Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Awful Announcing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Awful Announcing
Remove ads

Awful Announcing (AA) is an American sports news website and blog.[1] Founded in 2006 by Brian Powell, the website focuses on sports media personalities, particularly broadcast announcers and television sportscasters.

Quick Facts Available in, Owner ...
Remove ads

History

A graduate of James Madison University (JMU), Brian Powell founded Awful Announcing in May 2006.[2] Early in its history, Awful Announcing was a prominent outlet in the sports blogosphere.[3] Powell noted that Spencer Tillman was an early critic of his blog.[3] Bloguin Network acquired Awful Announcing in 2010; later in 2015, Comeback Media was spun out of Bloguin, becoming AA's parent company.[2] Ben Koo is the current owner of Awful Announcing.[4]

The website reports on news relating to sports announcing, broadcasting, and related media industry spaces.[5][6] AA also conducts interviews with sports media executives.[7] Their sharing of announcing audio has been cited to increase awareness of situations, such as when they wrote about West Virginia basketball coach Bob Huggins using a homophobic slur in a radio interview in 2023.[8]

Remove ads

Citation and reception

AA's reporting has been cited by sports media websites such as ESPN and Fox Sports,[9][10] as well as general news outlets like Forbes.[11] ESPN has also issued statements via Awful Announcing.[10]

Some sports announcers have commented on Awful Announcing. The book Those Guys Have All the Fun: Inside the World of ESPN (2011) quoted both Rece Davis and Bob Ley.[12] Davis stated that sports announcers who "fall into reading" blogs like Awful Announcing and get upset or try to explaint their mistakes pointed out by such blogs on-air "probably aren't doing [their] job as effectively as [they] ought to be". Meanwhile, Ley stated that he sometimes checks sports blogs like AA, as well as The Big Lead and Deadspin, likening visiting the blogs to "shopping in a discount store".[12] Other sports media personalities have referenced Awful Announcing in their own writing, such as Bill Simmons in his Book of Basketball (2009) and Jemele Hill in her memoir, Uphill (2022).[13][14]

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads