Q&A: Does anybody else see a problem with there being more stats, reports, and graphs on ESPN then the real news?
Question by Tim: Does anybody else see a problem with there being more stats, reports, and graphs on ESPN then the real news?
I know exactly how much money A-Rod is getting paid over the next four years, right down to the penny. But I have no idea how much my taxes will go up if Hillary or Obama gets elected. I don’t know what my taxes are being spent on, but I know how far over the salary cap the Knicks are. Doesn’t seem to make sense, does it?
Best answer:
Answer by delina_m
Goes to tell what people are really interested on knowing.
Add your own answer in the comments!
Categories: News Forecast Tags: anybody, Being, else, Espn, graphs, more, news, Problem, Real, reports, Stats, there
Q&A: Why doesn’t ESPN report news about WWE or TNA?
Question by I am Cyber Sapien {*_*}: Why doesn’t ESPN report news about WWE or TNA?
I think they should since they bring in new about all sports. They ever proclaim they are the ”worldwide leader in sports”.
Best answer:
Answer by Atribecalledrich
the “Worldwide leader in SPORTS” not “Sports Entertainment”
hey at least the Coach has a serious job with them
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
WHAT CHANNEL IS ESPN NEWS?
Question by : WHAT CHANNEL IS ESPN NEWS?
I need to know the soccer brackets!
What channel is ESPN News on COMCAST
Best answer:
Answer by 亚洲女孩 统治世界
Just go to ESPN.com.
Add your own answer in the comments!
Categories: News Forecast Tags: Channel, Espn, news
Cool ESPN News images
A few nice ESPN News images I found:
OWS/Zuccotti Park, Oct 2011 – 62

Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was published in an Oct 29, 2011 issue of Everyblock NYC zipcodes blog titled "10006."
**************************************
During the fall of 2011, various friends, business colleagues, and family members began asking me what I thought of the "Occupy Wall Street" (OWS) group of protesters who gathered in Zuccotti Park, and then marched in various parts of New York City to demonstrate their grievances. I responded that it was likely to be the same as their reaction, at least in the sense that my impressions were formed by whatever reports I saw in the newspapers or in television reports. Of course, you might have had a more personal, or "informed," opinion if you worked on Wall Street, or if you happened to be stuck on the Brooklyn Bridge when the protesters effectively shut things down for a few hours, or if you knew someone in the NYC Police Department that came into contact with the protesters.
But New York is a city of five different boroughs, sprawling out over several square miles — and the OWS protesters were camped out in a tiny "private park" in lower Manhattan, roughly a block from the American Stock Exchange, and a couple blocks from the nearly-completed 9-11 Memorial site. You don’t see or hear them on the Upper West Side, where I live; you don’t see them in Queens, Staten Island, or the Bronx; and I think it’s safe to say that the residents of Brooklyn only saw them if they were attempting to cross the Brooklyn Bridge at what turned out to be the wrong time on the wrong day.
But the protests have gone on, day after day, and week after week; and the media coverage has gradually increased. In mid-October of 2011, I was rather startled to read a news story indicating that OWS-related protests had taken place in 942 different cities and locations around the world. It may not have reached the level of the "Arab spring" uprisings that have brought down the governments of Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya (and probably a few more in the coming weeks and months), but it seems to be more potent and wide-spread than I had realized. So when the opportunity to visit Zuccotti Park arose, during my recent visit to see the 9-11 Memorial (which you can see in this Flickr set), I was happy to pursue it.
Before I offer my opinions about what I saw, I should mention that I come from the generation that marched for civil rights in the early- and mid-60s, and that marched against the Vietnam war in the late-60s and early-70s. I didn’t get arrested during any of those marches, and I didn’t burn any flags; but I have a distinct memory that almost all of those demonstrations and protests were large, and loud, and very passionate. Maybe it was just that I was relatively young at the time, and felt quite passionately about the issues of the day; but you can judge for yourself by looking at some of these old vintage-1969 photos from a Vietnam protest rally that took place in Bryant Park, behind the New York Public Library — as shown in this Flickr set.
As for the OWS protesters in Zuccotti Park: well, the whole thing seemed fairly small and subdued. If it is indeed the genesis of subsequent marches and protests in 942 cities, that’s pretty significant … but Zuccotti Park is less than half a square block in size, and the overall mood seemed much more like a mellow, low-key version of Woodstock than a loud, angry, passionate protest against the evils of Wall Street, or the corruption and political paralysis in Washington. It was certainly less loud, noisy, and passionate than the protests and demonstrations I’ve been reading about, and have watched from a safe distance, in places like Rome and Athens in recent months.
The folks in Zuccotti Park also struck me as the most media-friendly people I’ve ever seen. Indeed, I’ve never seen so many cameras, photographers, and videographers concentrated in one place. It seemed like almost everyone there was either posing for a photo, or taking someone’s photo, or being interviewed on-camera by someone. I didn’t see anyone from the major news channels — nobody from CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, Fox, or even ESPN — but I had a feeling that a lot of the photographers and videographers were freelance journalists collecting material they could feed to the cable-news channels, or other media-related clients.
I guess there’s nothing wrong with that … but I couldn’t help getting the impression that the protests, and the people camped out in Zuccotti Park, were more interested in the publicity and attention than the basic issues they were espousing. That may not be a fair judgment to make, but it was hard to escape that impression.
As for the political issues themselves … hmmm. Well, I understand and sympathize with the frustration that so many of the people who were directly responsible for the financial and economic catastrophies of the past few years have escaped any significant financial penalties or jail time. And I understand and completely sympathize with the frustration about the political dysfunction and paralysis that has gripped the country for the past several years. But I don’t have a good understanding of what the OWS folks really want to do in order to confront the problems they’ve identified and complained about. I know that, to a large extent, that’s a deliberate strategy on their part; but while I respect their right to operate in this fashion, it’s hard for me to know what it is I’m supposed to "support" with this group…
Anyway, I spent an hour or two in Zuccotti Park just wandering around, trying to get a feeling for what kind of people were there, what they were saying, what they cared about, and what they didn’t care about. I didn’t try to put any smart-aleck, humorous captions on each photo, because my own interpretation of a "scene" might have been wildly different than what they themselves were thinking or feeling. So I just took the pictures; you can decide for yourself what they mean…
OWS/Zuccotti Park, Oct 2011 – 05

Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was published in an Oct 26 2011 issue of Everyblock NYC zipcodes blog titled "10006."
**************************************
During the fall of 2011, various friends, business colleagues, and family members began asking me what I thought of the "Occupy Wall Street" (OWS) group of protesters who gathered in Zuccotti Park, and then marched in various parts of New York City to demonstrate their grievances. I responded that it was likely to be the same as their reaction, at least in the sense that my impressions were formed by whatever reports I saw in the newspapers or in television reports. Of course, you might have had a more personal, or "informed," opinion if you worked on Wall Street, or if you happened to be stuck on the Brooklyn Bridge when the protesters effectively shut things down for a few hours, or if you knew someone in the NYC Police Department that came into contact with the protesters.
But New York is a city of five different boroughs, sprawling out over several square miles — and the OWS protesters were camped out in a tiny "private park" in lower Manhattan, roughly a block from the American Stock Exchange, and a couple blocks from the nearly-completed 9-11 Memorial site. You don’t see or hear them on the Upper West Side, where I live; you don’t see them in Queens, Staten Island, or the Bronx; and I think it’s safe to say that the residents of Brooklyn only saw them if they were attempting to cross the Brooklyn Bridge at what turned out to be the wrong time on the wrong day.
But the protests have gone on, day after day, and week after week; and the media coverage has gradually increased. In mid-October of 2011, I was rather startled to read a news story indicating that OWS-related protests had taken place in 942 different cities and locations around the world. It may not have reached the level of the "Arab spring" uprisings that have brought down the governments of Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya (and probably a few more in the coming weeks and months), but it seems to be more potent and wide-spread than I had realized. So when the opportunity to visit Zuccotti Park arose, during my recent visit to see the 9-11 Memorial (which you can see in this Flickr set), I was happy to pursue it.
Before I offer my opinions about what I saw, I should mention that I come from the generation that marched for civil rights in the early- and mid-60s, and that marched against the Vietnam war in the late-60s and early-70s. I didn’t get arrested during any of those marches, and I didn’t burn any flags; but I have a distinct memory that almost all of those demonstrations and protests were large, and loud, and very passionate. Maybe it was just that I was relatively young at the time, and felt quite passionately about the issues of the day; but you can judge for yourself by looking at some of these old vintage-1969 photos from a Vietnam protest rally that took place in Bryant Park, behind the New York Public Library — as shown in this Flickr set.
As for the OWS protesters in Zuccotti Park: well, the whole thing seemed fairly small and subdued. If it is indeed the genesis of subsequent marches and protests in 942 cities, that’s pretty significant … but Zuccotti Park is less than half a square block in size, and the overall mood seemed much more like a mellow, low-key version of Woodstock than a loud, angry, passionate protest against the evils of Wall Street, or the corruption and political paralysis in Washington. It was certainly less loud, noisy, and passionate than the protests and demonstrations I’ve been reading about, and have watched from a safe distance, in places like Rome and Athens in recent months.
The folks in Zuccotti Park also struck me as the most media-friendly people I’ve ever seen. Indeed, I’ve never seen so many cameras, photographers, and videographers concentrated in one place. It seemed like almost everyone there was either posing for a photo, or taking someone’s photo, or being interviewed on-camera by someone. I didn’t see anyone from the major news channels — nobody from CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, Fox, or even ESPN — but I had a feeling that a lot of the photographers and videographers were freelance journalists collecting material they could feed to the cable-news channels, or other media-related clients.
I guess there’s nothing wrong with that … but I couldn’t help getting the impression that the protests, and the people camped out in Zuccotti Park, were more interested in the publicity and attention than the basic issues they were espousing. That may not be a fair judgment to make, but it was hard to escape that impression.
As for the political issues themselves … hmmm. Well, I understand and sympathize with the frustration that so many of the people who were directly responsible for the financial and economic catastrophies of the past few years have escaped any significant financial penalties or jail time. And I understand and completely sympathize with the frustration about the political dysfunction and paralysis that has gripped the country for the past several years. But I don’t have a good understanding of what the OWS folks really want to do in order to confront the problems they’ve identified and complained about. I know that, to a large extent, that’s a deliberate strategy on their part; but while I respect their right to operate in this fashion, it’s hard for me to know what it is I’m supposed to "support" with this group…
Anyway, I spent an hour or two in Zuccotti Park just wandering around, trying to get a feeling for what kind of people were there, what they were saying, what they cared about, and what they didn’t care about. I didn’t try to put any smart-aleck, humorous captions on each photo, because my own interpretation of a "scene" might have been wildly different than what they themselves were thinking or feeling. So I just took the pictures; you can decide for yourself what they mean…
Categories: News Forecast Tags: Cool, Espn, Images, news
ESPN NEWS Channel Question?
Question by magoo6: ESPN NEWS Channel Question?
Time Warner Cable Ny, NY
What station is the new ESPN NEWS HD- Regular espn news is 172
Best answer:
Answer by DEGA4LIFE20_BACK FROM THE DEAD
huh it depend’s were u live
Give your answer to this question below!
Categories: News Forecast Tags: Channel, Espn, news, question
Nice ESPN News photos
Check out these ESPN News images:
OWS/Zuccotti Park, Oct 2011 – 10

Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was published in an Oct 26 2011 issue of Everyblock NYC zipcodes blog titled "10006."
**************************************
During the fall of 2011, various friends, business colleagues, and family members began asking me what I thought of the "Occupy Wall Street" (OWS) group of protesters who gathered in Zuccotti Park, and then marched in various parts of New York City to demonstrate their grievances. I responded that it was likely to be the same as their reaction, at least in the sense that my impressions were formed by whatever reports I saw in the newspapers or in television reports. Of course, you might have had a more personal, or "informed," opinion if you worked on Wall Street, or if you happened to be stuck on the Brooklyn Bridge when the protesters effectively shut things down for a few hours, or if you knew someone in the NYC Police Department that came into contact with the protesters.
But New York is a city of five different boroughs, sprawling out over several square miles — and the OWS protesters were camped out in a tiny "private park" in lower Manhattan, roughly a block from the American Stock Exchange, and a couple blocks from the nearly-completed 9-11 Memorial site. You don’t see or hear them on the Upper West Side, where I live; you don’t see them in Queens, Staten Island, or the Bronx; and I think it’s safe to say that the residents of Brooklyn only saw them if they were attempting to cross the Brooklyn Bridge at what turned out to be the wrong time on the wrong day.
But the protests have gone on, day after day, and week after week; and the media coverage has gradually increased. In mid-October of 2011, I was rather startled to read a news story indicating that OWS-related protests had taken place in 942 different cities and locations around the world. It may not have reached the level of the "Arab spring" uprisings that have brought down the governments of Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya (and probably a few more in the coming weeks and months), but it seems to be more potent and wide-spread than I had realized. So when the opportunity to visit Zuccotti Park arose, during my recent visit to see the 9-11 Memorial (which you can see in this Flickr set), I was happy to pursue it.
Before I offer my opinions about what I saw, I should mention that I come from the generation that marched for civil rights in the early- and mid-60s, and that marched against the Vietnam war in the late-60s and early-70s. I didn’t get arrested during any of those marches, and I didn’t burn any flags; but I have a distinct memory that almost all of those demonstrations and protests were large, and loud, and very passionate. Maybe it was just that I was relatively young at the time, and felt quite passionately about the issues of the day; but you can judge for yourself by looking at some of these old vintage-1969 photos from a Vietnam protest rally that took place in Bryant Park, behind the New York Public Library — as shown in this Flickr set.
As for the OWS protesters in Zuccotti Park: well, the whole thing seemed fairly small and subdued. If it is indeed the genesis of subsequent marches and protests in 942 cities, that’s pretty significant … but Zuccotti Park is less than half a square block in size, and the overall mood seemed much more like a mellow, low-key version of Woodstock than a loud, angry, passionate protest against the evils of Wall Street, or the corruption and political paralysis in Washington. It was certainly less loud, noisy, and passionate than the protests and demonstrations I’ve been reading about, and have watched from a safe distance, in places like Rome and Athens in recent months.
The folks in Zuccotti Park also struck me as the most media-friendly people I’ve ever seen. Indeed, I’ve never seen so many cameras, photographers, and videographers concentrated in one place. It seemed like almost everyone there was either posing for a photo, or taking someone’s photo, or being interviewed on-camera by someone. I didn’t see anyone from the major news channels — nobody from CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, Fox, or even ESPN — but I had a feeling that a lot of the photographers and videographers were freelance journalists collecting material they could feed to the cable-news channels, or other media-related clients.
I guess there’s nothing wrong with that … but I couldn’t help getting the impression that the protests, and the people camped out in Zuccotti Park, were more interested in the publicity and attention than the basic issues they were espousing. That may not be a fair judgment to make, but it was hard to escape that impression.
