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.
We've talked a lot about the journalist and Friday Night Lights author
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"?
You would think that
Add CBS broadcaster 
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
It all started a week ago Tuesday. Pulitzer-prize winning author 