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Long Bomb: How the XFL Became TV's Biggest Fiasco
 
 
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Long Bomb: How the XFL Became TV's Biggest Fiasco [Hardcover]

Brett Forrest (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 24, 2002
There is no failure like televised failure. It is the most public failure. The most humbling failure. So it was odd when the two men who had assembled the biggest bomb in television history began high-fiving on the sidelines of the XFL’s final game.

But not everyone was celebrating. Dick Butkus bristled. Jesse Ventura just wanted it all to end. And the general public couldn’t wait to watch something completely different.

Brett Forrest’s Long Bomb is the unofficial inside story of what really happened in the XFL, the renegade football league dreamed up by NBC and the World Wrestling Federation. Forrest reported on the XFL from its first training camp to its championship game, and he takes us inside the limousines and locker rooms and onto the field to deliver the dope that NBC’s all-access cameras only promised. Along the way, Long Bomb seamlessly interweaves the story lines that arose from the doomed enterprise.

When network titan NBC lost television rights to the NFL, sports department chairman Dick Ebersol was willing to do anything to get football back under his wing. Meanwhile, Vince McMahon, at the apex of his powers with the WWF, desperately wanted to prove that he was more than a two-bit huckster. Old friends, the two men shared a common hatred of the suits who ran the NFL. By combining football, wrestling, and reality TV, they planned to reinvent the way America watched sports.

That’s where the story begins. Long Bomb follows the plot twists toward the humiliating finale, introducing us to key figures along the way. As color commentator, Jesse Ventura was a piece of the puzzle that was supposed to explode the TV sports formula. Soon enough, he became an expendable scapegoat. Dick Butkus was meant to lend a measure of football credibility to the fledgling operation, but ultimately even he couldn’t see what was worth saving or dressing up.

Long Bomb also tells the story of the men who played in the XFL, which promised as much to them as it did to its viewers. Set in Las Vegas, the book follows the Outlaws, including the league’s biggest star, Rod Smart. His nickname, He Hate Me, was the one thing that worked in the XFL. But the real story behind He Hate Me has never been told.

Forrest deconstructs every aspect of this moment-in-time experiment that spoke volumes about the direction of the entire TV sports business. A combination of desperation and hubris, the XFL reflected a confused media landscape, where the cost of airing big games ran too high in a wilderness of splintered audiences and expanding entertainment choices.

The XFL was supposed to be greater, bigger, better—more, more, more. If it worked, competing networks would have fallen over each other copying the formula. If it didn’t work, man, what a train wreck.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A joint venture of NBC Sports and World Wrestling Federation impresario and "bumpkin billionaire" Vince McMahon, the XFL-with its candid locker room cameras, WWF-style bad attitude and faster, looser, meaner brand of football-was supposed to revolutionize the way America watched sports. Instead, the league crashed and burned over the course of a single, calamitous season. Journalist Forrest's behind-the-scenes book chronicles that downfall in sharp, often witty prose, paying special attention to larger-than-life personalities: from blustery egotists like McMahon and ex-wrestler/Minnesota governor/XFL commentator Jesse Ventura, to the cockily self-deluded jocks, most of them NFL rejects, who saw the XFL as their last, best hope for making it. Interspersing their stories with accounts of bungled telecasts and on-field chaos, Forrest too often lets slip his obvious disdain, taking passing potshots at the "TV creeps" and "advertising hoodlums" of the NFL establishment and tossing off such incidental insults as "beyond alopecia, Jesse Ventura shared precious little with Howard Cosell." But if the author displays a little too much of his own XFL-type attitude, it does not cloud his generally clear-eyed account of Mr. McMahon's failed enterprise, in all its monumental folly.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Ironically, TV's professional football league-cum-reality show was created in response to the insanity of media outlets paying billions of dollars to lose money by broadcasting major organized sports. NBC bowed out of the negotiations for the NFL football package and hooked up with World Wrestling Federation impresario Vince McMahon to devise a low-rent alternative. The resulting bizarre merger of wrestling theatrics and professional football disintegrated into an economic and cultural car crash that was unsettling to watch. Journalist Forrest re-creates the short but provocative run of the XFL through the actions and comments of many of the major actors in the drama, especially McMahon, NBC executive Dick Ebersole, and announcer Gov. Jesse "The Body" Ventura. Such players as Rod Smart are depicted trying to maintain the dream of playing professional football while being ensnared in the circus atmosphere of a tasteless spectacle that no one was watching. The XFL set new records for low TV ratings. This fascinating pop culture tale is recommended for all libraries.
John Maxymuk, Rutgers Univ. Lib., Camden, NJ
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Crown; 1st edition (September 24, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0609609920
  • ISBN-13: 978-0609609927
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 5.9 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,396,887 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

20 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Mediocre at best, May 28, 2010
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This review is from: Long Bomb: How the XFL Became TV's Biggest Fiasco (Hardcover)
After reading the Rebel League, a great book about the WHA and Loose Balls, a decent book on the ABA, Long Bomb was a dud. I expected more of a league wide account. The author focuses in one team, the Las Vegas Outlaws and a little about the LA Maniax, the others are barely mentioned. I felt the book really lets the reader down in trying to get a good picture of the XFL. I wasn't a big fan of the WWF, maybe WWF fans will like this book better. It focuses more on Vince McMahon and Jessie Ventura than anything else.

