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Fire Joe Morgan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fire Joe Morgan
Type of site
Blog
Created byMichael Schur, Alan Yang, Dave King
URLwww.firejoemorgan.com
CommercialNo
LaunchedApril 28, 2005
Current statusDiscontinued, with occasional guest posts from Deadspin

Fire Joe Morgan was a sports journalism criticism blog which focused primarily on baseball. It was updated regularly from 2005 through 2008. Although the late sports commentator Joe Morgan was often criticized, the site did not target him exclusively, but rather criticized anything the writers considered to be ignorant journalism as a whole. The blog's slogan was "Where Bad Sports Journalism Comes to Die." The blog usually used a format known as fisking.

The website officially announced its discontinuation in November 2008. Although the website is no longer updated, its archives are still available at firejoemorgan.com. The blog had what was to be a one-day reprise on September 16, 2009, when Deadspin invited the authors to guest post.[1] The authors guest posted again on Deadspin on September 22, 2010.

In 2016, Fire Joe Morgan was assessed as being "on the right side of history" and "very, very funny" by Slate.[2] Upon Joe Morgan's passing in 2020, the authors noted their regret about the blog's name.[3][4][5] That same year, the authors held a reunion.[6]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • 1982 10 03 Dodgers at Giants
  • 1975 WS Gm7: Morgan's single gives Reds 4-3 lead
  • 1976 World Series game 2 New York Yankees at Cincinnati Reds Catfish Hunter PART 1

Transcription

Background

The website was founded by a group of friends in April 2005. Its sole purpose, according to Michael Schur, one of the founders, was to "make each other laugh."[7] The website championed the statistical analysis of baseball in the tradition of Bill James, often using sabermetrics to support its arguments. Sports writers who published works misstating the concepts of the book Moneyball were a common target.[8] The blog quickly grew in popularity, and was featured in an SI.com piece within its first year of existence.[9] The site's authors initially kept their identities hidden using the pseudonyms Ken Tremendous, Junior, and dak, but in February 2008 revealed themselves to be TV writers Michael Schur, Alan Yang, and Dave King respectively.[10] The three met as staff members of the Harvard Lampoon and Schur and Yang both wrote for the television show Parks and Recreation. As of season 4, King also worked for Parks and Recreation.[11] King is also a writer for Comedy Central's Workaholics.[12]

Mainstream recognition

From 2006 on, the website grew in popularity to the point where its name could be seen in newspaper sports sections[13][14] and heard on the air during sports radio broadcasts.[15] In 2007, users of the site bustedcoverage.com voted Fire Joe Morgan the best sports blog of the year, beating sites including Deadspin and MetsBlog in the contest.[16] Former Deadspin editor Will Leitch called Schur "one of our favorite sports bloggers."[17]

Several major newspapers and magazines, including New York Times, The Boston Globe, and New York magazine reported on the site's closing.[18][19][20] Sports Illustrated named Fire Joe Morgan one of the five most influential sports blogs of the decade in December 2009.[21]

References

  1. ^ "The FJM Reunion" Deadspin.com
  2. ^ https://slate.com/culture/2016/09/fire-joe-morgan-and-the-moneyball-revolution.html "Who Actually Won the Moneyball Revolution?"
  3. ^ "'Fire Joe Morgan' creator Mike Schur admits always regretting that name for his baseball blog 'Fire Joe Morgan' creator Mike Schur admits always regretting that name for his baseball blog". 15 October 2020.
  4. ^ "Michael Schur Remembers Joe Morgan, Regrets Blog Name". 13 October 2020.
  5. ^ "Mike Schur remembers MLB great Joe Morgan". 14 October 2020.
  6. ^ "A Few More Words: The Fire Joe Morgan Reunion on Apple Podcasts".
  7. ^ "The Relatively Short Goodbye" Firejoemorgan.com
  8. ^ "I've Had It With People Who've Had It With 'Moneyball'" Firejoemorgan.com
  9. ^ "Website takes its shots at Joe Morgan" Sports Illustrated (2005-10-21)
  10. ^ "About Us" Firejoemorgan.com
  11. ^ http://i56.tinypic.com/2q8mvet.jpg [dead link]
  12. ^ "Dave King". IMDb.com. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  13. ^ "King Kaufman's Sports Daily" Salon.com (2006-7-14)
  14. ^ "Criticism More Science Than Art" The Crimson (2006-5-2)
  15. ^ "Cardinals on the Brink; Tigers Hope History Counts" National Public Radio (2006-10-27)
  16. ^ "Fire Joe Morgan Is 2007 Sports Blog Of The Year" Bustedcoverage.com (2008-1-1)
  17. ^ "One Of Our Favorite Sports Bloggers Is ... Mose Schrute?!" Deadspin (2008-2-7)
  18. ^ "Writers Halt Site Skewering Sportswriters" The New York Times (2008-11-17)
  19. ^ "The firing squad" The Boston Globe (2008-11-14)
  20. ^ "Is It Really This Hard to Select Award Winners in Baseball?" New York Magazine (2008-11-21)
  21. ^ "2000s: The Decade in Sports" SI.com

External links

This page was last edited on 5 March 2023, at 09:07
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.