East Coast bias

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East Coast bias is the perceived tendency for sports broadcasting and journalism in the United States and Canada to give greater weight and attention to teams and athletes on the East Coast of their respective countries than those on the West Coast.

Overview

East Coast bias is used to explain perceived slights of teams and players relative to their comparable counterparts on the West Coast.[1][2][3][4] It is attributed to East Coast sports stories being more repetitive, comprehensive, and exaggerated.[3][5] "In America news still travels from east to west," wrote author George Will in Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball.[4] The bias is also used to rationalize the broadcasting of an East Coast team in favor of another compelling team based to the west.[6]

National coverage of live games is also perceived as favoring certain teams located on the Eastern side of the continent. For example, critics of what Hockey Night in Canada chooses to program allege that the show particularly favors the Toronto Maple Leafs.[7] Likewise, ESPN's baseball coverage has been the target of criticism because of its perceived bias towards the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees.[8]

Causes

Time zone map of North America

The North American continent is divided into seven time zones, spanning 6½ hours from Alaska to Newfoundland. Most of the continent's population (including all of the major professional sports teams) is concentrated in the four time zones of the contiguous United States and Canada west of the Maritimes; this, however, still poses a significant obstacle in that the easternmost sports teams are a full three hours ahead of their western counterparts. For sports that play in prime time according to local time zones (as is the case with ice hockey, baseball, and basketball), this can result in games played on the West Coast starting after 10 p.m. Eastern time (and not ending until around or after 1 a.m.), while the East is sleeping and after printing deadlines for the next day's newspapers have passed. Gennaro Filice of SI.com wrote that Major League Baseball's West Coast night games are ending as "the country's most influential scribes are catching Z after Z."[1] John Buccigross of ESPN notes that a lot of people in the East are asleep when National Hockey League's West night games are going on, resulting in lower television ratings for those West Coast games, which in turn contributes to the lack of national broadcasts of West games.[5]

In the United States, the major media hub is the East Coast city of New York. CBS Sports has its headquarters within the Manhattan borough of the city, and NBC Sports, MLB Network, and NHL Network all have their hubs in the metropolitan area (NBC is based in Stamford, Connecticut, while MLB/NHL share the former studios of MSNBC in Secaucus, New Jersey); ESPN is in Bristol, Connecticut, which is roughly equidistant to both New York and Boston. Meanwhile, Turner Sports is based in Atlanta, Georgia, also on the East Coast. Canada's two major media hubs, Toronto (for English-language media) and Montréal (for French-language media), are also both located in the Eastern Time Zone. Only Fox Sports and its cable channel Fox Sports 1 maintain their major broadcast hub in Los Angeles, along with the Pac-12 Networks in San Francisco, though FS1 and the Pac-12 Network's sports rights are limited to the point where they are thought of as an aberration (and Fox Sports itself is the major broadcast partner for college basketball's East Coast-centric Big East Conference). Buccigross wrote that an imbalance is understandable from Eastern writers, considering they are influenced by their close proximity and easier access to the happenings in the East.[5] The East is home to nearly half of the country's population and is both more densely populated and was settled and developed much earlier than the West.[9]

Fox Sports sportscaster Joe Buck attributes the shift to the economics of running a business: "If you think there is a perceived East Coast bias, guess what? You're right. That's where people are watching, that's where the numbers are."[10] ESPN ombudsman Le Anne Schreiber wrote that fans should forget about expecting equity in teams the network selects to broadcast. "It is long proven in NBA and NFL and MLB that spreading the wealth to 30 or 32 teams is a prescription for deflating ratings," said Len DeLuca, ESPN senior vice president for programming.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Filice, Gennaro (September 7, 2006). "Hoffman's dominance and Girardi's familiar situation". SI.com. Archived from the original on March 2, 2011.
  2. ^ "East Coast Bias Grows Ever More Apparent". The Hoya. September 12, 2003. Archived from the original on March 3, 2011.
  3. ^ a b Schoenfield, David (August 25, 2003). "The List: 10 cases of East Coast bias". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2011.
  4. ^ a b Will, George F. (1990). Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball. Macmillan Publishing Company. p. 168. ISBN 0-02-628470-7.
  5. ^ a b c Buccigross, John (February 2, 2010). "Time to give the West its due". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on August 25, 2011.
  6. ^ a b Schreiber, Le Anne (August 15, 2008). "Geography lesson: Breaking down the bias in ESPN's coverage". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2011.
  7. ^ Zelkovich, Chris (October 16, 2006). "Campbell adapts to HNIC hot seat". The Star. Toronto. Archived from the original on December 3, 2007. Retrieved 2007-01-10.
  8. ^ Krasovic, Tom (April 13, 2009). "Black tinkers with pitching rotation". The San Diego Union-Tribune.
  9. ^ Verducci, Tom (May 13, 2002). "Case Closed". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on January 29, 2011. Retrieved March 3, 2011.
  10. ^ Cesar, Dan (November 5, 2010). "Did "East Coast bias" sink Series ratings?". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Archived from the original on March 3, 2011.