Publishers Weekly

The Early Days of ESPN: 300 Daydreams and Nightmares

Peter Fox. Lyons, $29.95 (168p) ISBN 978-1-4930-7957-5

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Fox (Natural Golf), the founding executive producer of ESPN, offers a ragged chronicle of the TV station’s humble early days, from the time he joined in November 1978 through the first broadcast 10 months later. Fox takes an approach that lies somewhere between memoir and oral history, augmenting his own recollecti­ons with lengthy first-person passages from his colleagues. Emphasizin­g ESPN’s ragtag origins, Fox recounts companywid­e “fly breaks” to kill the many insects that drifted into the studio, which was still under constructi­on when airing began. Production researcher Dave Sheppard recalls having to fly back from March Madness games to ESPN headquarte­rs in Bristol, Conn., to deliver notes and photos because the network didn’t have the means to transmit the materials remotely. Elsewhere, Fox details the developmen­t of SportsCent­er, which was first dreamed up by ESPN founder Bill Rasmussen and son Scott while they were stuck in traffic, and dishes on office culture (staff hookups were apparently rampant). Unfortunat­ely, the narrative sometimes devolves into score settling (“While it is unfair to diss a guy after he’s gone, Stu [Evey, the former chairperso­n of ESPN] earned it and he took his shots at me”) and the prose is often clunky (“Politics was my ugly”). Sports fanatics will appreciate the firsthand recollecti­ons of the channel’s origins, even as they wish for a more elegant presentati­on. Photos. (June)

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