• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

I'm wondering

A

ArtSpooner

Guest
Why has there been no mention of John Henry's storming of the castle at 98.5 on this board? I would think that would be kind of a hot topic on a Boston Radio site. Felger must be jumping for joy. This has to boost his ratings. I even listened to the interview and I can't stand Felger. On the other hand, 'EEI, who pays millions of dollars to the Red Sox, has just watched the Sox owner greatly help their competitor. I can imagine that they're not real happy.
 
There's been some mentions on Boston Sports Media. Someone noted that while WEEI prefers not to mention their competition (though some recent liners say, "Uh oh, guess who's got the biggest one (signal?) now?"), 98.5 has been referred to as "CBS Radio"...while EEI's Larry Johnson came right out and called them the Sports Hub
 
Henry did go on NESN first via D&C. "EEI may have had a beef if the appearance had been promoted. But he came in off the street.

It probably will be the last time he does it but the RS are so in flux right now that Henry will be speaking again: just not on talk radio.

~ LarryJ did say Mustard made a face at him when he started talking Hub.
 
It was a well executed publicity stunt -- in the sense that they used it to focus attention on their version of events and blunt the impact of the Globe report.

Ownership had been excoriated for its performance during the WEEI appearance, with considerable criticism for Lucchino answering for Henry. So the Red Sox carefully orchestrated the "storming" of the radio station to get a well-prepared and well-rehearsed Henry to challenge two reporters,and to do it with the "enemy" station. No, the radio station was not a co-conspirator; in fact they fell for it.

Rule #1 of PR involving sports reporters is they wilt when challenged -- just watch a Belichik news conference, or remember back to Parcells news conferences. A coach willing to stare down the media can utter any nonsense they want and if the media makes even a feeble attempt at a follow-up question, they repeat the same idiocy and glare the sports reporters into submission. Happens after every Patriots loss. The Sox also well-remembered the "Curt in the car" calls, and how much credibility Schilling had for taking matters into his own hands to directly rebut stuff being said.

As a PR move, the Sox had a)the element of being aggressive with sports reporters who are generally spectacularly unable to respond when an interviewee comes at them from a position of strength and b) the preexisting predilection of the media to grant instant credibility to sports figures who seek them out to make public statements.

Remember, John Henry deals in commodities futures for a living. Nobody who deals in commodities futures does ANYTHING on impulse (well, anything not involving the former Miss Pizzuti); to act on impulse in the world of commodities trading is to die. The idea that he was listening to the radio and had a sudden impulse to "storm" a radio is nonsense. It was well-planned, probably well-rehearsed and very well-executed.

But don't believe it was the least bit spontaneous.
 
It was well-planned, probably well-rehearsed and very well-executed.
It wasn't well executed and as for being planned, I don't think so. Henry may be some sort of financial wiz but he's not a glib personality. He was out of his element.
If this was a RS plan, it wasn't a very good move on their part.
 
Like any PR move it may or may not work. It does create a context for rehabilitation of ownership's image because if you believe the far-out fantasy that this was a spontaneous event, you can probably be convinced that the triumvirate are good guys.

Personally I think they're very very bad people for a lot of reasons, ranging from building left field bleachers and conning people into thinking they're something special worth $160 a pop, to taking over a city street on game days, to the horrid way they treat former employees.

And it's not just me who thinks this whole thing was a PR scam. Here's what Massarotti said:

"Was Henry really just driving around yesterday when he detoured for the Sports Hub, or he was the trip more contrived? The afternoon drive show on the station was merely one segment old when Henry strolled into the studio – that’s about 15-20 minutes – which seems like an awfully short amount of time for someone to react to something on the airwaves, then be there out of the next commercial break.

"Or was Henry already on his way to the station before the show even began?"

I was glad to see that; I hate to think that people who work in the industry are as stupid as the listeners.
 
It may have been contrived on JWH's part, but I don't think he executed it very well. The remark about Carl Crawford made him look especially bad. He basically said, I didn't want him but I let them spend $140 million anyway. That doesn't sound like an astute manager to me. He comes across as this brilliant savant who has very little common sense. He bought an expensive toy and he wants to play with it, but doesn't know how. The wife doesn't sound like she has the pulse of Red Sox nation either. She tweets that he was home from the hospital in time to watch a soccer game right in the middle of all of the chaos. Soccer????

I think the way the whole treatment of Tito was handled very shabbily. Starting with the press conference, then the appearance on D&C to the assault on F&M, they've just looked worse each time. Lucchino comes across like a sleazy shyster no matter what he's saying. What I would have liked to hear Henry say was that if he finds out who Hohler's source is that he'll fire him/her. I didn't hear that. All I heard was a weasel trying to blame everyone else. On top of all of this, Theo decides that it's a good time to get out of Dodge. They should go to the matresses and shut up for a month or two.

I just noticed that I used "get out of Dodge" and "go to the matresses" in consecutive sentences. I must be watching too much TV.
 
ArtSpooner said:
The wife doesn't sound like she has the pulse of Red Sox nation either. She tweets that he was home from the hospital in time to watch a soccer game right in the middle of all of the chaos. Soccer????

The Red Sox season was over. Henry owns Liverpool FC, too. Liverpool FC is a much bigger deal globally than the Red Sox will ever be. Why shouldn't he have wanted to watch the game?
 
Blackroc said:
It was well-planned, probably well-rehearsed and very well-executed.
It wasn't well executed and as for being planned, I don't think so. Henry may be some sort of financial wiz but he's not a glib personality. He was out of his element.
If this was a RS plan, it wasn't a very good move on their part.

Mazz made a great point about something....Henry was supposedly "just driving around" and heard him and Felger telling lies and all that stuff, which got him mad and promptly headed to the station......and he got there at 2:20...with them just going on the air at 2, was there really time for all that to transpire?
 
CTListener said:
ArtSpooner said:
The wife doesn't sound like she has the pulse of Red Sox nation either. She tweets that he was home from the hospital in time to watch a soccer game right in the middle of all of the chaos. Soccer????

The Red Sox season was over. Henry owns Liverpool FC, too. Liverpool FC is a much bigger deal globally than the Red Sox will ever be. Why shouldn't he have wanted to watch the game?
Red Sox nation couldn't care less about soccer, especially when a very popular manager has been fired. Do you hear a lot of soccer talk on either sports radio station? She should have just said he was OK. I, for one, didn't even know what "the derby" was. I guessed that it was some kind of horse race and I bet I wasn't the only denizen of the very parochial Red Sox Nation who also didn't know. All I know about Liverpool is that the Beatles came from there. All I know about soccer is that every four years, we have to endure a bunch of foreign fools telling us that we known nothing about sports in the USA.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom