Showing posts with label ESPN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ESPN. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

[VIDEO] Curt Schilling Compares Muslim Extremism to Nazi Germany, Gets Thrown from Little League Broadcast

ESPN baseball analyst and former Major League Baseball pitcher Curt Schilling has been thrown from a Little League World Series broadcast for an “unacceptable” message posted to social media Tuesday.
According to the New York Timesthe former Red Sox star likened Muslim extremism to Nazi Germany in a message on Twitter, prompting ESPN to pull him from the broadcast.
Schilling posted a photo of Adolph Hitler on Twitter with the writing, “It’s said only 5-10 percent of Muslims are extremists. In 1940, only 7% of Germans were Nazis. How’d that go?”
He accompanied the meme with his own text, “The math is staggering when you get to true #’s.” Schilling deleted the tweet shortly after posting it.
In a statement Tuesday, ESPN labeled the tweet “completely unacceptable,” pulling Schilling from the broadcast and leaving the door ajar for further punishment.
“Curt’s tweet was completely unacceptable, and in no way represents our company’s perspective. We made that point very strongly to Curt and have removed him from his current Little League assignment pending further consideration,” ESPN said.
Schilling, who is a member of ESPN’s Sunday Night Baseball broadcast, immediately took responsibility for the tweet and accepted the punishment.
“I understand and accept my suspension. 100% my fault. Bad choices have bad consequences and this was a bad decision in every way on my part,” Schilling wrote on Twitter Tuesday afternoon.

Monday, July 20, 2015

Rush: Trump Tells Establishment to 'Go to Hell'


Image: Rush: Trump Tells Establishment to 'Go to Hell'(REUTERS/Jim Young)

Donald Trump is defying "conventional belief" by doubling down and refusing to apologize to Sen. John McCain for comments made over the weekend that at first questioned the senator's reputation as a war hero before saying that he is one, talk show host Rush Limbaugh said Monday.

"The American people haven't seen something like this in a long time," Limbaugh said on his radio program. "They have not seen an embattled public figure stand up, double down, and tell everyone to go to hell."

Limbaugh insisted that he is not a Trump apologist, but said the media and politicians are following a typical trail they use when they want to get rid of a public figure, and the talk show host said a similar pattern is often followed on his own controversial statements.

"Under conventional belief, a public figure makes a politically incorrect statement that offends somebody," said Limbaugh. "The Washington establishment and media react in outrage, and the media replays the offensive comment over and over and over."

Eventually, the establishment "gets together with the media" and all demand the public figure apologize, beg forgiveness, and withdraw from public life and "stay in chagrined irrelevance," said Limbaugh.

"This charade plays whenever this circumstance happens," said Limbaugh, and there is one fatal mistake made, when it is assumed that "the collective outrage of the Washington establishment and the media is reflective of the American people."

He noted that journalist Sharyl Attkisson wrote a "great analysis" of the Saturday incident. 

"It is a fact that Trump did not say what he is being reputed to say," said Limbaugh, that "McCain's not a hero, and so forth. Four different times, he said McCain is a war hero."

"Facts don't matter in a circumstance like this," Limbaugh said, but instead, statements are "purposely blurred, lied about or ignored, much like my ill fated commentary on ESPN. Take something that wasn't said and blow it out of proportion."

He also pointed out that Trump said what he did "following McCain's insult of Trump's supporters, calling them 'crazies.' This ticked Trump off, [because] he doesn't want to think they're a bunch of crazed wackos." 

But nobody is suggesting McCain apologize, but the media and Washington's establishment are all demanding apologies and saying that Trump's campaign can't survive, as is the usual pattern, said Limbaugh.

"Except one thing hasn't happened: Trump hasn't apologized," said Limbaugh. "Not only he hasn't, but he doubled down and added to his original criticism."

And the "architects" of the scandal "don't know what to do...the guilty party is begging for forgiveness but Trump has not," he said.



Wednesday, July 8, 2015

What Do a Family Restaurant in Oregon and a Car Dealer in Texas Have in Common?

