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I think ESPN didn't get enough heat for some of their more half baked 30 for 30's. I hated the Red Sox one because jesus christ, that was so drat recent and also one of the most OVER COVERED sports stories of the past decade. Once Brothers and Tim Richmond: To the Limit both suffered (though the Richmond one to a much greater extent) from the fact that they were done by the official bodies of the respective sport. Once Brothers had far too contrived of an ending and Tim Richmond was a historical white wash. I thought House of Steinbrenner actually was a bit underrated a bit though. I'm not fan of the Yankees but I thought it was an interesting though small in scope view of why people care about the Yankees. I was disappointed in it ultimately because I love Barbara Kopple's work but it just felt truncated, oddly paced, and the fact that George died I'm sure lead to some weird rushes in editing. Also a friend of mine has an opportunity to possibly pitch some ideas to ESPN. What would a dream 30 for 30 be for you?
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 09:17 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 21:25 |
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soggybagel posted:I hated the Red Sox one because jesus christ, that was so drat recent and also one of the most OVER COVERED sports stories of the past decade. Granted I've only seen 4 of the episodes (16th Man, Two Escobars, Once Brothers, Catching Hell), but I thought Catching Hell was amazing! I had losely followed baseball on and off for years, and when I first heard about the 30 for 30 I just assumed it was the Jess Maier yankees incident. I was amazed watching it when I discovered it was a completetly different incident that I hadn't heard of. I'm sure the US media ran it into the ground when it happened, but being in Australia I hadn't seen or heard of it before, and it was just a great documentary. I especially loved how it weaved in the background of the Red Sox curse and thought it did a really good job presenting the story given I hadn't heard of it before. soggybagel posted:Once Brothers and Tim Richmond: To the Limit both suffered (though the Richmond one to a much greater extent) from the fact that they were done by the official bodies of the respective sport. Once Brothers had far too contrived of an ending and Tim Richmond was a historical white wash. Agree completetly with this. It felt a little heavy handed and while I did enjoy it, it definetly felt a step below the others I had seen. soggybagel posted:Also a friend of mine has an opportunity to possibly pitch some ideas to ESPN. What would a dream 30 for 30 be for you? I've always thought it would be good to see them cover the 1968 Olympics and Tommie Smith, Peter Norman and John Carlos (the black power salute on the podium). Also theres a few football related incidents that I think would fit the style of the shows perfectly, namely Hillsborough 1989 and Munich 1972. I've found it very hard to find an easy (and legal) method of getting all the 30 for 30's in both the UK and Australia, so hopefully they can work on that as well.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 11:08 |
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Yeah Four Days in October is annoying to people who were, you know, following baseball intently eight years ago, but I think it'll hold up well in the end as an event worth having a documentary on. On the other hand, the actual documentary itself is total loving poo poo. Easily the worst of the bunch.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 12:26 |
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I think Game(s) 162 from 2011 (MLB) should be made into a 30 for 30 way down the road if this thing goes that long. Or they can just air the beginning to The Show '12
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 12:54 |
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I was expecting a lot better from "Kings Ransom" but
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 13:14 |
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Love this series, I particularly liked the Matt Hoffman one and Once Brothers, for all its shortcomings. Also as a football fan the Two Escobars made for great viewing. Would like to see some more footy ones in the upcoming season/s, I think Hillsborough would make a good/depressing doco. Dunno if ESPN classifies it as a 'sport' but an episode chronicling the Chris Benoit incident and maybe steroid use in pro wrestling would have me watching
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 13:28 |
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FlickingFire posted:Dunno if ESPN classifies it as a 'sport' but an episode chronicling the Chris Benoit incident and maybe steroid use in pro wrestling would have me watching This would be really interesting, though I doubt you would get anybody currently working for WWE to contribute in any meaningful way.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 13:29 |
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soggybagel posted:Also a friend of mine has an opportunity to possibly pitch some ideas to ESPN. What would a dream 30 for 30 be for you? Jerry Jones time in Dallas has plenty of material- his arrival and firing of Tom Landry, the deterioration of his relationship with Jimmy Johnson, the Barry Switzer era, etc. On the other hand, all of that is pretty heavily documented, and it would probably include more Skip Bayless talking head segments than I could stand, so maybe not. Ten years from now there should be a fantastic doc about the birth of the Big 12 in 1994 and its near death experience in the summer of 2010.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 14:27 |
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KYOON GRIFFEY JR posted:Yeah Four Days in October is annoying to people who were, you know, following baseball intently eight years ago, but I think it'll hold up well in the end as an event worth having a documentary on. 4 Days in October is awesome if you lazily follow the red sox and need something to watch instead of this year's team lose another game. The one I haven't seen that I want to see most is Into The Wind
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 14:58 |
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being hit in the dick with a sand bag dropped from a great height is preferable to watching the 2012 red sox right now
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 15:01 |
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soggybagel posted:Also a friend of mine has an opportunity to possibly pitch some ideas to ESPN. What would a dream 30 for 30 be for you? The 1973 Indianapolis 500 Amongst the lovely things that happened: - Endless postponements because of rain - A beloved veteran killed in practice - An almost fatal pileup on the start (The guy who caused it ended up addicted to pain medication & turned to crime) - A pit crew worker got run over & killed in the pits in front of the main grandstand & TV/radio broadcast booths - A young up-and-comer had a wreck after leading the race for the first time, and was recovering when he received a tainted blood sample a month later & died - His teammate is in the lead when the race is stopped due to rain, and despite trying to win for years can't enjoy it when it happens. It's an amazing story about the pointlessness of high-risk sports & the people who realise this, but do them anyway.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 15:02 |
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I'd love to see one on cheating/rule bending in NASCAR. Basically make it a 90 minute documentary on Smokey Yunick.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 15:11 |
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This one could be a bit broad, but maybe an episode on athlete scouting in general? I know they did one on Todd Marinovich (it was decent, nothing outstanding) but they could go in the opposite direction... like discuss Tom Brady or Mike Piazza or something on how they play(ed) at the level they did(are) when they were drafted so late in their respected drafts. I don't know enough about hockey and basketball to know they'd have people in that situation.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 15:11 |
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Collusion in Major League Baseball under Peter Uberroth (85-87ish).
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 15:27 |
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DJExile posted:I'd love to see one on cheating/rule bending in NASCAR. Basically make it a 90 minute documentary on Smokey Yunick. I also would love a doco on cheating in motor sports in general, and the 10 part mini-series on Tom Walkinshaw Racing that would follow.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 15:46 |
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soggybagel posted:I think ESPN didn't get enough heat for some of their more half baked 30 for 30's. I'd like to see one chronicling the different nation-sponsored training that goes on for the Olympics.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 16:30 |
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Despite the material being done to death already in books and such, I'd still love to see one about Bob Knight. Maybe about his departure from IU? And I agree that something like Hillsborough would be pretty gripping - really I'd just like to see another about soccer.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 16:39 |
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dsriggs posted:The 1973 Indianapolis 500 A special on the 1981 race would be amazing in my view. Also, one on "The Split", and it's impact on motorsport in the US.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 17:05 |
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soggybagel posted:Also a friend of mine has an opportunity to possibly pitch some ideas to ESPN. What would a dream 30 for 30 be for you? Pittsburgh drug trials
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 17:42 |
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soggybagel posted:Also a friend of mine has an opportunity to possibly pitch some ideas to ESPN. What would a dream 30 for 30 be for you? 90 minutes of Earl Weaver swearing at umpires and reporters.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 17:47 |
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DJExile posted:I'd love to see one on cheating/rule bending in NASCAR. Basically make it a 90 minute documentary on Smokey Yunick. Smokey Yunick isn't a story about cheating in Nascar. Its about finding any possible way to sidestep any rule. If he was a general he would find ways around the loving Geneva Convention. He is his own documentary. He cheated in sports car, open wheel. Dude probably cheated in a loving lawn mower race. Smokey Yunick was awesome. FuzzySkinner posted:
This would be great. I even have the name. "gently caress Tony George". Something that might be good is one on College Football where it goes into the deals that lead to FSU playing Savannah State, Alabama playing Western Kentucky High School or who ever the gently caress that is. And not just be a "D1 teams use it to pad their schedule". Go into the money, the administration push, the NCAA's allowance of it. Get into the business and the underhanded poo poo that I am sure is going on. I would also like to see one done on the sports books/wise guys and how they build lines, what they use to adjust. The real inside decisions. Not a layman's version.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 17:52 |
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Maybe a film about Marge Schott?
