Mike Wise, Faking Tweets and Why It’s Not Okay

Want to make a bunch of sports fans, journalist watch dogs and social media people flip out at the same time? I present to you your new role model: Mike Wise.

Before I launch into a discussion of his antics yesterday, I should say that I actually do appreciate Wise’s writing in my local Washington Post. I read his stuff frequently, and have definitely complimented it here within SportsGrid and Mediaite. But I think Wise made a crucial judgment error yesterday when he tried to make Twitter a playground for a inferiority complex display over the way that channel is used surrounding news and rumors.

To catch everyone up, yesterday morning during his radio show on Washington’s FM sports net, The Fan, Wise thought it would be fun to toy with his Twitter followers by posting a few fake rumors. The fake stories were none too salacious (rumors about whether Donovan McNabb would start the Washington Redskins first game, for example), but the one that did take hold and passed around plenty was a claim that Ben Roethlisberger’s suspension would be five games after his meeting with the commissioner later this week.

His motive was to test a theory about what is considered credible and believable on the social status network, that those who have a certain air of authority often are believed fully without further vetting. As he told Dan Levy of Press Coverage yesterday afternoon:

“Bottom line: I picked a lousy way to show we have no credibility in this medium, in the social networking medium, and that nobody checks these things out. It was just not a good way to do it. If i had to do it all over again I would have picked another way.”

That’s the story. And it’s been discussed just about everywhere in the last 24 hours (fellow Post sports writer Dan Steinberg collected most of the responses yesterday evening). Fundamentally, most were upset with Wise for irresponsibly pulling the wool over the eyes of Twitter users, and potentially even using the fake news to drive a growth in new followers. Deadspin got a hold of the “I’m not upset, but I’m disappointed” memo that was passed around the sports staff shortly after the stunt, while others called for Wise’s suspension from the Washington Post.

All of this is well and good, and it looks good for the media organization to try and uphold its pre-set social media guidelines, which are valid. The fundamental benchmark for these guidelines, though, has nothing to do with the channel through which a journalist passes his message. There aren’t different rules for Twitter and Facebook and Foursquare. Regardless of the actual network being used, the Post’s guidelines are about journalism first:

We never abandon the guidelines that govern the separation of news from opinion, the importance of fact and objectivity, the appropriate use of language and tone, and other hallmarks of our brand of journalism.

There is more than one difference between guys like Mike Wise and writers like those I get to join here at a blog like SportsGrid. For example, Dan, Glenn and I have all Twitter accounts, but we established these ourselves and no one will really run to the bank on our predictions, no matter what interviews or stories we get here. But for Wise, he gets immediate credibility by way of that Washington Post label – he’s a good journalist, he earned it. And he uses Twitter as a broadcast – look back at his history and you’ll notice little engagement with followers but lots of story streams, often very informed as well.

Wise’s theory was that people on Twitter will trust anything from a credible source, run it without verifying, and he wanted to be able to say how dangerous that could be. What he failed to factor into his experiment was how credibility was earned, which is exactly what he could have jeopardized with his little stunt. Deep down, I’ve convinced myself that Wise wanted to make the famed “blogger in pajamas” point. Instead, he made the “journalists don’t get social media point,” and the evidence of this to me is his “I’m sorry you feel that way,” apology:

He’s only half right on his first point: Mike, nobody checks *your* facts, because you are a sports writer for one of the three most important newspapers in the country. You better believe they will now.

I want to look back at the idea that Wise should be suspended, because I don’t think he should. I feel like he’s a kid who was told not to go climb in a tree, went and did it anyway, and now has a broken arm to show for it. The broken arm is a lesson enough, don’t ground the guy.

Actually, I have a better idea: Instead of squelching Twitter involvement, the Post should force him to take a lesson from guys like Steinberg and engage his followers and those tweeting at him. Maybe if he learned a little more about what conversation is valued, he wouldn’t have had this ridiculous idea in the first place.

SportsGrid

RBR Reading Room: Coach

Coachbook_medium

Alabama football is synonymous with one man – Paul W. Bryant. It is a fact that must be recognized and acknowledged before any true understanding of the program can proceed.

This presents a serious difficulty since Coach Bryant’s legend was already formidable during his lifetime and has scarcely dimmed in the years since. The night the Crimson Tide won the 2009 National Championship in Pasadena, an anonymous fan left a single rose in the hands of the coach’s statue. And every Alabama fan who heard about it felt it was completely fitting.

Despite that consensus of feeling, its almost impossible to condense into a simple explanation for others. Coach Bryant was a tough cookie to pin down when he was alive, and the task has only gotten harder since he passed away. The passage of years and the abundance of anecdotes have complicated things rather than clarified them.

