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Despite the increasing number of popular and celebrated sports
documentaries in contemporary culture, such as ESPN's 30 for 30
series, there has been little scholarly engagement with this genre.
Sports documentaries, like all films, do not merely showcase
objective reality but rather construct specific versions of
sporting culture that serve distinct economic, industrial,
institutional, historical, and sociopolitical ends ripe for
criticism, contextualization, and exploration. Sporting Realities
brings together a diverse group of scholars to probe the sports
documentary's cultural meanings, aesthetic practices, industrial
and commercial dimensions, and political contours across
historical, social, medium-specific, and geographic contexts. It
considers and critiques the sports documentary's visible and
powerful position in contemporary culture and forges novel
connections between the study of nonfiction media and sport.
ABC Sports shaped how the world consumes sport. The American
Broadcasting Company's sports division is behind some of network
television's most significant practices, celebrated personalities,
and iconic moments. It created the weekend anthology Wide World of
Sports, transformed professional football into a prime-time
spectacle with Monday Night Football, fashioned the Olympics into a
mega media event, and even revolutionized TV news. Travis Vogan's
cultural and institutional history of ABC Sports examines the
development of network sports television in the United States and
the aesthetic, cultural, political, and industrial practices that
mark it. ABC Sports traces the storied division from its beginnings
through the internet age to reveal the changes it endured along
with the new sports media environment it spawned.
Despite the increasing number of popular and celebrated sports
documentaries in contemporary culture, such as ESPN’s 30 for 30
series, there has been little scholarly engagement with this genre.
Sports documentaries, like all films, do not merely showcase
objective reality but rather construct specific versions of
sporting culture that serve distinct economic, industrial,
institutional, historical, and sociopolitical ends ripe for
criticism, contextualization, and exploration. Sporting Realities
brings together a diverse group of scholars to probe the sports
documentary’s cultural meanings, aesthetic practices, industrial
and commercial dimensions, and political contours across
historical, social, medium-specific, and geographic contexts. It
considers and critiques the sports documentary’s visible and
powerful position in contemporary culture and forges novel
connections between the study of nonfiction media and sport.
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ABC Sports shaped how the world consumes sport. The American
Broadcasting Company's sports division is behind some of network
television's most significant practices, celebrated personalities,
and iconic moments. It created the weekend anthology Wide World of
Sports, transformed professional football into a prime-time
spectacle with Monday Night Football, fashioned the Olympics into a
mega media event, and even revolutionized TV news. Travis Vogan's
cultural and institutional history of ABC Sports examines the
development of network sports television in the United States and
the aesthetic, cultural, political, and industrial practices that
mark it. ABC Sports traces the storied division from its beginnings
through the internet age to reveal the changes it endured along
with the new sports media environment it spawned.
Once a shoestring operation built on plywood sets and Australian
rules football, ESPN has evolved into a media colossus. A genius
for cross-promotion and its near-mystical rapport with its viewers
empower the network to set agendas and create superstars, to curate
sports history even as it mainstreams the latest cultural trends.
Travis Vogan teams archival research and interviews with an
all-star cast to pen the definitive account of how ESPN turned X's
and O's into billions of $$$. Vogan's institutional and cultural
history focuses on the network since 1998, the year it launched a
high-motor effort to craft its brand and grow audiences across
media platforms. As he shows, innovative properties like
SportsCentury, ESPN The Magazine, and 30 for 30 built the network's
cultural cache. This credibility, in turn, propelled ESPN's
transformation into an entity that lapped its run-of-the-mill
competitors and helped fulfill its self-proclaimed status as the
"Worldwide Leader in Sports." Ambitious and long overdue, ESPN: The
Making of a Sports Media Empire offers an inside look at how the
network changed an industry and reshaped the very way we live as
sports fans.
Once a shoestring operation built on plywood sets and Australian
rules football, ESPN has evolved into a media colossus. A genius
for cross-promotion and its near-mystical rapport with its viewers
empower the network to set agendas and create superstars, to curate
sports history even as it mainstreams the latest cultural trends.
Travis Vogan teams archival research and interviews with an
all-star cast to pen the definitive account of how ESPN turned X's
and O's into billions of $$$. Vogan's institutional and cultural
history focuses on the network since 1998, the year it launched a
high-motor effort to craft its brand and grow audiences across
media platforms. As he shows, innovative properties like
SportsCentury, ESPN The Magazine, and 30 for 30 built the network's
cultural cache. This credibility, in turn, propelled ESPN's
transformation into an entity that lapped its run-of-the-mill
competitors and helped fulfill its self-proclaimed status as the
"Worldwide Leader in Sports." Ambitious and long overdue, ESPN: The
Making of a Sports Media Empire offers an inside look at how the
network changed an industry and reshaped the very way we live as
sports fans.
NFL Films changed the way Americans view football. "Keepers of the
Flame: NFL Films and the Rise of Sports Media" traces the
subsidiary's development from a small independent film production
company to the marketing machine that "Sports Illustrated" named
"perhaps the most effective propaganda organ in the history of
corporate America."
Drawing on research at the NFL Films Archive and the Pro Football
Hall of Fame and interviews with media pioneer Steve Sabol and
others, Travis Vogan shows how NFL Films has constructed a
consistent, romanticized, and remarkably visible mythology for the
National Football League. The company packages football as a
visceral and dramatic sequence of violent, beautiful, graceful, and
heroic gridiron battles. Historically proven formulas for
presentation--such as the dramatic voiceovers once provided by John
Facenda's baritone, the soaring scores of Sam Spence's rousing
background music, and the epic poetry found in Steve Sabol's
scripts--are still used today.
From the Vincent Price-narrated "Strange but True Football
Stories" to the currently running series" Hard Knocks," NFL Films
distinguishes the NFL from other sports organizations and from
other media and entertainment. Vogan tells the larger story of the
company's relationship with and vast influence on our culture's
representations of sport, the expansion of sports television beyond
live game broadcasts, and the emergence of cable television and
Internet sports media.
"Keepers of the Flame: NFL Films and the Rise of Sports Media
"presents sports media as an integral facet of American popular
culture and NFL Films as key to the transformation of professional
football into the national obsession commonly known as America's
Game.
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