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Post by Chris on Jul 13, 2008 19:03:44 GMT -5
Anyone watching this series?
They are 2 episodes in. First episode was a head-to-head look at Joe Dimaggio and Ted Williams.
This week it's a tribute to the All Star game.
This is a good show, much like the "When It Was A Game" series, this is full of colorized home video and player/media anecdotes.
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$heriff Tom
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Groom ba ya ya ya
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Post by $heriff Tom on Jul 13, 2008 22:19:32 GMT -5
I honestly have not seen this in my listings, and I peruse just about every day. I'll be on the lookout for it, but it may be a regional offering?
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Post by Chris on Jul 13, 2008 23:33:41 GMT -5
Nope...searching for it on the Tivo menu shows it airing on all of the Fox regional channels. I recorded the fist weeks episode of Pittsburgh's FSN channel.
FSN REVISITS "BASEBALL'S GOLDEN AGE" IN NEW HISTORICAL SERIES
Recently Discovered Color Home Movies Restore Glory of America's Pastime Sunday Night Series Premieres July 6
This is a show about the great players and teams of yesteryear. It's a show that looks back at a time in America when fathers and grandfathers passed down tales of their ball-playing heroes to wide-eyed sons and grandsons. Men whose legends were so large that the mere mention of their names — Ruth, Cobb, Williams, Mays, Aaron — invoked stories of incomparable feats and unparalleled abilities, always beginning with, "I remember when ..."
Now older generations can relive their memories and younger generations can see just how special the players of yesterday were when FSN debuts its brilliant new series, BASEBALL'S GOLDEN AGE on Sunday, July 6 at 8 p.m..
Each 30-minute show is an elegant, gritty compilation of remarkable rare shots and never-before-seen footage, culled from hundreds of hours of color film shot by the fans, the players' families and most importantly, the players themselves.
Woven throughout the collection of color videos from the 1920s-1960s are interviews with baseball luminaries, writers, broadcasters and former team employees all reliving baseball's simpler time: an innocent period of all-night train rides, day games, cigars in the stands and nickel hot dogs. A journey to the era when players spent their entire careers with one team, long before chartered jets, free agency and arbitration, a time when "playing for the love of the game" wasn't just a cliché.
BASEBALL'S GOLDEN AGE keeps the heroes on the field and the viewers at home young forever, transporting fans to the days when there was no debate about baseball's place as America's national pastime.
The series is produced by Flagstaff Films, headed by Steven Stern, who as a founding partner in Black Canyon Productions, won multiple Peabody and Emmy Awards for such television achievements as the graceful baseball trilogy "When It Was a Game" and the eye-opening look at the dramatic gloved-fist demonstration at the 1968 Olympics, "Fists of Freedom." The footage for the series comes from Flagstaff Films library, arguably the most impressive private collection of baseball film in the U.S.
"Baseball's Golden Age is a more specific and detailed project than the baseball documentaries we've previously produced," said Stern. "Producing 13 episodes allows us to spend more time examining the rivalries, the players and the places that made baseball an American institution."
In the debut episode of the 13-week series, BASEBALL'S GOLDEN AGE looks at the sights and sounds of the game — peanuts and popcorn and the crack of the bat. The show touches on the rivalries of New York's three baseball teams, the oft-victorious Yankees and a Dodgers-Giants feud so passionate that it still resonates today, 3,000 miles from where it all started.
The episode also debates the legacy and legend of Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio, the faces of the greatest rivalry in sports. Who was the better player? Which was more important to his team? And what would have happened had a proposed swap of the two stars ever been completed?
Throughout the series, BASEBALL'S GOLDEN AGE touches on the famous St. Louis Gashouse Gang, Babe Ruth and dozens of other players who are still discussed today as the best to have ever played the game, Jackie Robinson and his enormous impact, baseball's Latin explosion, big bats and golden arms, the All-Star game and World Series, the war years, barnstorming tours, western expansion, the voices that resonated within the game and the economics that sculpted it, the classic stadiums that become national cathedrals, and the connection that fans felt with the players.
Among the hundreds of people interviewed include: Hall of Famers Johnny Bench, Ernie Banks, Al Kaline, Frank Robinson, Brooks Robinson and Bob Feller; all-stars Steve Garvey, Luis Tiant, Ralph Branca, Johnny Pesky and Tommy Davis; great managers Tommy Lasorda, Whitey Herzog, Red Shoendienst and Joe Torre; announcers who are identified with their respective teams almost as much as the players are, legends Marty Brennaman from Cincinnati, Detroit's Ernie Harwell, San Diego's Jerry Coleman; plus such respected voices as FOX's Joe Buck, Bob Costas and Tom Brokaw from NBC and CNN's Larry King, noted baseball authors Leigh Montville and Roger Kahn and highly-regarded baseball fans such as former presidential candidate and mayor of New York Rudy Giuliani.
BASEBALL'S GOLDEN AGE airs every Sunday night at 8 p.m. local on FSN-owned or affiliated regional sports networks.
FSN Executive Vice President George Greenberg and Vice President David Leepson serve as Executive Producers for the series.
BASEBALL'S GOLDEN AGE is the third series to fall under the FSN Original Programming banner, following the Emmy-award winning SPORT SCIENCE and the Emmy-nominated AMAZING SPORTS STORIES. FSN Original Programming series are high-quality productions with a historical, informative or storytelling narrative.
Baseball's Golden Age, Episode 1 breakdown — Topics The Sights and Sounds of the Game Joe DiMaggio vs. Ted Williams — who was the better player? Bath Ruth — with never-before-seen color footage New York Rivalries — Dodgers, Giants and Yankees
Interviewees showcased in the first episode of Baseball's Golden Age
"I remember ..." Former players, former coaches and current coaches: Ernie Banks (Cubs) Ralph Branca (Brooklyn Dodgers) Jerry Coleman (Yankees/Padres) Carl Erskine (Brooklyn Dodgers) Bob Feller (Indians) Al Kaline (Tigers) Tommy Lasorda (Dodgers) Johnny Pesky (Red Sox) Frank Robinson (Reds/Orioles) Joe Torre (Cardinals/Yankees/Dodgers)
Broadcasters: Bob Costas (NBC) Larry King (CNN) Bud Collins (NBC)
Authors, writers and historians: Nick Acocella Maury Allen Arnold Hano Donald Honig Leigh Montville Gay Talese John Thorn
MLB Officials: Marty Appel (former Yankees PR Director)
Celebrity baseball fans: Alan Dershowitz (attorney)
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$heriff Tom
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Groom ba ya ya ya
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Post by $heriff Tom on Jul 14, 2008 10:24:03 GMT -5
Ok, I did dig deeper, and Im recording the All-Star version later this afternoon. One thing that already has me glum going in is you cant do much with a 30 minute format. Looking at what you have listed for episode one, the fact that was crammed into a half-hour of TV time tells me this is mad rushed and too fast-paced.
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Post by Chris on Jul 14, 2008 10:44:29 GMT -5
right, but it is going to be a regular series, which is good.
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$heriff Tom
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Groom ba ya ya ya
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Post by $heriff Tom on Jul 14, 2008 16:35:59 GMT -5
Yeah, great, a regular series of 30 minute episodes. What is this, Laverne and Shirley?
I will give this a shot, but Im not optimistic.
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