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Author Topic: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman  (Read 3005 times)

CrackedSidewalksSays

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[Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« on: February 12, 2009, 10:15:03 AM »
Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman

Written by: noreply@blogger.com (Rob Lowe)

We've not discussed the distracting and useless ESPN Interactive Tuesday feature from the Villanova game, but I can't stop thinking about what a disgrace it was and how much it detracted from what should have been an enjoyable game to watch.

Finally, I had enough. Below is a letter I sent to ESPN's Ombudsman, Le Ann Schreiber addressing the Worldwide Leader's vacuous and unseemly attempt to engage fans.  I'm not naive enough to believe my single voice can get through to ESPN, but I do realize that my opinion is not a solitary one.

If you are not aware of the absurdity, I invite you to check out Yet Another Basketball Blog for his commentary on ESPN Interactive Tuesday as well.  Bratwurst, hands down.  And notice what deadspin managed to pick up.  There's also more Internet hate for the idea here at Awful Announcing.  Not surprisingly, the MU community thinks it's crap too.

If you were also annoyed by this gimmick, you can provide your own feedback to the Ombudsman by following this link.

====
Ms. Schreiber,

Quote
“Look, mister, there's... two kinds of dumb, uh... guy that gets naked and runs out in the snow and barks at the moon, and, uh, guy who does the same thing in my living room. First one don't matter, the second one you're kinda forced to deal with.”
--Hoosiers

I think that your columns are honest and insightful, and I make a point of reading your opinions.

Two nights ago I had the misfortune of watching Marquette lose 102-84 at Villanova.  This game was broadcast on 2/1 at 7:30 ET on ESPN2.

Compounding this loss was that the game was “ESPN Interactive Tuesday”.  This version of the broadcast treated viewers to a scrolling text bar across the top with viewer submissions, interactive polls, and even video commentary.

There was one legitimate poll “which player should be BE POY”.  There was poll that demonstrated a complete lack of understanding for the history of both programs, “Was Villanova ’85 or Marquette ’77 the better Cinderella story?” which ignores that Marquette was arguably the second most successful program of the 70’s.  There were even inane polls, such as “which coach is the best dressed?” or “bratwurst or cheese steak?”

However, during the entire broadcast of the game, viewers were forced to see what different text submissions thought of the game.  As put elsewhere, these submissions added neither insight nor humor to the game.  It was a constant stream of sophomoric and irrelevant commentary from people I don’t care about.  At best, they provided absurdity to the broadcast.  At worst, the scrolling text was insulting to the viewing audience.  My only recourse was to actively ignore the comments floating across the screen.

In summary, “ESPN Interactive Tuesday” significantly detracted from the game.  I hope to never watch another “ESPN Interactive game” in my life.

I respect and appreciate the desire of a company to experiment with different approaches to broadcasts.  However, any company that experiments must recognize feedback.  When your best outcome is absurdity, this is a failure.

Regards,

Rob Lowe

http://www.crackedsidewalks.com/2009/02/letter-to-espns-ombudsman.html

DoubleMU0609

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #1 on: February 12, 2009, 11:47:17 AM »
Rob,
Do you mind if we all copy / paste your letter and send it in as our own?  Get as many responses as we can to get some results.

Henry Sugar

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #2 on: February 12, 2009, 11:58:41 AM »
feel free
A warrior is an empowered and compassionate protector of others.

AlumKCof93

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #3 on: February 12, 2009, 01:45:15 PM »
Here's my post to Ms. Schrieber (whom I think is leaving ESPN shortly),

Ms. Schreiber,
While I love the service that ESPN provides, I often find myself upset at the way in which ESPN provides its services.  Its flagrant East Coast bias, its constant self-promotion, the sponsorship of everything, Len Elmore - all of these things bother me tremendously.  Due to this, I've enjoyed reading your columns addressing these concerns, thouogh I think one on Len Elmore is overdue.
That said, I've never been compelled to write on these matters until now.  The "interactive script" that ESPN used during the Feb 9th broadcast of Marquette-Villanova basketball game was an unforgivable.  It only served to distract attention away from a very entertaining game by providing innane comments from anonymous posters that provided no insight into the game.  It was unnecessary and sophomoric.  And with the scroll bar at the bottom of the screen, which is worthy of another email as well (reading Jeter say that he won't comment on AROD isn't newsworthy and certainly not necessary to be repeated every 30 seconds) only reduces the viewing of the game.

I appreciate the ability to provide feedback on this gimmick.  Thank you for your time.
"Yes, Dinnertime!  The perfect break between work and drunk" - Homer J. Simpson

detroitwarrior

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #4 on: February 12, 2009, 01:46:21 PM »
Nice work. The only useful poll question would have been "What size is the bra of Erin Andrews? ".
Once a warrior always a warrior.

Henry Sugar

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #5 on: February 12, 2009, 02:30:02 PM »
deleted
A warrior is an empowered and compassionate protector of others.

MU_4_Life

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #6 on: February 12, 2009, 05:29:19 PM »
And with the scroll bar at the bottom of the screen, which is worthy of another email as well (reading Jeter say that he won't comment on AROD isn't newsworthy and certainly not necessary to be repeated every 30 seconds) only reduces the viewing of the game.


Thats one thing that has always bothered me is the repeating 'news' feed at the bottom of the screen, especially on a slow news night.  After a two hour game the repeating text is almost burned into my brain.

