Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
But in a way he did luck into it. He was in the right place at the right time. The XRT guys happened to come into his hot dog stand which was pretty close to their studios. I'll agree that he made the most of it. But I wouldn't say there were thousands of guys who had the same chance and failed. It was an experiment that worked well for everyone for awhile.
I don't mean that there were thousands of people who actually got a radio show. I mean that there were thousands of people who knew a guy and could have jumped at the same chance. There probably were others who did get tryouts. I'm a little bit too young to have paid attention to the start of the Score but it's not like it was just the Mike North show for the entire time. However, he was the one who became the biggest star. There were also a ton of journalists with those fancy degrees that had the same chance.
He was in the right place at the right time, but he also was the right person and took advantage of it better than anyone else could have expected. This was a guy who was making over a million dollars a year to talk about sports. I think too many people discount his talent.
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
But it's like anything good. Too much of it is usually terrible. It was cool when Eddie Van Halen put both hands on the neck. When every douchebag with a guitar started doing it it became ridiculous. The obvious lack of professionalism and everyman vibe that North had was a breath of fresh air. Now every moron on the air is an unprofessional douche. Except Connor McKnight. That kid has a future.
I think North failed at any type of management, which makes sense given he had no training in it.