As for the political issues themselves … hmmm. Well, I understand and sympathize with the frustration that so many of the people who were directly responsible for the financial and economic catastrophies of the past few years have escaped any significant financial penalties or jail time. And I understand and completely sympathize with the frustration about the political dysfunction and paralysis that has gripped the country for the past several years. But I don’t have a good understanding of what the OWS folks really want to do in order to confront the problems they’ve identified and complained about. I know that, to a large extent, that’s a deliberate strategy on their part; but while I respect their right to operate in this fashion, it’s hard for me to know what it is I’m supposed to "support" with this group…
Anyway, I spent an hour or two in Zuccotti Park just wandering around, trying to get a feeling for what kind of people were there, what they were saying, what they cared about, and what they didn’t care about. I didn’t try to put any smart-aleck, humorous captions on each photo, because my own interpretation of a "scene" might have been wildly different than what they themselves were thinking or feeling. So I just took the pictures; you can decide for yourself what they mean…
OWS/Zuccotti Park, Oct 2011 – 12

Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was published in an Oct 26, 2011 issue of Everyblock NYC zipcodes blog titled "10006."
**************************************
During the fall of 2011, various friends, business colleagues, and family members began asking me what I thought of the "Occupy Wall Street" (OWS) group of protesters who gathered in Zuccotti Park, and then marched in various parts of New York City to demonstrate their grievances. I responded that it was likely to be the same as their reaction, at least in the sense that my impressions were formed by whatever reports I saw in the newspapers or in television reports. Of course, you might have had a more personal, or "informed," opinion if you worked on Wall Street, or if you happened to be stuck on the Brooklyn Bridge when the protesters effectively shut things down for a few hours, or if you knew someone in the NYC Police Department that came into contact with the protesters.
But New York is a city of five different boroughs, sprawling out over several square miles — and the OWS protesters were camped out in a tiny "private park" in lower Manhattan, roughly a block from the American Stock Exchange, and a couple blocks from the nearly-completed 9-11 Memorial site. You don’t see or hear them on the Upper West Side, where I live; you don’t see them in Queens, Staten Island, or the Bronx; and I think it’s safe to say that the residents of Brooklyn only saw them if they were attempting to cross the Brooklyn Bridge at what turned out to be the wrong time on the wrong day.
But the protests have gone on, day after day, and week after week; and the media coverage has gradually increased. In mid-October of 2011, I was rather startled to read a news story indicating that OWS-related protests had taken place in 942 different cities and locations around the world. It may not have reached the level of the "Arab spring" uprisings that have brought down the governments of Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya (and probably a few more in the coming weeks and months), but it seems to be more potent and wide-spread than I had realized. So when the opportunity to visit Zuccotti Park arose, during my recent visit to see the 9-11 Memorial (which you can see in this Flickr set), I was happy to pursue it.
Before I offer my opinions about what I saw, I should mention that I come from the generation that marched for civil rights in the early- and mid-60s, and that marched against the Vietnam war in the late-60s and early-70s. I didn’t get arrested during any of those marches, and I didn’t burn any flags; but I have a distinct memory that almost all of those demonstrations and protests were large, and loud, and very passionate. Maybe it was just that I was relatively young at the time, and felt quite passionately about the issues of the day; but you can judge for yourself by looking at some of these old vintage-1969 photos from a Vietnam protest rally that took place in Bryant Park, behind the New York Public Library — as shown in this Flickr set.
As for the OWS protesters in Zuccotti Park: well, the whole thing seemed fairly small and subdued. If it is indeed the genesis of subsequent marches and protests in 942 cities, that’s pretty significant … but Zuccotti Park is less than half a square block in size, and the overall mood seemed much more like a mellow, low-key version of Woodstock than a loud, angry, passionate protest against the evils of Wall Street, or the corruption and political paralysis in Washington. It was certainly less loud, noisy, and passionate than the protests and demonstrations I’ve been reading about, and have watched from a safe distance, in places like Rome and Athens in recent months.
The folks in Zuccotti Park also struck me as the most media-friendly people I’ve ever seen. Indeed, I’ve never seen so many cameras, photographers, and videographers concentrated in one place. It seemed like almost everyone there was either posing for a photo, or taking someone’s photo, or being interviewed on-camera by someone. I didn’t see anyone from the major news channels — nobody from CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, Fox, or even ESPN — but I had a feeling that a lot of the photographers and videographers were freelance journalists collecting material they could feed to the cable-news channels, or other media-related clients.
I guess there’s nothing wrong with that … but I couldn’t help getting the impression that the protests, and the people camped out in Zuccotti Park, were more interested in the publicity and attention than the basic issues they were espousing. That may not be a fair judgment to make, but it was hard to escape that impression.
As for the political issues themselves … hmmm. Well, I understand and sympathize with the frustration that so many of the people who were directly responsible for the financial and economic catastrophies of the past few years have escaped any significant financial penalties or jail time. And I understand and completely sympathize with the frustration about the political dysfunction and paralysis that has gripped the country for the past several years. But I don’t have a good understanding of what the OWS folks really want to do in order to confront the problems they’ve identified and complained about. I know that, to a large extent, that’s a deliberate strategy on their part; but while I respect their right to operate in this fashion, it’s hard for me to know what it is I’m supposed to "support" with this group…
Anyway, I spent an hour or two in Zuccotti Park just wandering around, trying to get a feeling for what kind of people were there, what they were saying, what they cared about, and what they didn’t care about. I didn’t try to put any smart-aleck, humorous captions on each photo, because my own interpretation of a "scene" might have been wildly different than what they themselves were thinking or feeling. So I just took the pictures; you can decide for yourself what they mean…
Categories: News Forecast Tags: Espn, news, Nice, Photos
Pro Wrestling Report on ESPN Radio – January 11, 2011
www.pwrshow.com Discussion on WWE RAW, TNA Gensis, Sting and Brock Lesnar in WWE, Fans Attacking Wrestlers on Twitter and SO MUCH MORE! Weekly Pro Wrestling News and Opinion broadcast on 540 ESPN Radio in Milwaukee, WI. Call us live at 1-800-990-ESPN!
Video Rating: 4 / 5
ESPN OTL: John Lennon Murder, 30th Anniversary
An ESPN “Outside The Lines” report on Beatles band member John Lennon, murdered on December 8th, 1980 in New York City. His shocking death was initially announced to a nationwide American audience on ABC’s Monday Night Football. This piece gives an in depth look at the event from eyewitnesses and former sportscasters involved. Originally Aired 12-5-2010
Video Rating: 5 / 5
The Poynter Review Project recently released an article ripping ESPN on their failure to cover the Penn State scandal precisely. Bringing in college football analysts and not reporting on Joe Paterno’s firing led to much outrage at ESPN. Watch more College Football stories at www.youtube.com Follow Rick on Twitter: twitter.com Follow Ben on Twitter: twitter.com Facebook: www.facebook.com
Categories: News Forecast Tags: 30th, anniversary, Espn, John, Lennon, Murder
ESPN News Flash: Cincinnati has been ordered to wear eye shields on their face masks. Why is this?
Question by hays101 REVISITED: ESPN News Flash: Cincinnati has been ordered to wear eye shields on their face masks. Why is this?
Best answer:
Answer by Asian Brown Trash
So no one gets injured by a Spike in the eye?
What do you think? Answer below!
Categories: News Forecast Tags: Been, Cincinnati, Espn, Face, Flash, masks., news, Ordered, Shields, their, this, Wear
Did anyone else know that Coach was an ESPN News host?
Question by BuffaloBillsYearIs2008: Did anyone else know that Coach was an ESPN News host?
I just saw him on ESPNEWS just now
I noticed he was gone off WWE but thats cool for Coach I guess
Best answer:
Answer by Rated RKO
Yes Like 2 or 3 months ago =) that’s kind of old news
Give your answer to this question below!