The author writes in a very cheesey style, with dumb analogies and stupid statements. For instance he refers to security guards as rent-a-cops so many times it gets lame.

The book is organized poorly, Page 100 should be the start of the book, where it actually starts to tell you how the XFL came about. The book starts off just plopping in the middle, making the reader wonder constantly what is going on and who are these people the author is talking about.

The XFL is done an injustice by having this be one of the only accounts of its brief history.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fascinating Postmortem Of TVs Biggest Bomb, February 19, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Long Bomb: How the XFL Became TV's Biggest Fiasco (Hardcover)
Long Bomb is more an account of the greatest failure in sports television than about the sport itself. We learn some about the Las Vegas Outlaws, but this book is at the core about the drama within the executive ranks of the league.

Dick Ebersol, the NBC Sports chairman, saw the current regime of negotiating contracts with sports leagues as a slow death for the network. Finally, he couldn't bid at the record levels for the new NFL contract. Instead, he hungered for a cheaper proprietary product built permanently for NBC.

Elsewhere in the world, the nouveau riche Vince McMahon sought out his own revenge against the snobby blue bloods of the NFL. McMahon had been a part of the rejected 1998 ownership bid that included author Tom Clancy, and the deal largely fell through over McMahon's reputation as an unsavory character. Incensed, McMahon held a grudge against the elitist old boys club, and kicked around a concept for his eventual revenge. Then the WWF issued a wildly-successful initial public offering, and Vince had the cash to start his own eight-team league, which would be based in the spring, like the USFL.

Ebersol welcomed him in like a white knight. They set a schedule for Saturday nights, in hopes of lifting a barren spot in NBC's lineup.

Long Bomb describes how a misguided emphasis on raunchy hype-driven gimmicks alienated the true football fan, but did not bring in the wrestling fan. The projected beautiful hybrid turned out to be a grotesque dying chimera, and after one year, Ebersol and McMahon at last pulled it off life-support.

Brett Forrest employed plenty of sardonic purple prose to describe the dream gone rotten. Another reviewer described this as gonzo journalism. I think that's apt. I'm reminded of Tom Wolfe's New Journalism. It works extremely well with this topic. The one irritating nit in the work is the persistent riddling of careless typos from the middle to the end. If you can overlook those, you'll enjoy this especially if you're fascinated by what can go wrong with the most sure television productions.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Long Bomb succeeds in sports and media realms, October 10, 2002
This review is from: Long Bomb: How the XFL Became TV's Biggest Fiasco (Hardcover)
(4.5 stars) In short, this is an extremely entertaining story that shows just how strong a grip hollywood has on sports, and just how much money corporates are willing to spend on smoke and mirrors, as long as the bikinis are skimpy enough.

Investigative work of Forrest is surprisingly thorough and likely has made him a candidate for some brand new cement shoes. Body guards might be in order. One asks the questions, "How does a guy so bright get in so close to guys so dense?"

For what its worth, my advice...buy and read this book if you are fed up with sappy fairy-tales of johnny-come-lately's saga with fame, drugs and women/men and the obligatory successful finale, with a "how-to" for the rest of us. And/or if you are fed up with media books by the likes of the Murdoch empire.

"Media-studies" readers will finally be entertained by a strong media book. Die-hard sports fans will have a chance to do a healthy re-think of their views on mass-media sports. I did.

Most of all...entertaining and sharp, bridges realms of sports/media. (4.5 stars)

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THERE IS NO FAILURE LIKE televised failure. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
pro football league, broadcast partner, game clock, pro wrestling, personal foul
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Rod Smart, Las Vegas, Ryan Clement, The Rock, San Francisco, Dick Ebersol, Los Angeles, Jesse Ventura, Rusty Tillman, Super Bowl, Jim Criner, John Gonzalez, Kelvin Kinney, Dick Butkus, Million Dollar Game, Monday Night Football, Ken Schanzer, Long Bomb, Sam Boyd Stadium, Lorne Michaels, Bubba Cam, Jim Ross, Tommy Maddox, Bob Costas
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Concordance | Text Stats
Browse Sample Pages:
Front Cover | Front Flap | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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