassing. I should’ve looked for the blue checkmark!
But after April 1, that signifier won’t matter. Legacy blue checkmarks will be removed from accounts that haven’t paid for Twitter Blue. Some accounts that were previously verified might purchase a subscription to maintain that blue check. But those that were deemed legitimate prior to Musk taking over Twitter likely won’t. (There are also rumors that Twitter is considering a feature that would allow Twitter Blue subscribers to hide their blue check and avoid revealing that purchase.)
That could be even more true for media organizations, which are being told to pay $1000 per month for verification. Do you think ESPN, the New York Times, or the Washington Post will pay $12,000 for a blue check?
well the new paid checkmarks seem to be working exactly how we all expected pic.twitter.com/4Thk63i9il
— SB Nation (@SBNation) November 9, 2022
We’ve already seen the problems that paying for verification can cause. Shortly after Twitter Blue launched, accounts pretending to be legacy verified users could be created. A fake Adam Schefter account tweeted that the Las Vegas Raiders had fired head coach Josh McDaniels. Users who saw the “Adam Schefter” Twitter name went with the news without looking more closely at the “@AdamSchefterNOT” handle. But there was a blue checkmark next to the name this time!
The same thing occurred with a fake LeBron James account tweeting that the NBA superstar had requested a trade from the Los Angeles Lakers. There was a “@KINGJamez” handle, but a “LeBron James” Twitter name with a blue check next to it.
Whether it’s because fans and media have become more discerning or Twitter has done good work cracking down on such fake accounts, there haven’t been many outrageous examples of deliberate deception since last November. But the potential for Twitter chaos after April 1 is looming.
If that seems like an overstatement, it’s a very real possibility that there will be an erosion of trust among Twitter users. Media and fans may have to take a breath before quickly tweeting and retweeting news from accounts that may or may not be credible. False news and phony statements could spread quickly and go viral across social media.
Starting April 15th, only verified accounts will be eligible to be in For You recommendations.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 27, 2023
The is the only realistic way to address advanced AI bot swarms taking over. It is otherwise a hopeless losing battle.
Voting in polls will require verification for same reason.
Even worse, Musk has announced that only verified Twitter Blue accounts will be seen in your “For You” timeline as of April 15. (He can’t claim it’s an April Fools’ Day joke on that date.)
Obviously, that carries far more serious real-world implications beyond sports. Forget about a fake Shams Charania account tweeting that Luka Dončić wants to be traded to the Lakers. It’s not difficult to imagine a fake Joe Biden account declaring war on Russia and some people believing it’s true because of the blue checkmark.
We may be nearing the end of Twitter being a reliable news-gathering tool. If the accounts tweeting out news can’t be trusted, where’s the value? Reporters and newsmakers may end up going to other social media platforms to break stories and carry the viability of verification.
When Fox Sports’ website infamously pivoted to video in 2017, Ken Rosenthal posted his MLB reporting on Facebook prior to joining The Athletic. Hello, Instagram. Will someone take their following and reputation to a fledgling platform like Mastodon, Post, Spoutible, or BlueSky, even if it means a lesser outlet?
If and when that happens, Twitter could still be a community but not nearly as much fun. Not when it becomes a matter of trust that breaks up the party.

Ian Casselberry is a sports media columnist for BSM. He has previously written and edited for Awful Announcing, The Comeback, Sports Illustrated, Yahoo Sports, MLive, Bleacher Report, and SB Nation. You can find him on Twitter @iancass or reach him by email at iancass@gmail.com.
BSM Writers
There’s a Lesson For Us All in Florida Atlantic’s Elite 8 Broadcast Struggle
“It is a ton of faith our industry has been forced to place in a single mode of delivery.”

Published
1 day agoon
March 28, 2023By
Ryan Brown
Ken LaVicka and Kevin Harlan probably don’t have a ton in common. Both of them were announcing an Elite Eight game over the weekend, that is one thing tying them together, but their experiences were wildly different. Harlan is on CBS with a production crew numbering in the dozens making certain all goes smoothly. LaVicka, the voice of the Florida Atlantic Owls, is a production crew himself, making certain those listening in South Florida heard the Owls punch their Final Four ticket. At least, that was LaVicka’s plan.
The Florida Atlantic Owls are going to the Men’s Final Four. Even while typing that sentence, it still seems odd to say. Do you know how many college basketball teams are thinking “how can Florida Atlantic make the Final Four and we can’t?” These are the types of stories that make the NCAA Tournament what it is. There is, literally, no barrier stopping any team from this tournament going on the run of their life and making it all the way.
Everyone listening in South Florida almost missed the moment it all became real for the Owls. With :18.6 to go in Florida Atlantic’s Elite Eight game against Kansas State, the Madison Square Garden Ethernet service to the front row of media seating went completely dark.
It was on that row that Ken LaVicka was painting the picture back to South Florida. Well, he was until the internet died on him.
Nobody does a single show away from their home studio anymore without trying to avoid the nightmare of Ethernet failure. Gone are the days of phone lines and ISDN connections, all the audio and video is now sent back to the studio over the technological miracle that is the internet. It is a ton of faith our industry has been forced to place in a single mode of delivery.
Take that anxiety and multiply it by 1,000 when that Ethernet line is connected to a Comrex unit for the most important moment of your career. LaVicka had the great fortune of a Kansas State timeout to try something, anything, to save the day. In his quick thinking, he spun around and grabbed an ethernet cable from row two which, as it turns out, still had internet access flowing through it’s cables. That cable, though, was the equivalent of an iPhone charging cord; never as long as you need it to be.
One of LaVicka’s co-workers from ESPN West Palm held the Comrex unit close enough to the second row for the cable to make a connection and the day was saved. LaVicka was able to call the last :15 of the Florida Atlantic win and, presumably, get in all the necessary sponsorship mentions.
It was an exciting end to the FAU v. Kansas State game, a great defensive stop by the Owls to seal the victory. LaVicka told the NCAA’s Andy Katz he tried to channel his inner Jim Nantz to relay that excitement. The NCAA Tournament excitement started early this year. In the very first TV window 13 Seed Furman upset 4 Seed Virginia with a late three pointer by JP Pegues, who had been 0-for-15 from beyond the arc leading up to that shot. It is the type of play the NCAA Tournament is built upon.
It was called in the manner Kevin Harlan’s career was built upon. Harlan, alongside Stan Van Gundy and Dan Bonner, called the Virginia turnover leading to the made Furman basket with his trademark excitement before laying out for the crowd reaction. After a few seconds of crowd excitement he asked his analysts, and the world, “Did we just see what I think we saw? Wow!” Vintage Kevin Harlan.
One reason we are so aware of what Harlan said, and that he signaled his analysts to lay out for the crowd reaction, was a CBS Sports tweet with video of Harlan, Van Gundy and Bonner in a split screen over the play. It gave us a rare look at a pro in the middle of his craft. We got to see that Harlan reacts just like he sounds. The video has more than six million views and has been retweeted more than 6,000 times, a lot of people seem to like it.
Kevin Harlan is not in that group. Harlan appeared on Richard Deitsch’s Sports Media podcast after the video went public and said he was embarrassed by it. Harlan added he “begged” CBS not send the tweet out but to no avail. Harlan told Deitsch “I don’t know that I’m glad that they caught our expression, but I’m glad the game was on the air. I think I join a chorus of other announcers who do not like the camera.”
There’s a valuable announcer lesson from Harlan there; the audience is almost always there for the game, not you. Harlan went on to describe the broadcast booth to Deitsch as somewhat of a sacred place. He would prefer to let his words accompany the video of the action to tell the story. Kevin Harlan is as good as they come at his craft, if he thinks that way, there’s probably great value in that line of thought.
We can learn from LaVicka, as well. You work in this business long enough and you come to accept technical difficulties are as much a part of it as anything. They always seem to strike at the worst times, it is just in their nature. Those who can find a way to deal with them without everything melting down are those who can give their audience what they showed up for. Those who lose their mind and spend time complaining about them during the production simply give the audience information they don’t really care about.
The Final Four is an unlikely collection of teams; Miami, San Diego State, Connecticut and Florida Atlantic. You all had that in your brackets, right? Yep, the Florida Atlantic Owls are going to the Final Four and Ken LaVicka will be there for it. Now, if the internet will just hold out.

Ryan Brown is a columnist for Barrett Sports Media, and a co-host of the popular sports audio/video show ‘The Next Round’ formerly known as JOX Roundtable, which previously aired on WJOX in Birmingham. You can find him on Twitter @RyanBrownLive and follow his show @NextRoundLive.