Posts tagged BuzzBissinger at FanHouse - AOL Sports Blog

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Stuart Scott's Take on Blogs: 'Whatever'

On the day A.J. Daulerio was named Deadspin editor last week, I asked him about a post he wrote at the Super Bowl a year and a half ago in which he described what he read while looking over Stuart Scott's shoulder as Scott sent a text message.

Daulerio said that while he's never heard from Scott about that post, "I heard he was upset, and rightfully so."

However, Scott talked to Dan Steinberg of the D.C. Sports Bog yesterday, and while Scott said he never reads blogs, he also didn't have anything negative to say about them. Steinberg writes:
I told Scott that A.J. Daulerio, his foil from Super Bowls past, had been named Deadspin editor. Scott wasn't immediately familiar with the name. "Whatever," he said, when I explained who he was. "If that's what he wants to do with his life...."
I can't say I'm a big Scott fan, but he comes across in Steinberg's interview as though he's a reasonable guy in his approach to blogs, not a ranting lunatic. Scott's no Buzz Bissinger.

Buzz Bissinger: Friday Night Lights Proves How Serious Sports Is in Our Culture

We've talked a lot about the journalist and Friday Night Lights author Buzz Bissinger in these parts the last couple of months, and for the most part it's been to say that his anti-blog rants are stupid and unbecoming of such an accomplished writer.

But in his long Q&A with Will Leitch at Deadspin, Bissinger made one point that's worth considering. After Leitch said he doesn't think sports should be treated with seriousness, Bissinger said:
We just disagree on a lot of fundamental things. Obviously, the biggest is that sports should not be treated with seriousness. I think Friday Night Lights proves the point of just how serious sports is in our culture. I think the point you do make, that there are too many articles in the print media that are cliched melodramatic tearjearkers that we have read a million times before, is well-taken. I don't like bloggers in general, but too many sportswriters just never get up off their butts and truly delve into subjects. And what comes out is tired autopilot journalese.
Friday Night Lights is a serious exploration of the impact that sports have on one town, and it's the best exploration of high school sports I've ever read. There's a place for sites like Deadspin that don't take sports seriously, but that doesn't mean no one should take sports seriously.

Sports Blogs Would Make Thomas Jefferson Want to Repeal First Amendment, Buzz Says

Take a look, on the right, at Thomas Jefferson's wistful countenance. Can't you just picture him thinking, "If I had known what sports blogs would be like, I never would have supported the First Amendment"?

Buzz Bissinger can. The latest stop on his tour of media appearances to explain his hatred of sports blogs is an article in The Boston Phoenix.

Will Leitch Leaves for New York Magazine, but He'd Like to Be Deadspin's Tom Brokaw


Will Leitch
has spent the last three years as the web's most influential sports blogger, and now he's joining the dreaded mainstream media.

New York Magazine is about to become his home, but before he leaves sports blogs behind, he agreed to talk to me for an interview in which we didn't discuss Buzz Bissinger (other than him assuring me that he had been talking to New York before the Bissinger blowup -- "it's not like they thought, Oh, that guy was on a TV show, let's get him'") but did discuss Deadspin's past and its future.

What will Deadspin look like post-Leitch? He told me, "I guarantee you, Deadspin is going to be considerably larger in a year than it is now." A full Q&A is below.

Buzz Bissinger and Nik Richie Get on Air Together and Somehow Nothing Explodes

You would think that Buzz Bissinger and Nik Richie (theDirty.com, not pictured) ending up on the same radio program, Bill Littlefield's outstanding Only a Game on NPR, would result in the world's first airwave strangulation. Surprisingly, the short interview went pretty well.

There were only a few seconds of real tension in the interview (about 4:24) when Richie attempted to point out the Dirty's "Gossip Disclaimer" as it related to his accusations of Kobe Bryant's infidelity, and the Bissinger starts to go off and mentions "Leitch" again.

But more to the point, since America is clearly tired of talking about Buzz, what really stood out for me was a disturbing statement that Richie made relating to blogger stereotypes.
I'm not really an investigative journalist. I'm just a blogger.
That is a problematic statement. First of all, again, blogging is a medium. "Being a blogger" does not necessarily force one to be a sarcastic gossip/rumor monger. Nor does it preclude one from actually being an investigative journalist.

Richie can say "my blog doesn't deal with journalism" and I would be fine with that, but to perpetuate the stereotype that bloggers do not care about actually being journalists simply because "they blog" is a silly, outdated copout. It is also the primary reason why -- dying medium aside -- newspaper writers dislike bloggers.

I'm not asking Nik Richie to stop doing what he is doing. Blogs and journalism do not have to go hand in hand. But just don't use the "Hey man, I'm just a blogger!" line. Blogs really aren't -- as Buzz pointed out -- "as counterculture as you think", and embracing the anti-journalism stereotype certainly will not help dissipate the notion that a certain medium lacks standards or reasonable perspectives on sports and society.

Jim Nantz Calls Blogs 'Usually So Vile and Vicious ... I Really Appreciated Buzz Bissinger'

Add CBS broadcaster Jim Nantz to the legions of mainstream media members who don't like blogs.

Asked in an interview with Dan Fleschner if he saw Buzz Bissinger's infamous anti-blog screed, Nantz said that he read about it, and added:
I have to admit, I'm so far out of the loop on the blogosphere, I really don't partake in that. I know that it's got a huge following. On the few occasions that I have gone or been introduced to it and checked out what's been written, maybe about my world, it's usually so vile and vicious that I shut it down after a minute or two. ...

I really appreciated Buzz Bissinger -- I read he was a little ashamed of his level of anger -- but I completely understood where he was coming from.

Nantz doesn't say which blogs he finds to be vile and vicious, but I would bet that if he read more blogs, and stopped and thought about it a little bit, he would realize that there's nothing inherently vile and vicious about blogs, and that there's plenty of vile and vicious stuff on CBS. There is good content and bad on blogs, just as there is good content and bad on network television.

Buzz Bissinger Doesn't Get Why 'People Seize on the Fact That I Used Profanity'


This might seem surprising given all that I've written about him in the last two weeks, but I admire Buzz Bissinger. Friday Night Lights, which I read in high school, is one of the reasons I wanted to become a sports writer.

And I admire the fact that he's given some fairly introspective interviews since his anti-blog rant made him the subject of great derision. But I also read some of the things he says in those interviews and think he still doesn't get it. Take this, for instance, from Vanity Fair:
I was a little bit surprised that people were so indignant about the use of profanity on a network that basically invented the use of the word "c---" as a noun, adjective, verb, and adverb through the show Deadwood. I mean-we were on HBO, were we not? It seemed to me that, when convenient, people seize on the fact that I used profanity.
Those of us who object to Bissinger's use of profanity in addressing Deadspin editor Will Leitch aren't prudes. I use and hear profanity in daily conversation and it doesn't offend me. Many of my favorite movies and TV shows use profanity and it doesn't offend me.

What offends me is that Bissinger used profanity in place of rational argument, that he used profanity to attack someone, and that he used profanity while decrying the coarseness of blogs. Bissinger seems to understand that elsewhere in the interview, when he says, "I should not have used that invective and profanity." But when he then follows it up by saying he's surprised by the reaction to his profanity, you realize that he still doesn't quite understand why so many people reacted so negatively to his comments.

Leonard Shapiro Agrees With Buzz Bissinger, Says Blogs Entitled to 'Uninformed Opinions'

Washington Post columnist Leonard Shapiro is the latest member of the sports journalism establishment to announce that he agrees with the basic thrust -- if not the profane tone -- of Buzz Bissinger's anti-blog rant last week.

Shapiro writes in his most recent column that he agrees with Bissinger that "Some of the sports blogs, with Deadspin at the very top of the list, have gone way out of bounds on the common decency meter." And then after Shapiro gets through his first round of bashing bloggers, he includes this, which I guess is supposed to make him look fair-minded:
And none of the above is even remotely meant to suggest that blogs ought to be banned. On the contrary, bloggers are certainly entitled to their often uninformed opinions, sometimes based solely on information gathered by the working press with far more access, sources and scruples than most of them.

Jason Whitlock on Sports Blogs: 'Lips Will Get Removed From Asses at Some Point'

It all started a week ago Tuesday. Pulitzer-prize winning author Buzz Bissinger ambushed Deadspin's Will Leitch on Costas Now; the blogosphere was predictably incensed in the minutes, hours, and days that followed; and finally, the mainstream media weighed in on the blogosphere weighing in on the whole mess.

By Internet standards, Kansas City Star columnist and FOXSports.com contributor Jason Whitlock was late to the discussion -- his column went up Thursday night, some 48 hours after the spectacle in question -- but he was the only member of the media to raise questions about Leitch, the blogger, referencing a bizarre NPR interview from earlier this year.

Leitch offered a thoughtful response to Whitlock's column on Monday, and he spoke to FanHouse about it a day later. Next up: Whitlock, naturally.

Whitlock admits to liking blogs, but understands that "bloggers are no different from writers or journalists. There are good ones and bad ones, fair and unfair ones, moderately accurate and horribly inaccurate ones. None is infallible," something lost on Bissinger until his recent mea culpa tour.

In the quick interview that follows, Whitlock looks at the present and future of the sports blogosphere.

More Houston Texans Draft News for Those Disappointed in the Houston Chronicle


One of the reasons why I started blogging is that I couldn't find enough in depth information about my favorite team, the Houston Texans. Since they are such a new team, if information wasn't on their website or in the Houston Chronicle, it likely didn't exist.

Well, with minor apologies to Buzz Bissinger, thank goodness for sports blogs. I want to point out in particular the fabu work that Solis has done at the BattleRedBlog about the 2008 Texans draft class. Check out these posts in particular:

"Super Steve Slaton" - Explains why this running back may be the perfect one cut and go back for the Texans zone blocking scheme.

"Steve Slaton: An Insider's Perspective" - A must read interview for Texans fans from with West Virginia's Director of New Media, John Antonik.
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