If you’ve watched ESPN’s coverage of this year’s NFL draft you might have noticed how many times Trey Wingo has transitioned from telling us about how good a drafted player is at football to how something so bad happened in the player’s life either recently or, in some cases, many, many years ago.
It’s been jarring, really, watching these awkward transitions from talk of football skills to how a player lost a loved one to a tragic event.
On a human level, it’s terrible and sad that so many players and people in the world have suffered losses in their lives. We’ve all gone through that and it sucks.
But you know what also sucks? The way ESPN has been stretching to tell these stories so quickly after a player was picked to play in the NFL.
Is it nice to learn something about these players as human beings? Of course. Does it feel like ESPN is trying to exploit these stories to make the viewers at home feel emotions and stay tuned into their coverage? Of course.
ESPN, which is doing a great job of producing this draft during a very challenging time, needs to learn from this and not repeat it next year. Because all this “tragedy porn” has been sickening and not necessary at all.
And I’m not the only one feeling that way:
Re: ESPN's "Tragedy Porn" during the NFL draft.
It's a very fine line between providing human interest stories to show adversity players have overcome and just sensationalizing tragedy.
I hope ESPN takes this draft to review where that line is.
— Jim Weber (@JimMWeber) April 25, 2020
I’d be fascinated to hear any explanation from @espn after this draft is over with about this strange fixation on dead family members, personal tragedy and conduct issues.
— socially distant since ‘86 (@brianneubert) April 25, 2020
people: “this nfl draft will be a great distraction from all the tragedy in the world right now”
espn: “here is everyone that has died in this player’s life”
— maybe: chris (@noturfatherscpa) April 24, 2020
I'm not sure I understand the producing philosophy at ESPN to play-up every tragedy/death in each draft pick's life? I think the audience is sophisticated enough to understand this is a big day in their lives–do the viewers need a tragic reason to appreciate the significance?
— Travis Lee (@TLee_WMTW) April 24, 2020
These are the type of blurbs people want to see about players as they are drafted. Not the ridiculous non-stop tragedy porn we kept hearing from @ESPN and @wingoz over and over during draft coverage. https://t.co/e73trMoBRb
— Man on a Mission (@Supeprime) April 25, 2020
ESPN's formula:
– Draft pick announced
– Highlights of draft pick from college
– Stats and analysis from NFL and NCAA Football experts
– Story about a heartbreaking tragedy the draft pick suffered from 10-20 years ago
– Video of draft pick's father working out. (if applicable)— Zach Halverson (@ZachHalverson) April 25, 2020
WHAT IS GOING ON WITH ALL THESE TRAGEDY STORIES ON ESPN’s DRAFT COVERAGE
— Nicholas Smith (@Nick_V_Smith) April 25, 2020
The NFL has done a great job, all things considered, with this draft.
ESPN, on the other hand, has lost a lot of fans, from tragedy porn to subpar analysis (which is magnified this year). Not the best three days for the Worldwide Leader…
At least #TheLastDance is tomorrow!
— Cole Tarver (@TheColeTarver) April 25, 2020
ESPN: tell us about yourself
NFL DRAFT PROSPECT: so i like football, hanging out with my friends, playing video games! looking forward to helping at the next level!!ESPN: yea sure anyway what's ur greatest personal tragedy and do u prefer soft piano or harp as background music
— Tyler Conway (@jtylerconway) April 25, 2020
Hey @espn can we get less concerts and tragedy porn and more coverage of the actual draft and players?
— Geoff D (@Boomer0888) April 25, 2020
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