What do a family restaurant in Oregon, a car dealer in Texas and a building supply store in Massachusetts have in common? They've found successful ways to capture the attention of customers spending more time than ever with "screens"—TVs, phones, tablets and computers. 

Those businesses joined others during a recent webcast, Take Five for Your Future, presented by Comcast Spotlight, the advertising sales division of Comcast Cable. The companies participated in Comcast Spotlight's LAMP Awards, which recognize multi-screen advertising—combining television and digital marketing. 

The benefit is two-fold: some prospective customers will see a message on one screen that they missed on the other, while another group will see the message on both screens, and thus hear that message more often. 

Amy Schearer, Chief Marketing Officer of the Philadelphia Zoo, said during the webcast that this approach allowed the tourist attraction to "reach people at multiple points during the day." The zoo's multi-screen campaign, highlighting a new exhibit for children, contributed to one of the best years for total attendance. The growth came despite a harsh winter and spring, which dampens attendance. Once Mother Nature relented, though, the campaign worked its magic. 

A recurring theme from webcast participants was the ability of cable TV and digital advertising to reach specific neighborhoods. For People's Federal Savings Bank in Massachusetts, it turned out that their network of branches aligned well with Comcast Spotlight's zones, or groupings of neighborhoods, in the market. 

According to Thomas Long, Principal of the Long Group, the bank's marketing agency, a targeted approach meant their advertising "worked smarter and harder." The result of the campaign was a 250% increase in monthly checking account sales. Also noteworthy was that the new customers coming to the bank were, on average, 16 years younger than the bank's existing customers, meaning a new generation of consumers was getting the message as a result of TV advertising on networks like ABC Family and Bravo coupled with the same commercial appearing before online video and in banner advertisements on XFINITY.com. 

That approach also worked wonders for Chace Building Supply, the Massachusetts retailer. Chace competes with several national, "big-box" retailers, a challenge for many small businesses. In addition to being able to focus advertising near its store location, what also benefited the store was the ability to reach both men and women. For men, it meant commercials in programs like ESPN's Monday Night Football and Boston Bruins games; for women, networks like Lifetime, E! and Food Network hit the mark. 

For Elmer's, the Portland restaurant chain, reaching multiple audiences meant something different: attracting new customers, including those new to the region and not familiar with Elmer's 55-year history, while appealing to long-time guests. Like other webcast participants, Elmer's took advantage of the cost savings by using its existing commercial as an online advertisement, and added a little something extra to the online ads: pictures of seasonal menu items. That had customers clicking to learn more: 12% of the 12,000+ people who watched the online video visited Elmer's website. In the hyper-competitive restaurant business, Elmer's recorded a five percent increase in total sales, a figure Director of Restaurant Support Jill Ramos called "truly a win in the restaurant industry

." Some businesses take a hybrid approach to local advertising. Ron Carter Cadillac, the Texas auto dealer, aired advertising throughout the full Houston market, with additional commercials focused on the area immediately surrounding the dealership. It was an effective strategy to maximize the marketing budget, and included a mix of morning, primetime and weekend time periods. Ron Ross also wanted to reach a younger audience than is typically thought of as a Cadillac customer, so networks like ESPN, TNT and USA were a key component in its plan. The digital advertising element of the media plan did its job, nearly doubling traffic to Ron Carter's website, while overall vehicle sales increased about 50%. Chris Premant, E-commerce and Business Development Manager for the dealer noted that those results underscore "the reality that traditional drives digital" when it comes to advertising. 


Comcast Spotlight recently began accepting entries for this year's LAMP Awards, and will announce the winners this fall.