I just love the fact that Jeter is not making a comment is the top news story.  The top news story is someone is not saying anything?  ESPN has to get over the fact that there are people out there who do not care that much the Yankees.

CrackedSidewalksSays

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[Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #7 on: February 12, 2009, 06:30:04 PM »
Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman

Written by: noreply@blogger.com (Rob Lowe)

UPDATE:  Got a response from ESPN

I got a response from the assistant to the ESPN Ombudsman.  While it may be a form letter, I think the good news story is that multiple emails sent to the Ombudsman receive special attention (see below in bold).  If you also had an issue with "ESPN Tuesday Interactive", take a few minutes to let Le Ann Schreiber know.  The original post is below the email.
Quote
I cannot respond personally to all the mail I receive, but  I do read and take note of all complaints.  When the complaints are specific to a show or to an article on espn.com, I forward them to the producer or editor in charge of that content. When there are several complaints on the same topic,  I do a weekly tabulation that becomes part of a report sent to all of ESPN's top management.  (I do the same for positive comments.) I cannot assure you that your complaints or mine will result in action, but I can assure you they are not lost in some cyberspace void.  They are read, thought about, disseminated.[/i]
[/i]Thank you,[/i]
[/i]Le Anne Schreiber[/i]
[/i]====

We've not discussed the distracting and useless ESPN Interactive Tuesday feature from the Villanova game, but I can't stop thinking about what a disgrace it was and how much it detracted from what should have been an enjoyable game to watch.

Finally, I had enough. Below is a letter I sent to ESPN's Ombudsman, Le Ann Schreiber addressing the Worldwide Leader's vacuous and unseemly attempt to engage fans.  I'm not naive enough to believe my single voice can get through to ESPN, but I do realize that my opinion is not a solitary one.

If you are not aware of the absurdity, I invite you to check out Yet Another Basketball Blog for his commentary on ESPN Interactive Tuesday as well.  Bratwurst, hands down.  And notice what deadspin managed to pick up.  There's also more Internet hate for the idea here at Awful Announcing.  Not surprisingly, the MU community thinks it's crap too.  Now, even Villanova bloggers such as Villanova by the Numbers are saying Interactive Tuesday?  No Thanks.

If you were also annoyed by this gimmick, you can provide your own feedback to the Ombudsman by following this link.

====
Ms. Schreiber,
Quote
“Look, mister, there's... two kinds of dumb, uh... guy that gets naked and runs out in the snow and barks at the moon, and, uh, guy who does the same thing in my living room. First one don't matter, the second one you're kinda forced to deal with.”
--Hoosiers

I think that your columns are honest and insightful, and I make a point of reading your opinions.

Two nights ago I had the misfortune of watching Marquette lose 102-84 at Villanova.  This game was broadcast on 2/1 at 7:30 ET on ESPN2.

Compounding this loss was that the game was “ESPN Interactive Tuesday”.  This version of the broadcast treated viewers to a scrolling text bar across the top with viewer submissions, interactive polls, and even video commentary.

There was one legitimate poll “which player should be BE POY”.  There was poll that demonstrated a complete lack of understanding for the history of both programs, “Was Villanova ’85 or Marquette ’77 the better Cinderella story?” which ignores that Marquette was arguably the second most successful program of the 70’s.  There were even inane polls, such as “which coach is the best dressed?” or “bratwurst or cheese steak?”

However, during the entire broadcast of the game, viewers were forced to see what different text submissions thought of the game.  As put elsewhere, these submissions added neither insight nor humor to the game.  It was a constant stream of sophomoric and irrelevant commentary from people I don’t care about.  At best, they provided absurdity to the broadcast.  At worst, the scrolling text was insulting to the viewing audience.  My only recourse was to actively ignore the comments floating across the screen.

In summary, “ESPN Interactive Tuesday” significantly detracted from the game.  I hope to never watch another “ESPN Interactive game” in my life.

I respect and appreciate the desire of a company to experiment with different approaches to broadcasts.  However, any company that experiments must recognize feedback.  When your best outcome is absurdity, this is a failure.

Regards,

Rob Lowe
====

http://www.crackedsidewalks.com/2009/02/letter-to-espns-ombudsman.html

4everwarriors

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #8 on: February 12, 2009, 10:25:22 PM »
Nice work. The only useful poll question would have been "What size is the bra of Erin Andrews? ".


EAT has assured me she doesn't need and/or wear a bra. Those puppies stand on their own merit.
"Give 'Em Hell, Al"

AlumKCof93

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks] Letter to ESPN's Ombudsman
« Reply #9 on: February 16, 2009, 03:41:59 PM »
F/U - Response from the ESPN Ombudsman on the Interactive Scroll . . .

"I have been remiss in not using this column to relay to ESPN the unanimous dislike my correspondents have expressed for a certain Interactive Tuesday feature employed during college football and basketball games. They have called the top screen scrolls of text messages from viewers silly, bothersome, worthless and "the dumbest, most distracting gimmick I've ever been subjected to." After the Feb. 10 Marquette-Villanova game, fed-up fans of both teams mounted a write-the-ombudsman campaign that outweighed, by far, any mail I received about the A-Rod coverage. Thanks for the feedback, but you can stop now. You have been heard, loud and clear."

Good work MU and Nova fans.  Hopefully, we'll never see this interactive thing again.  Can we start the same write-the-ombudsman campaign on Len Elmore now?
"Yes, Dinnertime!  The perfect break between work and drunk" - Homer J. Simpson

 

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