Publisher's Synopsis
Welcome to the graveyard of real sports journalism, where hot takes are currency, debate shows are glorified shouting contests, and a guy who never played the game tells you why your favorite player isn't clutch because his true shooting percentage dipped in February.
Once upon a time, sportswriters were storytellers. Grizzled, whiskey-soaked poets who knew the game, loved the game, and actually watched the game before spewing their opinions. Now we get a parade of overcaffeinated talking heads screaming into the void, regurgitating the same tired GOAT debates like fast food for the brain, empty calories that keep you full but leave you malnourished. Add in the rise of analytics bros, guys who treat basketball like an Excel spreadsheet and believe a contested mid-range jumper is worse than a war crime and suddenly, the joy of simply watching the game is gone. Buried under numbers and narratives that mean nothing when the ball is actually in play.
Talking Heads & Empty Calories is a love letter to what sports journalism used to be and a fiery eulogy for what it's become. From the death of local coverage to the MVP race turning into a high school popularity contest, from Woj Bombs becoming Shams Missiles to rivalries dying in the age of fire emojis and jersey swaps. This book rips apart the modern sports media machine and asks one simple question: When did we stop loving the game and start obsessing over the conversation around it?
This book is for the real ones. The fans who still give a damn, the ones who don't need Stephen A. Smith screaming at them to tell them why a game mattered. It's for the people who miss when sportswriters could actually write, when stats were a tool, not a religion, when the story on the court mattered more than whatever forced debate was trending that morning. It's bitter, it's funny and it's brutally honest. Just like the game used to be.
Buy it. Read it. Argue about it. Or don't. Either way, the truth is still the truth: Modern sports media is broken, and this is the postmortem it deserves.