It was probably over a year ago that if an athlete or even an entertainer broke major news on his or her blog he or she would have been vilified. Yet the reports that Curt Schilling, an athlete who is actually working in the digital world with a few ventures, including a gaming company, announced his retirement in his words, on his blog 38pitches.com, and with little fanfare, barely made a negative dent in the media. The Boston Globe report was a great look back at Schilling's career and his impact on things bigger than baseball, and ironically the access quotes in the story were much more others talking about the pitcher than him talking about retirement. As mentioned, Schilling does take the digital world very seriously, and his blog often offers up opinion and commentary on things that have little or nothing to do with baseball. The issue with this was not the announcement, but the more universal acceptance of the medium. There will be media interviews with Schilling as the days roll by, and he really hasn’t been in the mainstream sports world for a while, but there is no doubt he was an athlete and personality of influence, and it still remains a marvel at how quickly the “missives” controlled by the speaker and used by the media because there is no other access, is becoming the norm for getting the message out. The additional benefit to the speaker is how sites for top athletes who are now building themselves as brands can use news to drive traffic and partnerships. Schilling's blog and url ran in every major media publication as it was the only source of the statement. Therefore all that traffic and access to his advertisers and “click through's” become his. If he had called a reporter or a radio show that proprietary traffic would have gone elsewhere. Thus by driving the traffic and controlling the message Curt Schilling won on many fronts, and can now do whatever mass interviews he desires as followup. Another example of the changing flow of media information control.
Some other good reads…Media Post has a good piece on the NBA's new partnership with Cartoon Network…the AP story on Japan's WBC win gives great flavor as to the importance of the event as a brand in Asia…
the New York Daily News had a nice feature on the Mets David Wright helping an Iraq war vet attend the WBC…Entrepreneur Magazine has a good profile on the owner of New York watering hole Foley's and its baseball fanatic owner, Sean Clancy, and the Salt Lake Tribune has a good piece on the ever-growing rivalry between the Jazz and the Rockets.