;
The Baseball Network (
Baseball Night in America) (1994–1995): This short-lived
joint venture between
ABC,
NBC, and
Major League Baseball (MLB) premiered immediately after
CBS's four-year run as Major League Baseball's over-the-air broadcaster (which was itself a disaster, compared at least once to the
Exxon Valdez oil spill). It was a pioneer in that the league produced and owned the rights to the telecasts, including half of the regular season and the postseason, but it was mostly a flop. :The Baseball Network had exclusivity in every market, so in markets with two teams, a Baseball Network game featuring one team prevented all viewers in the market from seeing the other team's game that night. Fans of East Coast teams couldn't see games played on the West Coast (or vice versa) in the team's home market because they started too early or too late. Regionalized coverage lasted well into the postseason. Finally, a
players' strike ended the 1994 season in mid-August, cancelling the entire postseason, including the World Series. :
Sports Illustrateds
Tom Verducci dubbed The Baseball Network "America's regional pastime" and an "abomination".
Bob Costas wrote that it was an unprecedented surrender of prestige and a slap to all serious fans. When public address announcer
Tom Hutyler mentioned The Baseball Network during the
Mariners-
Yankees ALDS at
Seattle's
Kingdome, the crowd erupted in boos. :The Baseball Network shut down at the end of the 1995 season. When
ABC Sports president Dennis Swanson announced the dissolution, he said "The fact of the matter is, Major League Baseball seems incapable at this point in time, of living with any long term relationships, whether it's with fans, with players, with the political community in
Washington, with the advertising community here in
Manhattan, or with its TV partners". ;
Celebrity Boxing (2002): This two-episode icon of Fox's "lowbrow" era ranked number 6 on
TV Guide's "50 Worst TV Shows of All Time" list. The boxers were mostly "D-list" celebrities and people involved in notorious criminal cases. One match pitted
Joey Buttafuoco (taking the place of
"Weird Al" Yankovic, who refused to fight a woman) against pro wrestler
Chyna; Buttafuoco won in a decision. ;
Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson (2024): This professional boxing match featuring
YouTuber and former
Disney Channel star-turned-boxer
Jake Paul and former
undisputed heavyweight champion
Mike Tyson was widely criticised for a variety of factors prior to and after the event. :Many viewers and other boxers criticised the event due to the 31-year age difference between the combatants, the largest recorded in the history of professional boxing. Former
UFC Middleweight Champion,
Sean Strickland stated that the fight should be illegal, and fellow YouTuber-turned-boxer
KSI described the bout as "elderly abuse". :At the weigh-in the day prior to the fight, Paul performed a racist gesture towards Tyson by imitating the
knuckle-walking done by non-human
primates and then proceeding to step on Tyson's toes. In retaliation, Tyson slapped Paul across the face. On the day of the event, many viewers expressed outrage towards
Netflix due to the widespread technical difficulties that prevented them from watching the highly anticipated fight. :Paul won the fight by
unanimous decision, largely after Tyson shifted his strategy to surviving the bout by avoiding taking punches and making very few shots of his own. ;
NBA on ABC (
2002–present): Viewer complaints about ABC's telecasts of NBA games since the 2002 season include strange camera angles (including the Floorcam and Skycam angles), shots from too far away, colors that seem faded and dull, and quieting the crowd noise so that announcers can be heard clearly; NBC had allowed crowd noise to occasionally drown out their announcers. The
2003 NBA Finals received very little fanfare on ABC or corporate partner ESPN. Subsequent Finals were promoted more on both networks, but NBA-related advertisements on ABC were still down significantly from promotions on NBC. According to the
Sports Business Daily, NBA promos took up 3 minutes and 55 seconds of airtime on ABC during the week of May 23,
2004, compared to 2 minutes and 45 seconds for the
Indy 500. Promotions for the Indianapolis 500 outnumbered promotions for the NBA Finals 14:9 from 9:00 pm to 11:00 pm during that week. ;
NBC Olympic broadcasts (
1964,
1988–present
summer];
1972,
2002–present
winter]): NBC was the inaugural Olympic broadcaster at the
1964 Tokyo Summer Olympics. They later broadcast the 1972 Winter Olympics. NBC brought the broadcast rights to start with the 1988 Summer Olympics, and would obtain rights to broadcast the Winter Olympics starting in 2002. NBCUniversal (a division of
