Register   |  Login Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to B&C Magazine
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talk, Magazines in Fox Sports Game Plan

By Allison Romano -- Broadcasting & Cable, 2/16/2004

Fox Sports Networks is testing a play designed to keep viewers in their seats: entertainment fare on Fox's 20 regional sports networks. Used as shoulder bits for games and news, the shows will include talkers, celebrity and pop-culture vehicles, and interview programs—all sports-related.

"We need people to stay longer. We need to branch out. We need more variety," says Executive VP of Programming George Greenberg. (Fox owns 11 of the regional sports nets; the other nine are affiliates.)

Starting March 21, Fox Sports Net Across America is a weekly magazine show culled from reporting across the regions. Riding the casino-game craze, Fox plans an invitation-only poker show featuring top players.

Daily strip The Sports List is a countdown show with athletes and celebs dishing on top sports moments and players with former Olympic champ Summer Sanders, who has signed on to host. Both those shows arrive in May.

And here's an interesting cross breed. "Nightline meets Bill O'Reilly's show" is how Greenberg describes another strip show in the works, a topical sports show tackling hot sports issues.

Greenberg and his development team, led by Vice President of Development Zig Gauthier and director Geoff Suddleson are sifting through hundreds of pitches looking for about a dozen series. Both are MTV vets. They're steering clear of scripted shows for now, though: too risky.

But the slate may include a sports-themed animated show from Jeff Nodelman about two agoraphobic videogame designers. It will mix animation with live-action sports footage.

Fox is also plotting stunts and specials, like quarterly interview specials that Greenberg bills as "the Barbara Walters [interviews] of sports," hosted by a Fox Sports talent and pegged to big events like the Super Bowl or NBA Finals.

But these new shows can't run uniformly across the sports channels. The nets have to accommodate live events and different time zones. So Fox is requesting—rather than requiring—that programs premiere on certain nights and repeat throughout the week. Fox Sports Net Across America, for example, would debut on Sunday nights, rerun Mondays and Fridays.

If Fox's gamble succeeds, it may be the start of a programming revolution.

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

PRODUCT WIRE




 
Advertisement

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs


Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

» VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Podcasts

Photos

  • Sarah Palin's TV Land Lookalikes
    Forget Tina Fey. B&C has compiled a gallery of dead ringers for Alaska Governor Sarah Palin from the world of TV.
  • The 60 Minutes Clock, Through the Years
    CBS' 60 Minutes is celebrating 40 years on the air and, as the show has evolved, so has its signature clock logo.
  • Showtime Showhouse
    Cable Network Showtime & Metropolitan Home Magazine partnered to turn a brownstone house near Gramercy Park into a luxurious & artistic representation of its programs. Each room is inspired by the Network's shows.

    Photographs taken by Lucy Hemmings.

Advertisements





B&C NEWSLETTERS

Click on a title below to learn more.

Broadcasting & Cable Today
B&C HD Update
B&C Telco IP Update
B&C Local Cable Advertising Sales
B&C Hispanic Television Update
B&C International Update
B&C TechTalk
B&C NewsCentral
©2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites