Corporate synergies, vertical integration, in–house promos…there are all sorts of ways for networks to try and promote assets owned by other branches of their corporate structure, and we see all of those quite a bit. But that sometimes gets awkward when Thing A is being promoted on Thing B and the Thing B audience has some crossover, but not a total crossover, with the Thing A audience. Examples include decades of Joe Buck promo reads for a whole lot of crappy Fox shows, long debates about how to pronounce Mark-Paul Gosselaar’s name, Susan Sarandon inside the glass on a NBCSN hockey broadcast, Ernie Johnson awkwardly eating Pizza Hut pizza on-air, and much more. And the latest example comes from a Braun Strowman interview on Fox’s almost-national broadcast of the Chicago Cubs-St. Louis Cardinals game Thursday.
Having guests in the MLB booth is a long-running tradition, of course, especially on regional broadcasts of not-so-consequential games. But Cubs-Cardinals is pretty significant (the 82-70 Cubs were three games back of the 85-67 Cardinals for the division lead heading into this one), and interrupting a significant broadcast that’s going out to almost the entire country for an interview with a professional wrestler is interesting, to say the least. And while it’s understandable why Fox wants to promote WWE Smackdown‘s upcoming move to the Fox broadcast network (debuting Aug. 4), this interview went on for a long, long time, and created some annoyance amongst those watching who weren’t big WWE fans. Here are a couple of clips from the interview, first with Strowman talking with Joe Davis and John Smoltz about Smackdown’s move to Fox, and promoting how Smackdown airs 52 weeks a year, unlike MLB and NFL games:
From there, the interview just kept going and going. Later on, Strowman talked about playing baseball through high school, then slo-pitch softball, which his father was famed for:
https://twitter.com/MLBONFOX/status/1174842357650317312
And a whole lot of people weren’t impressed:
https://twitter.com/phil_rosenthal/status/1174833550161580032
https://twitter.com/wetzclan/status/1174834225691930625
https://twitter.com/hbagenstos/status/1174833333299290112
https://twitter.com/MandyN77/status/1174833503076139010
The basic idea here is understandable; Fox has a big new sports-adjacent property to promote, and they’re going to do that any way they can. And in some ways, this is a more logical cross-promotion than some of the booth interviews with actors over the years; there’s probably a higher crossover between baseball fans and wrestling fans than baseball fans and fans of whatever show the network’s trying to promote this week.
But it’s unclear that having Strowman show up on a significant MLB on Fox broadcast for such a long interview is going to actually be beneficial for Fox. Especially as this led to a whole lot of backlash from those who were trying to follow the game and not the interview with the wrestler. It’s an interesting move, but not necessarily a beneficial one.
[Clippit]
About Andrew Bucholtz
Andrew Bucholtz has been covering sports media for Awful Announcing since 2012. He is also a staff writer for The Comeback. His previous work includes time at Yahoo! Sports Canada and Black Press.
Recent Posts
Bryce Harper insists the WBC is great, but ‘it’s not the Olympics’
He's hoping MLB and the union can agree to let players compete in the 2028 LA Games.
Fox viewers hated Saturday’s IndyCar broadcast
"This is actually a great race and we are getting the worst tv coverage in 20 years."
Bruce Pearl tells Travis Steele their clash over Miami’s (OH) tournament résumé is ‘just business’
"I kind of feel like you're Cinderella, and I'm the ugly stepmother."
Tim Kurkjian apologizes for putting Ubaldo Jiménez’s fastball ahead of Mariano Rivera’s cutter
""Well, I must have been drunk when I said that."
Adam Schein set to debut ‘Schein Time’ for New York Post, California Post beginning March 10
The daily digital show will air Monday through Friday at 2 p.m. ET on YouTube and nypost.com/sports.
Seth Davis calls out Miami taunting Ohio student section: ‘Better to win with class’
"I know lots of people love this stuff, and we can agree to disagree."