Comcast which operates NBC and its cable networks) holds the broadcasting rights for the Olympics until 2032. Since 2000, NBC has received criticism over its tape-delaying practice, which has gotten many complaints from many viewers, yet in 1992, the then-NBC Sports producer Terry O'Neil coined the term "possibly live" for NBC's practices to tape delay live events as if they were live. Some examples include the Women's Gymnastics event during the
2016 Summer Olympics in order to "juice the numbers". In the
2010 Winter Olympics, NBC aired no alpine skiing events in order to showcase high-profile events. Many viewers have expressed outrage, including U.S. senators during the 2010 Winter games, and people were forced to use VPN servers to access the
BBC and in Canada,
CTV (for the 2010 Winter Games and 2012 Summer Games), and the
CBC (for the 2014 Winter Games and 2016 Summer Games) to view them live. :NBC has also frequently been criticized for airing the Olympics as if it is more of a reality television program instead of a live sports event. One example of this includes cutting off a fall from Russian gymnast
Ksenia Afanasyeva, which NBC Sports chairman
Mark Lazarus did "in the interest of time", although her routine took only 1 minute and 38 seconds. And according to
The New York Times, he did this to create suspense on the U.S. Women's Gymnastics team. :In 2016, chief marketing officer John Miller held a press conference prior to the 2016 Summer Olympics about their formatting of NBC's Olympics coverage, citing that the Olympics were "not about the result, [but] about the journey. The people who watch the Olympics are not particularly sports fans. More women watch the Games than men, and for the women, they're less interested in the result and more interested in the journey. It's sort of like the ultimate
reality show and
mini-series wrapped into one". This led to criticism from the media; Linda Stasi of the
New York Daily News claimed it to be "sexist nonsense" and a "pandering, condescending view of the millions of women viewers".
Washington Post columnist Sally Jenkins suggested that "it insults the audience — but it sure does insult Olympic athletes, especially female athletes". :NBC was also criticized for frequently editing and tape-delaying the opening and closing ceremonies, with "context" as its main reason. In 2010, NBC aired the opening and closing ceremonies on a tape delay, even for viewers on Pacific Time, despite being 3 hours behind Eastern Time. During the closing ceremony, NBC went into a 65-minute intermission to air a series premiere of
The Marriage Ref and local newscasts, and returning to the ceremony at 11:35 PM ET/PT. This spawned outbursts from upset viewers, especially on
Twitter, when several performances were cut off. :In 2012, NBC cut a tribute to the victims of the
July 7, 2005 London bombings in favor of a
Ryan Seacrest interview with U.S. swimmer
Michael Phelps during the opening ceremonies. Ultimately, this caused the
hashtag #NBCFail to trend on Twitter. The network was criticized for cutting up to 27% of the closing ceremonies to air local newscasts and a sneak preview of the NBC sitcom
Animal Practice. : In 2014, NBC also received criticism for cutting the video segments on the Olympic Torch relay and not showing the mascots. It also received criticism for cutting the Olympic Oaths and IOC President
Thomas Bach's speech on discrimination and equality. It was also criticized for setting a 90-minute window to air the closing ceremonies. In addition, they used the times before and after the 90-minute window to air a sneak preview of another sitcom,
Growing Up Fisher, at 10:30 PM ET/PT, and a documentary on
Tonya Harding and
Nancy Kerrigan which aired between 7 PM and 8:30 PM ET/PT. In 2016, NBC aired both of the ceremonies in a 1-hour delay (at 8 PM ET/PT) and it also drew criticism for the excessive number of advertisements it aired during the delayed ceremony, and cutting 38% of the closing ceremony. :NBC also received criticism for an alleged pro-American bias despite such bias being far less than other national Olympic broadcasters such as Canada and Russia, and for various comments made by commentators during the Olympics in 2016 and in the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympics. ;
NHL on Fox (
FoxTrax era):
Fox Sports's decision to implement a
CGI-generated glowing hockey puck during their live coverage of the
National Hockey League from 1996 to 1998 drew ire from sports fans, who derided the move as a gimmick. Greg Wyshinski called the glowing puck one of the worst ideas in sports history in his book
Glow Pucks and Ten-Cent Beer: The 101 Worst Ideas in Sports History. ;
Olympics Triplecast (1992): Even before the
1992 Summer Olympics started, many criticized the business model. On July 16, nine days before the Opening Ceremony, one
Philadelphia Inquirer writer called it "the biggest marketing disaster since
New Coke".
