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Not to be confused with the baseball term "around the horn".
This article is about the ESPN sports discussion show. For the BBC radio comedy, see Round the Horne.
Around the Horn (sometimes abbreviated ATH) is a daily, half-hour sports talk program on ESPN filmed in Washington, D.C. It airs at 5:00 pm ET, as part of a sports talk hour with Pardon the Interruption. It is a production of ESPN Original Entertainment and is currently hosted by Tony Reali.
[edit] HistoryAround the Horn premiered on November 4, 2002, hosted by Max Kellerman. It replaced the interview show Unscripted with Chris Connelly. On February 2, 2004, Tony Reali, known as "Stat Boy" on Pardon the Interruption, became the show's new host when Kellerman left ESPN due to a contract dispute. The show's launch team and daily production management was led by broadcast executive James Cohen. On July 10, 2007, the show celebrated its 1,000th episode in a show won by Jay Mariotti. Around the Horn and Pardon the Interruption have a combined household rating of 788,000 homes in 2006. The 4th quarter was the most-watched quarter ever for both shows. ATH had increased ratings in 12 of the last 13 quarters through the end of 2006.[citation needed] [edit] The setThe Around the Horn set is in the same Atlantic Video complex as the set for Pardon the Interruption. It features the host's desk with the point triggers and mute buttons, opposite of four screens of the panelists with their score under them and the mute sign above them. Behind the host's desk is a map of the contiguous United States of America with the mastheads of the newspapers affiliated with the show outlined in their region which include: the Los Angeles Times, The Denver Post, the Chicago Sun-Times, and The Dallas Morning News. The Cold Pizza logo was also added near New York's place on the map when Woody Paige was based in New York, and it was subsequently removed when Paige returned to Denver. The Boston Globe logo was also used when the paper was an affiliate, but the sign now reads "Boston" where the Globe's masthead was (various non-Globe personnel, as well as several writers for the paper, are based in Boston and have appeared on the show). Each panelist appears either within the offices of their respective newspaper, in front of a screen representing the city they're located in, or in another studio. [edit] RoundsThe current Around The Horn format consists of the following:
[edit] Previous formatBefore the show was retooled in early 2003, the format was similar, wherein the first two rounds were pretty much the same but with different titles. There was a bigger difference after that. The show ran like so:
[edit] PointsThe show is unique as it "scores the argument" - points are awarded or taken from panelists at the discretion of the host depending on the strength or weakness of their arguments. The rewarding - and deduction - of points has changed throughout the series. Originally, being muted cost a panelist five points. Later, while Kellerman was still hosting the show, the scoring was at its most strict: "good" answers were awarded two points, "great" answers were given three, and a mute subtracted three points from a panelist's score. Shortly before Kellerman left the show, the mute was reduced to its current -1. Around the time Reali took over the show, the host was allowed to give points at his own discretion, Reali may give a single point for a weak argument, or many points for a particularly strong case backed by statistical information. The host may also give multiple points for "inside information" that he deems correct. Points may also be taken away for self-promotion, such as bragging about a good column or a successful upset pick (According to Reali, "Self-promotion is the mating call of the mute button!"[1]) In addition, complaints about how many points that they or another panelist received, usually results in a deduction and/or mute. Reali mainly uses the mute button when a panelist interrupts another panelist, begins to ramble, or changes his or her previous opinion on a given topic. Jay Mariotti currently holds the points record before the showdown with 56 on August 31, 2007. The record previously was 52 by Bill Plaschke in 2004. Reali also makes bets occasionally with the panelists on sporting events, with the panelist gaining or losing a large amount of points based on the outcome. For example, in summer of 2007, Woody Paige made a bet with Reali that he could drink a gallon of water during the 30 minutes of the show. At the end, the tank was empty. On the next show, secret cameras revealed Paige dumping most of the water in a cooler. Rather than receiving the promised 100 points, Paige received several mutes. There have been some topics, most during the Out of Bounds segment, which have not been scored due to their sensitive nature. Such examples include Bob Ryan's suspension for his comments towards Jason Kidd's wife, the Duke Lacrosse Case, White Sox manager Ozzie Guillén making a homosexual slur towards Jay Mariotti, Ben Roethlisberger's motorcycle accident, Michael Vick's dog fighting and animal abuse, and discussions of deaths. Other sensitive topics that do not award points are held at the beginning. After Paige encouraged viewers to come up with ways to improve the scoring system, the June 19, 2008 episode was played with no scoring and no muting. This led to all four panelists reaching out of bounds and the showdown, with nobody being declared the winner. On August 11, 2008, Michael Smith, senior writer for ESPN.com returned to the show for the first time in nearly a year and went on to win the show with 25 points over Tim Cowlishaw, J.A Adande & Woody Paige, before the show, Tony Reali said "who's that guy in Boston?" Smith will return to the show sometime later on. [edit] Hosts
[edit] Guest hosts
[edit] Panelists[edit] Regular panelists
[edit] Infrequent panelists
[edit] Former panelists
[edit] Guest panelists
[edit] Running gagsDuring the show's long run, it has developed certain comedic long-running gags, much like its sister show Pardon the Interruption, that longtime viewers will recognize and casual viewers may be unable to easily comprehend. The gags revolve around the personalities of Reali and the columnists, along with their interactions. The most recognizable gag is the chalkboard in the top-left hand corner of Woody Paige's square on which he writes witty phrases that are different for each segment of the show, usually puns, such as "I'm chalk-bored"[4] Paige started using it while in New York, then brought it back to Denver a few shows after his return. [edit] References
[edit] External links
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