Future of Sports Journalism | Events | Sport, Media, and Culture Minor | University of Notre Dame

Future of Sports Journalism

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Location: Online - Zoom (see registration link)

Future of Sports Journalism Info Poster

Future of Sports Journalism

Hosted by the Aspen Institute Sports and Society Program

Register for Zoom link here

What's Lost if Sports Journalism is Deprioritized?

Sports both reflect and shape our society. Journalism unpacks those relationships, along the way making the games that we play more interesting and relevant. The New York Times, HBO Real Sports, and Los Angeles Times helped set the standard. Now, each outlet is changing how it covers sports – and Real Sports ended its run after 29 award-winning years.

What happened? And what does the future hold for enterprise and investigative journalism in sports? Could the public get less, or more, coverage of important topics as the media landscape evolves? What are the most promising business models to support this work? And what do we lose if longform sports journalism gets deprioritized in a streaming world?

Join us Nov. 15 from 12-1 pm ET for our next Future of Sports Discussion. We will address the topic from two angles, with two panels:

What Happened to Sports Journalism, with speakers including:

  • Ben Strauss, Washington Post sports and media reporter
  • Jon Solomon, Aspen Institute Sports & Society Program editorial director, former investigative sports reporter (moderator)

Where to Go From Here for Sports Journalism, with speakers including:

  • David Boardman, Temple University Klein College of Media and Communication dean and professor, Solutions Journalism Network vice chair
  • John Kosner, Kosner Media president, four-decade veteran of sports media
  • Iliana Limón Romero, Los Angeles Times sports editor
  • Tom Farrey, Aspen Institute Sports & Society Program executive director, former investigative sports reporter (moderator)