The Sports Reporters

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The Sports Reporters
Genre sports talk/ debate
Starring John Saunders with various personalities
Country of origin Flag of United States United States
Production
Running time 30 min.
Broadcast
Original channel ESPN (1988-)
Original run 1988 – Present

The Sports Reporters is a sports talk show that airs on ESPN at 10 a.m. ET every Sunday morning (and replayed at 12:30 p.m. ET the same day on ESPNEWS). It is broadcast in New York City, New York at the ESPN Zone. The format of the show is a roundtable discussion among four sports media personalities, with one regular host and three rotating guests.

Contents

[edit] Hosts and panelists

The show was originally hosted by Gary Thorne and later Dick Schaap. The host of the show since the death of Schaap is John Saunders. Regular panelists include Mike Lupica of the New York Daily News, Mitch Albom of the Detroit Free Press, Michael Wilbon of the Washington Post, Bob Ryan of the Boston Globe, Stephen A. Smith of Quite Frankly with Stephen A. Smith and formerly Jason Whitlock of the Kansas City Star. No women are regular panelists on the show, but in celebration of Title IX one show in 2005 included three female sports journalists.

[edit] Format

The majority of the show is discussion of issues posed by the host. The subjects vary from predictions for upcoming events to on- or off-the-field controversies, and the discussions occasionally get heated. The hallmark of the show is the final segment, Parting Shots, in which each of the four panelists delivers a short monologue. The Parting Shots are often a time for the journalists to address a subject that they think is not being sufficiently covered. They are frequently humorous, and usually intended to be thought-provoking.

[edit] Lupica/Whitlock Controversy

However, after the announcement, Whitlock was interviewed by sports blog The Big Lead[1], and in that interview, he disparaged two of his ESPN colleagues. Whitlock labeled Mike Lupica "an insecure, mean-spirited busybody", and referred to Robert "Scoop" Jackson as a "clown", saying that "the publishing of [Jackson's] fake ghetto posturing is an insult to black intelligence." Jackson, like Whitlock, is African-American.

After those comments were made public, Whitlock went noticeably absent from any ESPN television work. He soon announced to The Kansas City Star readers in September 2006 that he was fired altogether from ESPN as a result of his remarks; he wrote that the company doesn't tolerate criticism and acted as they saw fit [2]. After being fired from ESPN, Whitlock was quickly hired as a columnist for AOL Sports; Whitlock's first AOL Sports column was published September 29, 2006.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://thebiglead.com/?p=1038
  2. ^ Whitlock, Jason. Freedom to speak has price Kansas City Star, 24 September 2006 (Retrieved 27 November 2006).

[edit] External links

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