All entries tagged: APSE
Five ways for sports reporters to maintain a balance of power with the teams and leagues they cover
In June 2007, John McClain, who covers the NFL’s Houston Texans for the Houston Chronicle, was getting tired of a league rule that limited the Chronicle to posting no more than 45 seconds of team video on its web site every day. So he and his colleague Anna-Megan Raley decided it was time for a [...]
When the league owns the network — and pays the journalists: A new set of ethical questions arise
With no live programming in the morning, MLB Network had to scramble to assemble its crew after the bombshell broke Feb. 7: Sports Illustrated’s Selena Roberts and David Epstein were reporting that Alex Rodriguez had tested positive for steroids in 2003 as a member of the Texas Rangers. But within a few hours, MLB Network [...]
A legal primer: No consistent winner in the turf wars between sports leagues and news organizations
[This is part two of our series on the changing relationships between sports leagues and news organizations. See the whole series here. —Josh]
Before diving any deeper into the growing power of sports leagues over how news organizations do their work, it’s important to trace the legal path that got us to this point. A few [...]
Sports leagues as media moguls: What happens when the people we cover start to control the news?
[Today, we're starting a four-part series by our friend Justin Rice on how the media tables are turning in the world of sports, where the subjects of coverage are becoming the creators of coverage — and what implications those shifts have for the rest of the news business. —Josh]
Thirty-eight days after Major League Baseball launched [...]








