Sports TV News
Sports Media Reacts to Scary Situation in Cincinnati on Monday Night Football
“When something so significant and unprecedented happens on television, most go to social media to talk about it.”

Published
1 month agoon
By
BSM Staff
It was a scary scene Monday night as medics performed CPR on the Buffalo Bills’ Damar Hamlin. The defensive back collapsed during the first quarter of Buffalo’s much-anticipated matchup with the Cincinnati Bengals.
When something so significant and unprecedented happens on television, most go to social media to talk about it. Members of the sports media were no exception.
I am beginning to get quite scared, looking at what happened, the ambulance on the field and the reactions of all the players.
— Rich Eisen (@richeisen) January 3, 2023
Damn, this is scary. Prayers up for @BuffaloBills Safety Damar Hamlin — who’s in critical condition. Just praying this brother survives and ends up okay.#🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
— Stephen A Smith (@stephenasmith) January 3, 2023
We use these cliches. “Going to war”, “willing to die”, “give it all”. That’s all talk. It’s a game. A game! You never suit up & think you’re not going to make it home. I can’t imagine what he & the Bills are going through. Please pray for Damar & his family! I’m fucking shook!
— Ryan Clark (@Realrclark25) January 3, 2023
This is just devastating.
— Jamie Erdahl 💍 Buckman (@JamieErdahl) January 3, 2023
i hope the players know they really don't have to play if they don't want to. in this moment, nobody can make them play. nobody.
— bomani (@bomani_jones) January 3, 2023
Tonight we should all be praying for Damar Hamlin.
— Robert Iger (@RobertIger) January 3, 2023
I’m sick watching this.
— Andrew Fillipponi (@ThePoniExpress) January 3, 2023
Clips from the ESPN broadcast were shared across Twitter. In addition to video, there was plenty of praise for ESPN’s talent in the way they reacted in a scary moment,
Really appreciate the compassion and perspective of Ryan Clark and Scott Van Pelt shared talking through this heartbreaking situation involving Damar Hamlin.
— Bruce Feldman (@BruceFeldmanCFB) January 3, 2023
Listening to Lisa S. and SVP get emotional during the broadcast is evidence of just how impactful and emotional these events are for ALL of us…whether we personally know Damar Hamlin or not.
— Aaron Taylor (@AaronTaylorCFB) January 3, 2023
Absolutely impossible spot for them, but ESPN, Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Lisa Salters, Suzy Kolber, Adam Schefter, Booger McFarland, Scott Van Pelt & Ryan Clark couldn’t have done a better job doing 3 straight hours of live news coverage of a tragic story w/ very little information.
— Jimmy Traina (@JimmyTraina) January 3, 2023
Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Lisa Salters, Suzy Kolber, Adam Schefter and Booger McFarland did a great job in an impossible spot tonight.
— Ryan Glasspiegel (@sportsrapport) January 3, 2023
Want to give credit to Scott Van Pelt, Ryan Clark, Lisa Salters, Joe Buck, Troy Aikman and everyone else on ESPN right now.
— Aaron Torres (@Aaron_Torres) January 3, 2023
There is no right thing to say. There is no update to give. And yet they're all on our TVs giving us anything they can.
Incredible work by all involved 🙏
Tonight is a night you really want thoughtful people on air. You want people who don't speculate. You want people with basic humanity. Lisa Salters, Booger McFarland, Ryan Clark, Joe Buck, Scott Van Pelt and pretty much everyone on ESPN so far has really done this tonight.
— Richard Deitsch (@richarddeitsch) January 3, 2023
Also, ESPN has not shown the Hamlin replay once since the situation was obviously serious. Classy. The producers behind the scenes deserve praise, too, for the coverage that many sports fans haven’t been able to turn away from tonight. https://t.co/w8xxDlJU8p
— Ryan Porth (@Porth670) January 3, 2023
Yes I saw what the unnamed stooge tweeted. I’d rather focus on the job true pros like Scott Van Pelt, Booger McFarland, Ryan Clark, Suzy Kolber, Lisa Salters, Joe Buck, Troy Aikman and others have done and are doing in a remarkably tough spot right now.
— Brent Axe (@BrentAxeMedia) January 3, 2023
FOX’s Skip Bayless found himself in the spotlight in the situation for the wrong reason. His tweet suggesting that it is important for the league to figure out when to resume the game was met with criticism from colleagues across the industry.
I’m embarrassed for some of my colleagues who sometimes show NO HUMANITY….
— Mike Hill (@ItsMikeHill) January 3, 2023
Damar Hamlin’s LIFE is in the balance.
— Robert Griffin III (@RGIII) January 3, 2023
Get your head out of your Ass. https://t.co/EpnnzyJrpb
We're seeing the kindest, most heartfelt side of Twitter tonight, in the wake of Damar Hamlin requiring CPR during MNF.
— Bonnie Bernstein (@BonnieBernstein) January 3, 2023
But, we're also seeing the worst of Twitter. Hard to believe some can be so cruel and callous.
Please lead w love and light. We only get 1 shot at this life.
For the millionth time, @realskipbayless – and I’ve known you for 32 years – you are a soulless fucking piece of shit. https://t.co/lUrg45M9fm
— fishsports (@fishsports) January 3, 2023
It is easy for fans to feel helpless in these moments. Some media members took it upon themselves to share information and links for people to donate to a toy drive organized by Damar Hamlin’s charity.
Damar Hamlin started a toy drive two years ago, as he prepared to try and make it in the NFL, and set a goal to raise $2,500. Bills fans found it tonight, and started donating to it.
— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) January 3, 2023
Current donation total: $905,464
Here's the link …https://t.co/pNIudOsFO2
Sports TV News
Nick Wright: The Best Version of First Things First is What We’re Doing Now
“I used to approach the TV show with the perspective of I have to prove how smart I am to the audience every single day.”

Published
2 days agoon
February 3, 2023By
Ricky Keeler
Nick Wright has been a co-host on First Things First on FS1 for the last five-and-a-half years. The show has evolved over the years and according to Wright, he has evolved as a broadcaster from the time he got cut from doing play-by-play at WAER in Syracuse to now.
Wright was a guest on The Colin Cowherd Podcast this week and he said that when he first appeared on television, he wanted the audience to think he had all the answers, but the mindset has changed for him and he said the new version of the show that he does with Kevin Wildes and Chris Broussard every weekday is the most successful version of the show.
“When I got on TV, I think the first year maybe, I thought the job was to always have all the answers. To have the facts exactly right, to never be wrong. I’ve now done the show for five-and-a-half years. By a country mile, the most successful version of the show is the one I’m doing right now — this moment — with Wildes and Broussard. It’s the funniest and that’s why.
“I used to approach the TV show with the perspective of I have to prove how smart I am to the audience every single day. Now I approach it as our entire goal is to put on a show that people smile while they are watching and have a good time and that has enough meat to it where it is not all empty calories. There’s got to be the information, there’s got to be the analysis, but there’s also got to be a lot of bells and whistles and funny stuff and guys messing with each other and that’s what works. That took me a while to figure out.”
The only time when Wright didn’t think he had to prove how smart he was when he first appeared on TV was when he would appear on The Herd as Cowherd’s guest and he had a goal in mind whenever he would appear on the show.
“Early in our relationship, I was really, really trying to impress you and I wanted to make you laugh. Every time I came on, I was like ‘It’s successful if I made Colin laugh’. I was too stupid to realize I should just be trying to make the audience laugh, too… That was the best version of me at the time. I felt like you knew I was smart, so I wasn’t trying to prove it to you. I could be the best version of myself.”
While Wright knows he is not a traditional broadcaster, he mentioned to Cowherd that there is one skill set he definitely knows he has.
“The point is I’m not a great broadcaster, like a traditional broadcaster. I can’t read off a teleprompter, but there is a specific thing I can do, which is confidently argue, whether it’s 1-on-1 with my wife or in front of a million people.”
Even though Wright got cut from doing play-by-play at Syracuse, he told Cowherd he was doing talk shows at the station still and it led him to where he is today.
“I was fortunate that I was already working on the talk-show staff. Growing up, I thought I wanted to do play-by-play, but what I wanted to do was color commentary. I would watch the NBA on NBC with Bob Costas, Bill Walton, and Steve ‘Snapper’ Jones and what I wanted to do was the color, but I didn’t realize you can’t do that unless you are a former player or a former coach. They aren’t hiring me to do commentary
“I was crushed, but it made me fully pivot to talk shows. Now at WAER, the talk show studio is named after me and my picture is on the wall. I am a Hall of Famer there. Bob Costas, Marv Albert, Nick Wright, those are the three studios there.”

Ricky Keeler is a reporter for BSM with a primary focus on sports media podcasts and national personalities. He is also an active podcaster with an interest in pursuing a career in sports media. You can find him on Twitter @Rickinator555 or reach him by email at RickJKeeler@gmail.com.
Sports TV News
Outside the Lines Won’t Return to ESPN Weekend Schedule
The show, which debuted in 1990, aired as a daily show from 2003 to 2019 and aired a Sunday-edition from 2000 to 2017.

Published
2 days agoon
February 3, 2023By
BSM Staff
ESPN has decided to not return Outside the Lines to its weekend lineup, ending the show’s linear television run.
A report from John Ourand of Sports Business Journal claims ESPN told OTL staffers that the show wouldn’t return to the network after the Super Bowl.
The show, which debuted in 1990, aired as a daily show from 2003 to 2019 and aired a Sunday-edition from 2000 to 2017. Outside the Lines was often regarded as the “moral compass” of ESPN, and was often the source of some of the more investigative reporting employed by the network.
Outside the Lines — which was airing at 9:00 AM on Saturday mornings — averaged 303,000 viewers in the timeslot. Meanwhile, SportsCenter: AM has seen an average audience of 572,000 in the same window.
The Outside the Lines brand will continue being utilized during the Noon ET SportsCenter, as well as ESPN digital platforms, including the network’s YouTube page.
Jeremy Schaap will continue to host the Outside the Lines segments during SportsCenter, but will also be the host of a new iteration of The Sports Reporters that will air on ESPN’s YouTube channel. Schaap’s father, Dick, was the host of the ESPN Sunday morning program from 1988 until his death in 2001. The show aired on ESPN from 1988 to 2017.
Sports TV News
CBS: Calling Meeting With Tony Romo ‘Intervention’ is ‘Complete Mischaracterization’
“We meet regularly with our on-air talent.”

Published
2 days agoon
February 3, 2023By
BSM Staff
An opening question in broadcasting circles is ‘What happened to Tony Romo?’, with even CBS reportedly pondering the issue.
During The Marchand and Ourand Sports Media Podcast earlier this week, The New York Post’s Andrew Marchand claimed CBS attempted “an intervention” with its lead NFL analyst.
The intended mission of several alleged meetings with CBS Sports Chairman Sean McManus and CBS NFL producer Jim Rikhoff was to return Romo to his previous heights, which were widely regarded as the best NFL analyst in the business.
CBS Sports has responded to the insinuation that the meetings would be classified as an “intervention” with a strong denial.
“To call this an intervention is a complete mischaracterization, we meet regularly with our on-air talent,” CBS Sports spokeswoman Jen Sabatelle told Marchand.
Marchand added that CBS Sports officials plan to attempt to rectify the issues it sees with Romo again this offseason. Romo — who signed a 10-year, $180 million contract with CBS Sports in 2020 — is slated to call Super Bowl LVIII in 2024 with Jim Nantz.