Beardown wrote:
Pappy's Crappy wrote:
Beardown wrote:
Sox pay their announcers. CBS (WSCR) pays the Sox for the rights to broadcast them.
Not so. Read the interview with Brooks Boyer currently available at whitesoxinteractive.com. He makes it clear that the radio announcers are employees of the Score, not the Sox.
Really? I thought I remember Ranger telling us that he's paid by the Score but not Farmer and Singleton.
Ok. I guess it doesn't matter. I mean, if the Sox were to pay the announcers that would mean the Score would pay more for the rights. If the Score pays that means the Sox charge them less for the rights. Either way, I'm sure Reinsdorf has influence. So Mitch was the one that hired Singleton?
Hawk and D.J are paid by the Sox right?
The following is straight from the mouth of Brooks Boyer, the guy at the Sox who's at least partly responsible for decisions regarding broadcasting. I can't say for sure who pays Hawk & DJ, though. (Two things--this interview was done when Singleton was still there and also note who he uses as an example of a hire that the Sox would nix right away.)
“We have a significant amount of input. If we don’t want someone or if say WSCR radio doesn’t want someone, either party can veto the choice. It’s a collaborative process, both of us have a large say in the matter. For example, and I’m just using this name, not that he was ever a candidate, if WSCR radio came to us and said we want Mike North in the Sox broadcasting booth, we’d say no. Why would we want someone who is going to knock our product or be very critical of it?”
“Regarding the specifics on Chris, it’s no secret that it came down to either him or Tommy John. There was a mutual feeling among us and WSCR that we wanted a fresh voice. Tommy and Ed were both pitchers and both played in the same era. The game had changed a lot since they were playing. We felt it would be better to have Ed’s perspective on the game and Chris’ who played at a different time in a different position and certainly Chris, like Tommy, was a member of the Sox family.”
“The process that time started when we put together a list of ten to fifteen names, WCSR radio put together a list of ten to fifteen names and then we interviewed candidates. We’d speak with them, then WSCR radio interviewed them, then we interviewed some candidates together before we made a choice.”
“Both Chris and Ed are employees of WSCR radio, not the White Sox.”