The Big Lead: Difference between revisions
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'''The Big Lead ''' is a non-corporate [[blog ]] that mainly covers sports, as well as dabbling in entertainment, media criticism, and other non-sports/entertainment related news stories. It was started in February of 2006 by Jason McIntyre and David Lessa. McIntyre, a former assistant news editor for [[US Weekly ]] and sportswriter, hired friends Stephen Douglas, Tyler Duffy, Andy Horonzy, and Tim Ryan to help contribute. Currently, the site averages over 2 million monthly page views.<ref>{{cite news |
'''The Big Lead ''' is a non-corporate [[blog ]] that mainly covers sports, as well as dabbling in entertainment, media criticism, and other non-sports/entertainment related news stories. It was started in February of 2006 by Jason McIntyre and David Lessa. McIntyre, a former assistant news editor for [[US Weekly ]] and sportswriter, hired friends Stephen Douglas (username Cousins of Ron Mexico), Tyler Duffy (tyduffy), Andy Horonzy (Cap Rooney), and Tim Ryan (The Sports Hernia) to help contribute. Currently, the site averages over 2 million monthly page views.<ref>{{cite news |
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|url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/magazine/specials/2000s/12/07/movies.tv.books.blogs/1.html#ixzz0aXau4URV |
|url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/magazine/specials/2000s/12/07/movies.tv.books.blogs/1.html#ixzz0aXau4URV |
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|title=best of decade: movies, tv shows, books, blogs |
|title=best of decade: movies, tv shows, books, blogs |
Revision as of 19:04, 30 December 2009
Format and Content
The site is usually updated between 10 to 15 daily between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. est, with each post receiving its own title and space for registered readers to post comments. Days usually begin with the morning "Roundup", which links to varying news stories of interest in paragraph form at the top, and mainly links to different sports related stories at the bottom. The Roundup is usually accompanied by a picture of an attractive model or actress as well as relevant or humorous YouTube clips. Recaps of the previous nights games also receive a common post heading. Basketball recaps are entitled "Ballin'", baseball game recaps are called "Yardwork", football previews are called "Pigsplosion", and soccer posts are usually called "The Onion Bag".
Every year the site stages what it calls a "Culture Tournament". 64 different sports figures, celebrities, or other relevant items (example: Michael Phelps' Bong Hit) are seeded in an NCAA basketball tournament style bracket. Readers are allowed to vote one time for each match up until a winner is decided. In 2008, ESPN sideline reporter Erin Andrews beat out actress/singer Jessica Simpson.[2] In the 2009 version, Megan Fox was crowned champion narrowly over Andrews.[3]
Gaining Notoriety
The site first gained notoriety by obtaining interviews with syndicated sportswriter and ESPN Poker commentator Norman Chad and Kansas City Star and FoxSports.com columnist Jason Whitlock. The interview with Whitlock generated controversy when he proceeded to trash his then ESPN colleagues Scoop Jackson and Mike Lupica.[4] This ended Whitlocks association with the network.[5]
The Colin Cowherd Incident
On April 5th, 2007, ESPN Radio personality Colin Cowherd instructed the listeners of his radio show to flood The Big Lead with traffic. The surge in activity overloaded the servers, knocking the site out of commission for about 48 hours.[6] The attack appeared to be unprovoked, with Cowherd saying "wouldn't it be great if we could blow up a website?". His actions drew criticism from the blogosphere, as well as ESPN.com's ombudsman Le Anne Schreiber, who called his actions "immature, irresponsible, arrogant, malicious, destructive and dumb."[7] However, since such actions weren't forbidden by ESPN at that time, he was not disciplined.
References
- ^ Graham, Bryan Armen (December 11, 2009). "best of decade: movies, tv shows, books, blogs". sportsillustrated.com.
- ^ 2008 Culture Bracket
- ^ 2009 Culture Bracket
- ^ "Oh Damn, Did Whitlock Really Say That? A Q&A with Jason Whitlock
- ^ Deitsch, Richard (March 12, 2008). "Anonymous No More". sportsillustrated.com.
- ^ On Cowherd, Our Site, and the Ombudsman's Swift Response
- ^ Schreiber, Le Anne (April 8, 2007). "Cowherds 'Attack' on blog:'Zero tolerance'". espn.com.