The New York Times called it "sports TV's biggest flop" and said that NBC and Cablevision were "bereft in sanity" in operating it. By 1994, it was referred to as "the ''
Heaven's Gate of television". Albert Kim, the editor of Entertainment Weekly'', went on
National Public Radio and called it "an unmitigated disaster for NBC". It lost about $100 million (half of which was covered by Cablevision under agreement) and shaped NBC's strategies in covering future Olympics. ;
Power Slap: Road To The Title (2023):
UFC president
Dana White started the Power Slap League in 2022 and signed a deal with
TBS to air an eight-episode reality competition series. Its January 2023 debut was delayed a week after White was filmed striking his wife in a nightclub. :The show got negative reception from critics and notable
combat sport and political figures due to its violent nature and subsequent concerns over
head trauma suffered by contestants.
The New York Times wrote, "What's next, who can survive being run over by a tank? Knife fights on national television?" and criticized the league as "a display of pure punishment created for TV ratings, video views and money, money, money". Stuart Heritage of
The Guardian commented that
Power Slap "has caused a firestorm, not least because it is objectively stupid and dangerous, with slap fighters often ending up swollen and disfigured". Eric Blum of
Deadspin called the "needlessly barbaric" show "the worst thing I've ever seen". :Despite airing after
AEW Dynamite,
Power Slap suffered from poor ratings and was not renewed by TBS for a second season. Former
Nevada State Athletic Commission chairman
Stephen Cloobeck resigned in December 2022 due to personal regret over his "mistake" of sanctioning the sport. ;
Thursday Night Football (2006–present): Since 2006, when the
National Football League started playing games on Thursday nights, the TV broadcasts have faced heavy criticism, including: hiring
Bryant Gumbel as its first play-by-play announcer, difficulties getting cable providers to carry the
NFL Network, poor quality games,
a uniform scheme that made it very difficult for viewers with
color blindness to tell teams apart, disrupting the league's weekly schedule in a way that potentially puts players at greater risk of injury, and saturating the market, driving down viewership of the league's Sunday and Monday games (the league is
forbidden under federal law from televising games on Friday or Saturday for most of the regular season). On at least one occasion, the league has reportedly considered ending the package after its current contracts expire. ;
XFL on NBC,
XFL on TNN and
XFL on UPN (2001): The three programs covering the original incarnation of the
XFL are generally treated as one for the purposes of worst television show lists. The series ranked No. 3 on the 2002
TV Guide list of worst TV series of all time, #2 on ESPN's list of biggest sports flops, #21 on
TV Guide's 2010 list of the biggest television blunders of all time, and #10 on ''Entertainment Weekly's'' list of the biggest bombs in television history. Despite the league's failure, both of its co-founders tried again nearly two decades later:
Dick Ebersol with the
Alliance of American Football in 2019 (which ran out of money midway through its only season), and
Vince McMahon with
another XFL in 2020. The second XFL had a longer enduring impact, as three of its teams have survived as members of the
United Football League into 2026, after a series of sales and mergers. ==Talk shows==