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ESPN has grown from a start-up cable network in a small Connecticut
town to a $50 billion global enterprise. For the past 35 years,
ESPN - along with its sister networks - has been the preeminent
source for sports for millions around the globe. Its 24-hour
coverage of sports news and programming has cultivated generations
of sports consumers, utilizing multiple ESPN platforms for news and
entertainment. The pervasiveness of the company's branded content
has influenced how sports fans think and feel about the people who
play and control these games. In The ESPN Effect, leading sports
media scholars examine ESPN and its impact on culture, sports
journalism, audience, and the business of sports media. The final
part of the book considers the future of ESPN, beginning with an
interview with Chris LaPlaca, ESPN senior vice president. As the
first academic text dedicated to the self-proclaimed "worldwide
leader in sports", this book contributes to the growth of sports
media research and provides a starting point for scholars examining
the present and future impact of ESPN.
ESPN has grown from a start-up cable network in a small Connecticut
town to a $50 billion global enterprise. For the past 35 years,
ESPN - along with its sister networks - has been the preeminent
source for sports for millions around the globe. Its 24-hour
coverage of sports news and programming has cultivated generations
of sports consumers, utilizing multiple ESPN platforms for news and
entertainment. The pervasiveness of the company's branded content
has influenced how sports fans think and feel about the people who
play and control these games. In The ESPN Effect, leading sports
media scholars examine ESPN and its impact on culture, sports
journalism, audience, and the business of sports media. The final
part of the book considers the future of ESPN, beginning with an
interview with Chris LaPlaca, ESPN senior vice president. As the
first academic text dedicated to the self-proclaimed "worldwide
leader in sports", this book contributes to the growth of sports
media research and provides a starting point for scholars examining
the present and future impact of ESPN.
ESPN and the Changing Sports Media Landscape considers the ways the
network is reinventing itself as it enters its fifth decade. In
their previous book, The ESPN Effect (2015), the editors made the
observation that ESPN was a pervasive branded-content provider
across multiple media platforms, delivering programs and
information 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, to influence how
sports fans think and feel about the people who play and control
these games. ESPN and the Changing Sports Media Landscape asks
whether that will hold true in the 2020s and beyond. The past
decade has seen momentous changes in the sports media landscape,
among them the massive proliferation of mobile platforms as a major
source of sports content, astronomical growth in fantasy sport and
esport industries, and the increasing entanglement of sports media
in contentious sociopolitical debates. The contributors to this
book analyze how ESPN has navigated the shifting playing field and
speculate on what the next decade might bring for ESPN and the
global sports media industry.
ESPN and the Changing Sports Media Landscape considers the ways the
network is reinventing itself as it enters its fifth decade. In
their previous book, The ESPN Effect (2015), the editors made the
observation that ESPN was a pervasive branded-content provider
across multiple media platforms, delivering programs and
information 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, to influence how
sports fans think and feel about the people who play and control
these games. ESPN and the Changing Sports Media Landscape asks
whether that will hold true in the 2020s and beyond. The past
decade has seen momentous changes in the sports media landscape,
among them the massive proliferation of mobile platforms as a major
source of sports content, astronomical growth in fantasy sport and
esport industries, and the increasing entanglement of sports media
in contentious sociopolitical debates. The contributors to this
book analyze how ESPN has navigated the shifting playing field and
speculate on what the next decade might bring for ESPN and the
global sports media industry.
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