Keith Dunnavant’s 1996 book on Coach Bryant’s life, Coach, The Life of Paul “Bear” Bryant is recognized as one of the best biographies of the Alabama legend. While it doesn’t seem to completely succeed at getting to the heart of this complex man, it certainly provides one of the best overviews of his life.

The story is simple enough: the son of an Arkansas sharecropper becomes a football player at a famed university and helps his team to a national championship. He then goes on to resurrect a series of downtrodden programs before becoming head coach of his alma mater and leading it to the greatest successful era in college football history. He stepped down after amassing the winningest record of any coach in the sport and passed away almost a month later.

The problem is it does nothing to explain that strange charisma that made players follow him unwaveringly despite the brutality of his practices and seemingly callous feelings for them. It can’t address his importance to the state and the South as a whole that went far beyond his position as a football coach. And it can’t tell why all of this reverberates so strongly almost three decades after his death.

Dunnavant’s book does a great job in trying to bridge this immense gap. He tells the story of Coach Bryan’ts life in a literary fashion relying on chronological order when it suits the narrative and abandoning it when it does not. He follows the ebb and flow of events that shaped Coach Bryant’s life and, in turn all those around him his life affected.

One canard Dunnavant takes particular care to destroy is the idea Coach Bryant hewed to a conservative approach to the game – defense and a rushing attack were the mainstays of his approach. Instead, Coach shows that while Coach Bryant wasn’t by any means an innovator, he wouldn’t hesitate to absorb a new strategy or approach if he thought it would give him an edge.

“Rather than being chained to a set of beliefs, Bryant was a pragmatists who was strengthened by the ability to adapt in order to give his team the best chance of winning,” Dunnavant writes.

It was, Dunnavant argues, his emphasis on organization to maximize results while preparing his players physically and psychologically that made him as successful as he proved to be.

Dunavant’s other book on Alabama football is the excellent The Missing Ring which recounts the Crimson Tide’s 1966 season and subsequent snubbing for the national championship. “Unbeaten, untied and uncrowned,” as he aptly phrases it.

The dual approach works well since The Missing Ring ends up being more about Alabama football and not Coach Bryant specifically. In Coach, the 1966 season is one element of the tale and the factors that went into its unfolding and the people who were involved are much more the focus.

The other book that Coach must be evaluated in terms of is Alan Barra’s biography of Coach Bryant, The Last Coach. Yet the way these two great books approach their subject matter is sharply different.

The dual approach works well since The Missing Ring ends up being more about Alabama football and not Coach Bryant specifically. In Coach, the 1966 season is one element of the tale and the factors that went into its unfolding and the people who were involved are much more the focus.

The other book that Coach must be evaluated in terms of is Alan Barra’s biography of Coach Bryant, The Last Coach. Yet the way these two great books approach their subject matter is sharply different.

Barra’s book is much more comprehensive and provides a contextual window for Coach Bryant’s life that is invaluable to understanding his impact to the school, the sport and the South as a whole. Dunnavant goes for a broader emotional picture. He’s less interested in mapping the course of Coach Bryant’s life than capturing the themes that drove it the course it did.

As a result, Coach is a much more personal work. It takes a great deal of time trying to humanize a man whose legend makes such a task almost impossible. There’s far too much invested in what Coach Bryant represented to completely ever see him as an individual. An Dunnavant points out this was a situation that Coach Bryant encountered with regularity during his lifetime.

“Coach Bryant had a kind of magic to him,” Dunnavant quotes a former player saying. “It was something you couldn’t really put your finger on, but you could feel it whenever he walked into the room.”

Still, the effort is important. While Dunnavant might not succeed at unearthing exactly what made Coach Bryant tick he does come closest at touching the emotional core of what he came to represent. I’ve read this book several times and still find myself tearing up at the account of Coach Bryant’s last months and passing. I’ll bet the next time you read it, you will too.

Roll ‘Bama Roll

Roger Federer Hits An Amazing Between-The-Legs Winner AGAIN (Video)

Roger Federer failed to win the U.S. Open last year, but he did hit the shot of the tournament – a winner hit from between his legs in the semifinal against Novak Djokovic. The shot got over 2,000 words from Joe Posnanski, and might have gotten 20,000 more if David Foster Wallace had been alive to see it.

But to me, it wasn’t quite the same when Federer lost in the final. Sure, it was still an incredible shot, still fun to watch replays of (you can do that below)…but he didn’t finish the job. And surely he’d never be able to his another shot like that.

Of course, you can see where this is going. Flash forward from the end of last year’s U.S. Open to this year’s first round, and Federer’s match last night against Brian Dabul, which Federer won easily, 6-1, 6-4, 6-2.

Late in the second set, Dabul was serving in a long game with multiple deuces (a game he eventually won, but no one will remember that). Dabul and Federer were rallying, and Dabul hit one over Federer’s head, to the back of the court. Federer chased after it, and only had one option – announcer John McEnroe even said, “Between the legs.” He went for it, and…another perfect winner.

There’s really nothing else to say here except watch the video of the shot below. Then, watch the other video below, of Federer’s similar shot against Djokovic last year, and decide which one you like better. Or just be thankful you live in a world where someone who could pull this type of shot off twice in competition exists. Your call.

SportsGrid

The Jumbo Package: 08/31/10

San Jose State running back Brandon Rutley is a Tuscaloosa native (although raised on the West Coast). He's expected to handle punt and kick returns for the Spartans on Saturday.

Matt Cilley – AP

San Jose State running back Brandon Rutley is a Tuscaloosa native (although raised on the West Coast). He’s expected to handle punt and kick returns for the Spartans on Saturday.

You know it’s game week when the opponent profiles start popping up all over the interwebs. The problem is there just ain’t a lot of 411 on the San Jose State Spartans. They have an overhauled roster and a new head coach.

Coach Saban has admitted this one is a challenge to prepare for and the staff has been forced to use Nevada-Reno as their example because “supposedly that is the offense that this team is running.”

Tough opening test for new San Jose St. coach | The Associated Press

The Tide is not sure what to expect from the Spartans | TideSports.com

Saban: Saturday will reveal a lot about Tide | oanow.com

Alabama not looking past San Jose | TideSports.com

 

Crimson Tide Player Profiles

The 2010 roster was released into the wild yesterday. And while frolicking among it’s brethrin, eager sportswriters swooped in to deliver a few player feature stories.

Scarbinsky: Hoover’s Kerry Murphy finds redemption at Alabama at last | al.com

With Rolando McClain suiting up in the NFL, it’s Dont’a Hightower’s turn to lead a fearsome Tide ‘D’ | al.com

Tide’s Square looks forward to fresh start | Montgomery Advertiser

Alabama linebacker prospect Trey DePriest likes to stay active | al.com

 

Miscellaneous

Less sunlight, air in Bryant-Denny Stadium a challenge for Tide’s groundskeeper | al.com

Seems not everybody is happy about the South end zone addition.

Tide doubles Gene Stallings pleasure | Decaturdaily.com

A nice take out on former Alabama coach Gene Stallings. 

Alabama-Auburn Iron Bowl rivalry celebrated in art show | al.com

I might not know art, but i know what I hate.

Roll ‘Bama Roll

Saban got angry at me last season for asking about the team’s Thanksgiving plans. He thought I was…

Saban got angry at me last season for asking about the team’s Thanksgiving plans. He thought I was second-guessing his decision to let the players go home. I wasn’t, but he was in a mood that week.

Anyway, he didn’t like the question and called me back into his office after the press conference (which happened a few times) and lit me up pretty good (which actually usually didn’t happen in those settings). It showed me he was REALLY worried about playing Auburn on the short week. At that moment, I was convinced Bama might lose that game, which they almost did.

Roll ‘Bama Roll

And y’all wonder why we’re gonna miss him… Anyway, Gentry Estes is hosting his farewell chat…

Gentry_farewell

And y’all wonder why we’re gonna miss him…

Anyway, Gentry Estes is hosting his farewell chat over at al.com, so go say your goodbyes.

Roll ‘Bama Roll

Sacramento Bee to ESPN: “Please Go Away”

ESPN is really making it easy to mock them these days. Over the weekend, the mighty network caused quite a ruckus during their telecast of a California prep football game.

Let’s just say that the local media were more than a little excited when the Worldwide Leader packed their bags and left town. In particular, The Sacramento Bee was none too happy with the way they were treated.

“As of early Friday evening, ESPN insisted that local television outlets were to have no access to the field – meaning no highlights on their newscasts – but it was adjusted to limited access from the end zones.”

The disdain for the elitist attitude that ESPN showed was not lost on the participants either. Both coaches were upset with how ESPN allowed the event to create a circus atmosphere, forgetting that players are student-athletes (no not the fake ones that are in college). Many of the players were pulled out of class to do interviews.

In taking the word “control freak” to a new level, ESPN was said to have rolled up with boxes full of sports-branded bottles and jugs, with instructions to display them on the sideline.

“No one had bothered to inform Folsom. It was a first: being told how to hydrate your players. ‘I told them if they wanted the coolers back, we were just going to leave them on the field,’ Richardson said.”

The host school, Folsom, had to wrestle ESPN for their $ 2,000 check which they described as “piddly.” They even had to fight for visiting Grant to get compensated also – a whopping $ 1,000.

The quote of the day comes from Fox 40 sports director Jim Crandell:

“I’ve covered eight Super Bowls and never had as many difficulties as I have with this game,”

You stay classy, ESPN.

Photo via. Is local media better than national media? Tell me your thoughts on Twitter.

SportsGrid