NFL Network coverage of family tragedies

Authored by awfulannouncing.com and submitted by OVEIDPTVZSEU
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The 2020 NFL Draft has seen plenty of unusual things thanks to it being conducted from the homes of everyone involved, but the technical side has largely been okay so far. However, the ESPN/NFL Network broadcast has received a lot of criticism for something in the editorial realm rather than the technical realm; their insistence on bringing up tragedies in many players’ family histories. Here are some of the many, many tweets on that:

If the NFL Draft graphics from last night were for superheroes, this is what they'd look like pic.twitter.com/HTvJ3cwwVN — Fitz (@FitzGSN_) April 24, 2020

ESPN NFL Draft producers when they find out a draft pick grew up in a loving household with both parents present pic.twitter.com/yLDP0UmEsb — Matthew A. Cherry (@MatthewACherry) April 25, 2020

is this the NFL draft or an obituary? jk, kind of not — Shannon B. Terry (@sbterry247) April 25, 2020

My dad died when I was a teenager and my brother died in a war, please draft me @NFL — Tom Knox (@venerableknox) April 25, 2020

No one: ESPN: Let me tell you about this draft prospect’s worst childhood trauma — Cameron Magruder (@ScooterMagruder) April 24, 2020

ESPN would’ve loved me in the NFL draft, I’ve got tons of childhood trauma. — T (@Mad_Dad2020) April 25, 2020

ESPN: His dad died from blunt force trauma from a sausage biscuit in a prison food fight, so he has a tattoo of Jimmy Dean to commemorate his legacy. #NFLDraft — Lord Pyrex 🇳🇬 (@iLikeIke_) April 25, 2020

ESPN is really going all in on the trauma porn apparently. Capitalizing off of someone's tragedy. Terrible #NFLDraft — Embraced by the Mafia, The parade let me down (@TEZforPREZ) April 25, 2020

Tonight we should take a shot every time ESPN brings up family trauma of an NFL draft prospect. pic.twitter.com/3qd2edT8ff — Man on a Mission (@Supeprime) April 24, 2020

ESPN, for every damn pick this weekend: "The Bills select, John Smith, wide receiver, Ohio State. Explosive route runner, great hands… but first let's tell you about his Great Aunt Tilly, who died in a tragic dirt biking accident when he was nine." — Aaron Torres (@Aaron_Torres) April 24, 2020

ESPN dug deep. Couldn’t play up the rags-to-riches angle with Michael Pittman Jr. because he comes from money. Couldn’t find any cringeworthy childhood trauma. So, they just threw in the fact he has a stuttering problem at the end of his draft montage. #NFLDraft — Nick Birdsong (@birds_word) April 24, 2020

"hey, I know you happy and all, but here's a reminder of your family trauma" – ESPN #NFLDraft — Sunny Singh (@2CupzSunny) April 24, 2020

Some of these stories were about immediate family deaths, but some went further afield still to extended family and to all sorts of highly questionable content. One particularly-bashed one was the decision to discuss Clemson receiver Tee Higgins’ mother’s struggles with drug addiction:

@espn this is disgusting on your part, Tee Higgins is enjoying his entrance to the NFL. And y’all have to announce his personal family business, by putting his moms drug addiction battle. Y’all should be ashamed of yourselves. pic.twitter.com/0oO1LbVZGr — Roy Resendez (@royresendez32) April 24, 2020

Can ESPN just focus on the athletes and not so much on players traumatic backgrounds. Tee Higgins just got drafted and they talk about his mom drug addiction. — Rashawn Williams (@cant_stop_ray) April 24, 2020

#NFLDraft2020 ~Tee Higgins is selected first overall in the 2nd round ESPN~His mom was a drug addict for 16 years! Assholes, just assholes 😑 — Kev (@NDrules43) April 24, 2020

ESPN DRAFT PROFILE Name: Tee Higgins Position: WR Strengths: Ridiculous hands, huge catch radius Personal: As a child watched the vicious landlord Chiu-Feng slaughter his entire family, lives only for vengeance against the dastardly land barons of Sichuan province — BUM CHILLUPS (@edsbs) April 24, 2020

is the fourth of four facts ESPN can come up with about Tee Higgins that his mom fought drug addiction for 16 years? Why is this draft like this? — Sloane (@ohsloane) April 24, 2020

Did ESPN really feel the need to ruin Tee Higgins’ biggest day of his life by bringing up his mom’s drug addiction??? #NFLDraft2020 #NFLDraft #NFL pic.twitter.com/AnlALjXV40 — Nolan Hughes (@NoNoNolanHughes) April 24, 2020

Nobody: Trey Wingo talking about Tee Higgins’ mom: pic.twitter.com/iWmCMEXa6J — FGB (@FiftyGutBlog) April 24, 2020

“Get To Know Tee Higgins!” ESPN: Mom can’t lay off the crack. We’ll see how that affects his career. pic.twitter.com/OE0RkF0gew — Kyle (@KyleWooderboys) April 24, 2020

That one certainly does seem exceptionally questionable. That’s not a notable fact about Higgins at all, and it seems unfortunate to relay his mother’s past struggles in public on this kind of a platform. But this was just one of the many, many times the ESPN/NFL Network broadcast dove into trauma porn on days one and two of the draft. And while those networks have done that at times before, it’s felt particularly over-the-top this year. We’ll see if that continues during the third day of the draft.

6arn on April 25th, 2020 at 22:22 UTC »

The worst was Yetur Gross-Matos. He was taken in the second round so we are already pretty beat down by these stories and all the coronavirus stuff (which they also went overboard on). Yetur is picked and they go into how his father saved him from drowning but died in the process. Super downer, but wait, we aren't done yet! Years later his brother dies while playing baseball. Kid got hit by lightning!

Who would have thought the NFL draft would be one of the most depressing things a person could watch in the middle of a pandemic.

tetoffens on April 25th, 2020 at 18:12 UTC »

It was ridiculous. They always do this with a focus on human interest stories but it was so overboard to a comical degree. This is a lifelong dream for these kids, maybe the biggest moment in their young lives, and these analysts were just like casually to every one of them saying morbid things like "Hey, remember when ISIS killed your father? Would your brutally horrifically murdered father be proud of you right now?"

md22mdrx on April 25th, 2020 at 18:08 UTC »

Yeah ... it’s like they went overboard into everyone’s life history to point out deaths. It was weird.