Thursday, November 7, 2013

[VIDEO] ESPN Contributor Blasts American Flag-Themed Football Unis, 'War Anthem' Before Games

Wednesday on ESPN’s Around the Horn, a majority of th
Wednesday on ESPN’s Around the Horn, a majority of the sports commentator panel, including J.A. Adande and Kevin Blackistone, ripped into Northwestern University’s controversial American flag-themed Under Armour football uniforms designed to raise money for the Wounded Warriors Project.
Part of the controversy is the so-called “blood-splatter” effect on the uniforms (which is actually just a faux-weathered look, not streaks of blood, as the blue sections of the unis demonstrate). The question opened up the conversation to the larger topic of military displays at sporting events, allowing Blackistone to unload on what he deems the inappropriate connection between sports and the military, going so far as to decry the “singing of a war anthem to open every game” and the presence of military recruiters at stadiums.
Reali: Hey, KB, your alma mater, Northwestern University. The helmets and jerseys for next week's game against Michigan, courtesy of Under Armour. Designed to honor America and Wounded Warriors. Under scrutiny for the design, which some think uses a blood splatter effect as well as claims of flag desecration. The school says anyone seeing that is misinterpreting. "Buy or sell" the uniform, Adande?
Adande: If it makes people uncomfortable, thoughts of war should make people uncomfortable. There’s nothing comforting about war. And utilizing the flag in the uniform, we’ve seen that in baseball caps, we’ve seen that in other uniforms, so that’s nothing new. It actually bothers me that nothing says Northwestern on the helmet.
Reali: Blackistone?
Via: Truth Revolt
Continue Reading..... 

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Fox News Has Highest Telecast Ever with Final Presidential Debate


NBC was the most-watched network for the final presidential debate last night with 12.391 million viewers tuning in. ABC was next with 11.730 million, according to Nielsen Fast National numbers. But the 11.474 million that watched on Fox News were enough to give the network its most-watched telecast ever. Fox News’s previous record was set in 2008 when VP nominees Gov. Sara Palin and Sen. Joe Biden debated. On that night 11.098 million watched. Fox News also topped CBS and beat the combined viewership of MSNBC and CNN.
On the three cable and three broadcast networks the debate was watched by 53.9 million people. The total will likely be down from the two previous debates when all networks are added up. The candidates faced stiff competition from Monday Night Football on ESPN (10.66 million viewers) and Game 7 of the NLCS on FOX (8.1 million viewers).
  • Broadcast Fast Nationals 9-10:34pm:
NBC: 12,391,341 in total viewers / 5,839,648 in 25-54
ABC: 11,730,247 in total viewers / 4,361,952 in 25-54
CBS: 8,437,098 in total viewers / 3,564,135 in 25-54
  • Broadcast post-Debate analysis 10:34-11pm
NBC: 9.327 million total viewers / 3.6 rating in 25-54
ABC: 8.052 million total viewers /2.6 rating in 25-54
CBS: 6.167 million total viewers / 2.3 rating in 25-54
  • Cable coverage 9:00-10:30pm:
FNC: 11,474,835 in total viewers  /3,433,142 in 25-54
CNN: 5,808,405 in total viewers  /2,475,772 in 25-54
MSNBC: 4,063,673 in total viewers / 1,701,793 in 25-54
  • Cable primetime 8:00-11:00pm
FNC: 9,068,124 in total viewers / 2,586,259 in 25-54
CNN: 4,374,775 in total viewers / 1,833,421 in 25-54
MSNBC: 3,295,125 in total viewers / 1,345,369 in 25-54


Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Ryan Compares Obama to an NFL Replacement Ref


Republican Vice Presidential candidate Paul Ryan said Tuesday in Ohio that NFL replacement referees reminded him of President Obama on the economy, "if you can't get it right, get out."
NFL replacement referees are under fire for repeatedly blowing calls and mismanaging games this season… a controversial call made at the end of the Packers-Seahawks game last night actually cost Green Bay the game. 
Ryan also joked that the NFL refs worked part-time in the Obama administration's budget office, "they see the national debt clock starring them in the face, they see a debt crisis and they just ignore and pretend it didn’t even happen. They are trying to pick the winners and losers and they don’t even do that very well.”

PAUL RYAN: "I gotta start off on something that was really troubling that occured last night, did you guys watch that Packer game last night? Give me a break! It's time to get the real refs!
You know, it reminds me of President Obama and the economy! If you can't get it right, it's time to get out!
I have think that these refs work part time for President Obama in the budget office!
They see the national debt clock starring them in the face, they see a debt crisis and they just ignore and pretend it didn’t even happen. They are trying to pick the winners and losers and they don’t even do that very well.”

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