ESPN
ESPN, an abbreviation of Entertainment and Sports Programming Network, is an American cable television network dedicated to sports 24 hours a day. It was founded by Scott Rasmussen and his father Bill Rasmussen, and launched on September 7 1979. Its signature telecast, SportsCenter, debuted with the network and aired its 25,000th episode on August 25 2002. ESPN broadcasts primarily out of its studios in Bristol, Connecticut and is available in over 77 million homes in the United States. The name of the company was shortened to "ESPN Inc." in February 1985.
History
ESPN started as an alternative to the short sports segments in standard television news broadcasts and the information found in "Sports" sections of newspapers. ESPN started out fairly small and often had to broadcast unorthodox sporting events, such as tractor pulls and the short-lived United States Football League (USFL), to attract viewers. In 1987, ESPN landed a contract to show National Football League games on Sunday evenings, an event which marked as a turning point in turning ESPN from a smaller cable TV network to a marketing empire and a cornerstone to the enthusiastic "sports culture" it largely helped to create.
ESPN was originally owned by a joint venture between Getty Oil Company (which was purchased by Texaco) and Nabisco. As of 2005, the entire family of ESPN networks and franchises is owned by ABC (the American Broadcasting Company) (80%), which is a part of The Walt Disney Company, and the Hearst Corporation (20%).
In 2003, the Office of Foreign Assets Control reported that ESPN engaged in illegal trade with Cuba and had to settle with the United States government for US$40,000. [1]
Television networks
ESPN launched a sister network, ESPN2, on October 1, 1993, currently available in more than 65 million homes across America. ESPNEWS was launched on November 1, 1996, providing 24 hour-a-day highlights, scores, and news from the sports world. ESPN Classic was launched on October 9, 1997 as the Classic Sports Network (ESPN purchased it later), and airs documentaries and replays some of the greatest games in sports history. A Spanish language network, ESPN Deportes, was launched on January 7, 2004. ESPN also owns ESPNHD, which generally airs the normal ESPN programming in high definition. On March 4, 2005, ESPN launched a college athletics channel called ESPNU.
Other business ventures
ESPN launched the ESPN Radio network on January 1, 1992, ESPN The Magazine on March 11, 1998, and its ESPN Zone franchise of restaurant/entertainment complexes in Baltimore, Maryland on July 11, 1998.
ESPN launched their own website known as ESPN SportsZone on 1995. After 1998, the site was renamed to ESPN.com. In 2001, ESPN.com created a new website called, Page 2 which features sports opinion columns from several writers, most notably Skip Bayless and Bill Simmons. Hunter S. Thompson was also a frequent contributor.
The ESPY Awards are also administered by ESPN, which it initiated in 1993. Proceeds from the event go to the V Foundation, a cancer-fighting nonprofit group founded in honor of and continuing in memory of former basketball coach Jim Valvano, who delivered an emotional speech at the first ESPY awards show, mere weeks before his death.
Starting with their 2004 lineup of sports games, Sega acquired the ESPN license to integrate their "TV show look & feel" into its franchise of video games covering America's major professional sports leagues and college basketball. The deal will end after the 2005-2006 sports season. After the 2005-2006 season, Electronic Arts has acquired the ESPN license to use for 15-years on their video games. [2]
Shows
- Baseball Tonight (1993–present)
- BodyShaping (1990–1998)
- College GameDay (1989–present)
- Dream Job (2004–present)
- NFL Primetime (1987–present)
- Outside the Lines (1990–present)
- SportsCenter (1979–present)
- NHL 2Night (1995–2004)
ESPN Original Entertainment programs
- Around the Horn (2002–present)
- Dream Job (2003–present)
- Hustle (TV movie, 2004)
- The Junction Boys (TV movie, 2002)
- Pardon the Interruption (2002–present)
- Playmakers (2003)
- A Season on the Brink (TV movie, 2002)
- 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story (TV movie, 2004)
- Streetball: The AND 1 Mix Tape Tour (2002–present)
- Tilt (2005–present)
Personalities (past & present)
- David Aldridge
- John Anderson
- Jill Arrington
- Chris Berman
- Steve Berthiaume
- John Buccigross
- Bill Clement
- Linda Cohn
- Beano Cook
- Lee Corso
- Colin Cowherd
- Jennifer Dempster
- Rich Eisen
- Neil Everett
- Chris Fowler
- Ron Franklin
- Kevin Frazier
- Peter Gammons
- Gayle Gardner
- George Grande
- Mike Greenberg
- Mike Golic
- Mike Gottfried
- Greg Gumbel
- Tony Gwynn
- Mike Hall
- Kirk Herbstreit
- Fred Hickman
- Dana Jacobson
- Max Kellerman
- Craig Kilborn
- Mel Kiper, Jr.
- Curry Kirkpatrick
- Suzy Kolber
- Tony Kornheiser
- John Kruk
- Lou Leonard
- Steve Levy
- Bob Ley
- Paul Maguire
- Kenny Mayne
- Tom Mees
- Barry Melrose
- Jon Miller
- Joe Morgan
- Keith Olbermann
- Lou Palmer
- Dan Patrick
- Mike Patrick
- Bill Pidto
- Tony Reali
- Harold Reynolds
- Robin Roberts
- Jim Rome
- Karie Ross
- Sean Salisbury
- John Saunders
- Stuart Scott
- Steven A. Smith
- Tommy Smyth
- Charley Steiner
- Steve Stone
- Joe Theismann
- Scott Van Pelt
- Dick Vitale
- Michael Wilbon
- Matt Winer
- Trey Wingo
- Todd Wright
External links
- ESPN: http://www.espn.com
- ESPN Video Games: http://www.espnvideogames.com