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 18:19 |
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FlickingFire posted:Love this series, I particularly liked the Matt Hoffman one and Once Brothers, for all its shortcomings. Also as a football fan the Two Escobars made for great viewing. Would like to see some more footy ones in the upcoming season/s, I think Hillsborough would make a good/depressing doco. Dunno if ESPN classifies it as a 'sport' but an episode chronicling the Chris Benoit incident and maybe steroid use in pro wrestling would have me watching Years ago, I remember Simmons listing topics they wanted to do but didn't for the original 30 for 30 and a documentary about Andre the Giant was one they really wanted to do. They didn't because of the footage rights being impossible to get since WWE would rather do it themselves.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 18:21 |
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They should have done one about Dock Ellis' LSD perfect game when he was still alive. That Steinbrenner doc was disappointing to me, because originally I thought it was pitched as more of a story about Steinbrenner himself. But then he died and 90% of that doc was about New Yankee Stadium, which I could give a crap about.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 18:25 |
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Here is the schedule for the upcoming 30 for 30 'Round II': October 2nd: 'Broke' (about athletes and financial troubles. Subjects include Bernie Kosar, Andre Rison, and Cliff Floyd) October 9th: '9.79' (about Ben Johnson breaking the speed record and then getting busted for doping) October 16th: 'There's No Place Like Home' (about a man trying to purchase the original Naismith 'Rules of Basketball' at a Sotheby's auction so that he can return them to Naismith's home down of Lawrence, Kansas) October 23rd: 'Benji' (about Ben Wilson, a major HS basketball prospect who was murdered in 1984 shortly before his senior season) October 30th: 'Ghosts of Ole Miss' (about the integration in 1962 at the University of Mississippi and their unbeaten football team) December 8th: 'You Don't Know Bo' (about Bo Jackson and what he's been doing since he retired, or something)
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 18:36 |
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El Gallinero Gros posted:Maybe a film about Marge Schott? You see she was good for baseball at first.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 18:36 |
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FlamingLiberal posted:They should have done one about Dock Ellis' LSD perfect game when he was still alive. Eh, it's been done to death and there's a crew working on a feature length documentary about Ellis' life story.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 18:48 |
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FlamingLiberal posted:October 2nd: 'Broke' (about athletes and financial troubles. Subjects include Bernie Kosar, Andre Rison, and Cliff Floyd) Really looking forward to seeing this.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 18:59 |
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Is "40 Minutes of Hell" about Nolan Richardson and the Arkansas basketball team worth seeking out? If it's similar quality to Guru of Go or the HBO UNLV documentary I think it's something I'd like to see.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 19:20 |
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FlamingLiberal posted:October 2nd: 'Broke' (about athletes and financial troubles. Subjects include Bernie Kosar, Andre Rison, and Cliff Floyd) Cliff Floyd has been retired since 2010, and he made over 53 million dollars in his career
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 19:35 |
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ozymandius1024 posted:Cliff Floyd has been retired since 2010, and he made over 53 million dollars in his career
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 19:58 |
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ozymandius1024 posted:Cliff Floyd has been retired since 2010, and he made over 53 million dollars in his career That money goes in a hurry. He probably retired with about 500,000 or maybe even less.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 20:05 |
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FlamingLiberal posted:Here is the schedule for the upcoming 30 for 30 'Round II': The first sounds fascinating, and the other two have the potential to be awesome.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 20:23 |
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Frankly I'd just love to see more racing documentaries.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 20:23 |
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I just think, even the Indy 500 itself, is just too important of an event to not have a documentary about. It's one of the elite sporting events in the country, but I don't think this current generation cares enough about it anymore. I really believe that it'd be great if it's importance within sports was brought to the nations attention again. 1979 Daytona 500 would be good too, and it's importance in bringing NASCAR to a mainstream audience for the first time. High School football in Ohio would be great to cover as well. Often times Masslion-McKinley get mentioned, but schools like Steubenville are just insanely into the whole thing. Same with Basketball in Indiana.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 20:28 |
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Hello Towel posted:The first sounds fascinating, and the other two have the potential to be awesome. I will be incredibly disappointed if the one about Bo isn't amazing. Hell, I'm just excited that I'll probably have a good source to link now for the time he threw out whoever it was from the wall from the left field wall. I look for that every once in a while and can't ever find it. e: Oh I hope it is more about Bo the athlete and not about what he's done since he retired, I just read that part. Although I guess that could be interesting too it's not what I want. Grittybeard fucked around with this message at 20:50 on Sep 7, 2012 |
# ? Sep 7, 2012 20:48 |
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I believe that the Bo documentary has already aired before at a few public screenings, and the buzz has been generally positive.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 21:04 |
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ozymandius1024 posted:Cliff Floyd has been retired since 2010, and he made over 53 million dollars in his career This is football, not baseball like what Floyd played, but 3/4 of all NFL players will file for bankruptcy at some point after leaving the NFL. It's amazing how quickly players blow through that money.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 21:05 |
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I'd like to see one about the Atlanta Olympic bombing, specifically the shitstorm that Richard Jewell went through. Most people probably don't even remember who actually planted the bomb and why (I know I didn't).
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 22:31 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 21:25 |
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kidcoelacanth posted:Frankly I'd just love to see more racing documentaries. I would like to see one on the discussion/development/retarded thought process, then eventual fall out from the COT. Followed by a 30 for 30 about the new Indy Car. So we can see just how loving incompetent NASCAR is.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 22:36 |