Real
Sports Goes 2-For-4
Latest
Show Has 2 Good Features, 2 Disappointing Profiles
By
George Stahl
NEW
YORK (AQB)--The latest Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel on
HBO this month includes two terrific features on the increased
use of andro by high school students and on a reverse discrimination
lawsuit filed by a former Orlando Magic assistant coach.
Unfortunately,
the show (10:15 p.m. ET Monday) also contains two poor profiles
on new South Carolina coach Lou Holtz and Miami coach Jimmy Johnson.
Both suffer from the oft-repeated AQB criticism of Real Sports
profiles - the lack of interviews.
[NOTE:
This show's review is based on an advanced copy for the media,
which doesn't include studio scenes with host Bryant Gumbel.]
This
month's star piece is Bernard Goldberg's examination of the increased
use of the muscle building supplement Androstenedine, or
Andro, by high school students since Mark McGwire acknowledged
using it last year in his record-breaking 70 home run season.
McGwire has since said he has stopped using it.
Goldberg
lists the problems linked to Andro use - heart disease, liver
problems, stunting of growth, to name a few - and shows how easy
it is to buy the supplement, which doesn't require Food and Drug
Administration approval because it is considered a natural substance.
But
what separates this piece from other Andro stories is that
Goldberg and producer Tim Walker tracked down a strength and conditioning
coach at one of the nation's top high school football programs
in West Monroe, La., who approves the use of Andro so much that
he has given it to his son since he was 12.
And
what about the concerns some have about Andro? "I think you
could say that about caffeine, drinking coffee, drinking Cokes,
eating hamburgers, eating too much fat, not eating enough fat.
You could pick any topic," the father said. "I'm concerned
as a parent. But myself and my wife and my son have talked about
it and, at this point, until there are more studies done, we're
OK with it."
And
the son's reaction? "My Dad is the one who gets it for me,
so obviously he thinks it's real good. Before we get anything
new, or anything, he'll research it to make sure it's OK and not
going to hurt me in the long run," the 16-year-old said.
The
other excellent feature is Armen Keteyian's piece on former Magic
assistant coach George Scholz, who was fired by the team after
the 1992 NBA season. Since then, Scholz has pursued a lawsuit
against the Magic, accusing the team of firing him because it
wanted a black assistant coach. (Scholz's replacement was former
NBA player Tree Rollins, a black man).
Keteyian,
who first reported on the lawsuit in his excellent 1997 book Money
Players: Days And Nights Inside The New NBA with Harvey Araton
and Martin Dardis, details the history of the case, which was
thrown out of court in 1996 for lack of evidence despite the fact
that four of the six jurors were planning to decide in Scholz's
favor. An
appeal overturned the judge's decision, and the case now returns
to the court next month.
The
show's two profiles, sadly, do not match its two features. As
we have said in the past, most recently with last
month's look at Derek Jeter, HBO's practice of featuring
quotes mostly from the profiled person misses a lot of the story.
As my mother always says, you can tell a lot about a person by
the friends they keep.
This
is most evident this month in Frank Deford's piece on the "new"
Jimmy Johnson, who wants to ease some of the pressures of
being an NFL head coach in order to spend more time with his family.
Deford,
who wears a funky shirt in the piece, nicely documents how Johnson
came to this self-realization at the funeral of his mother in
December and how Johnson's relationship with his two sons have
changed since then. All three of them are interviewed.
However,
the piece could have been so much better with interviews
with assistant coach Dave Wannstedt, who was brought in after
being fired by the Chicago Bears to help Johnson's workload, and
with Dolphin players, who could have commented on if they had
noticed a difference in their head coach.
Sonja
Steptoe's profile of Lou Holtz also suffered from this problem.
For example, despite the fact that one of Steptoe's main topics
is Holtz's relationship with his players, her piece includes only
one former player, ex-Notre Dame quarterback Tony Rice, and no
current South Carolina players.
Is
it me or is that a little one-sided?
The
Holtz story was far from the best work from Emmy-winning Steptoe
or producer Richard Brenner, who handled Real
Sports' look at the war between ESPN and Fox Sports in January.
The piece included nothing on Holtz's wife, who has been fighting
throat cancer and whose opinion reportedly influenced Holtz's
decision to return. It also seemed
disjointed, jumping from one issue to another without a smooth
transition
- something unusual for this well-produced series.
For
a much better look at Lou Holtz, check out Chris
Dufresne's excellent story on Holtz in Sunday's Los Angeles Times.
Grade:
B. Real Sports features are among the best on television,
but its profiles...
Play
dates: 10:15 p.m. Monday; 6 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Thursday;
1 p.m. Saturday; 5 p.m. Sept. 3; and 10 a.m.
Sept. 5.
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