NFL Media’s surprise decision to cut much-loved football podcast Around The NFL has sparked dismay and regret among colleagues, contributors and fans on both sides of the pond.
The widely respected podcast ran for more than a decade and comprised regulars Dan Hanzus, Marc Sessler, Gregg Rosenthal and the late Chris Wesseling, as well as a number of NFL Network contributors.
It built a particularly loyal fanbase in international markets with the team regularly traveling to London NFL games, hosting events in the city and appearing on Sky Sports’ NFL coverage.
The irreverent and informed show aired multiple times a week and was also broadcast on the Network but suddenly went quiet without warning this summer. Listeners’ fears were confirmed when the network confirmed yesterday that it wouldn’t be continuing with the show and that Hanzus and Sessler would no longer be at the company. It said it...
The widely respected podcast ran for more than a decade and comprised regulars Dan Hanzus, Marc Sessler, Gregg Rosenthal and the late Chris Wesseling, as well as a number of NFL Network contributors.
It built a particularly loyal fanbase in international markets with the team regularly traveling to London NFL games, hosting events in the city and appearing on Sky Sports’ NFL coverage.
The irreverent and informed show aired multiple times a week and was also broadcast on the Network but suddenly went quiet without warning this summer. Listeners’ fears were confirmed when the network confirmed yesterday that it wouldn’t be continuing with the show and that Hanzus and Sessler would no longer be at the company. It said it...
- 7/8/2024
- by Andreas Wiseman
- Deadline Film + TV
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If paranoia were a drug, Line Of Duty would be a top-rung dealer. Series 3’s twists and revelations keep coming…
This review contains spoilers.
“Sincerity is everything. Fake that and you’ve got it made.” That old showbiz joke applies to other arenas than just Hollywood, as this week’s Line Of Duty proved.
By closing on Lindsay Denton practising a courtroom monologue, drilling each line, gesture and glance like a leading lady in her dressing room rather than a prison cell, the episode cemented the thematic importance of performance in this show. These characters may be police officers, but they’re also players in an improvised drama that relies on them never letting their masks slip.
What went on in that bedroom? Either Danny shot himself or was killed, both versions of the truth that were rehearsed by his rapidly shrinking squad this week on stage...
google+
If paranoia were a drug, Line Of Duty would be a top-rung dealer. Series 3’s twists and revelations keep coming…
This review contains spoilers.
“Sincerity is everything. Fake that and you’ve got it made.” That old showbiz joke applies to other arenas than just Hollywood, as this week’s Line Of Duty proved.
By closing on Lindsay Denton practising a courtroom monologue, drilling each line, gesture and glance like a leading lady in her dressing room rather than a prison cell, the episode cemented the thematic importance of performance in this show. These characters may be police officers, but they’re also players in an improvised drama that relies on them never letting their masks slip.
What went on in that bedroom? Either Danny shot himself or was killed, both versions of the truth that were rehearsed by his rapidly shrinking squad this week on stage...
- 3/31/2016
- Den of Geek
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