NFL Fantasy and FiveThirtyEight Driving ESPN Podcasts to Record Numbers; “Dunkumentaries” Honored by RAIN

ESPN Podcasts

NFL Fantasy and FiveThirtyEight Driving ESPN Podcasts to Record Numbers; “Dunkumentaries” Honored by RAIN

Monthly Record for Podcast Impressions for Sixth Consecutive Month, Nearly Double August 2015

With the nation’s focus on the start of the NFL season and the stretch run of the Presidential campaign, ESPN Audio’s originally produced podcast business is enjoying unprecedented success, with “Fantasy Focus Football” and two FiveThirtyEight offerings leading the list in August when overall downloads set an ESPN record for the sixth consecutive month.

“FiveThirtyEight Elections” – where FiveThirtyEight’s editor-in-chief Nate Silver hosts and discusses the presidential election with the site’s political team – was atop the list of more than 40 offerings with 7.8 million downloads in August.  The daily “Fantasy Focus Football,” hosted by Matthew Berry with Field Yates and injury expert Stephania Bell, was second with 6.1 million, up 56% from the year before (3.9 million).  FiveThirtyEight’s  “What’s the Point” – highlighting data’s growing influence in people’s lives where host Jody Avirgan talks to guests who are using data in surprising ways – came in third with 1.6 million.

In fact, as of September 20, “Fantasy Focus” had already topped its August total – and, more importantly, its September 2015 total of 6.7 – with 6.8 million downloads this month.

Overall, including podcasts of ESPN Radio and television programming, ESPN Audio broke its record for podcast impressions for the sixth consecutive month with 54.6 million, up 94% from 28.1 million in August 2015.  It also marked a 12% rise from the previous record of 48.8 million in July.

One of the highlights in August was “Pin Kings,” part of an unprecedented multiplatform enterprise journalism initiative involving television, ESPN the Magazine and ESPN.com.  The series was a first for ESPN Audio – an episodic presentation, 16 chapters, as it were, complete with a mystery building to a dramatic ending.

“Dunkumentaries” Named Podcast of the Year

ESPN Audio’s first foray into long-form podcasts, April’s five-part “Dunkumentaires,” was named Podcast of the Year by RAIN, the internet/radio business outlet, at its annual show in Nashville on September 20.  A collaboration with ESPN Films, the series was called “an audio-rich celebration of the slam dunk in all its glory. Over the course of five podcast episodes, the program explores the stories and personalities connected to the most powerful shot in basketball.”  Of note, the award was not specific to sports topics; the competition came from the complete range of podcast subject matter.

Ryan Nantell, the ESPN Films and FiveThirtyEight producer who headed up the project, says, “To have this series honored by a nationally recognized industry outlet is a great win for our blossoming audio storytelling efforts. ‘Dunkumentaries’ was a fun passion-project that the entire team poured a lot of energy into. To have it be so well received sends a strong signal that we’re really on to something here.”

Recently, ESPN Films and ESPN Audio announced they are teaming up to produce 30 for 30 Podcasts – bringing high-quality sports storytelling to fans in audio form. The series will tell original stories in the likeness of the acclaimed 30 for 30 documentaries, made specifically with a narrative podcasting approach. The first season will launch in early 2017.

– 30 –

Dave Nagle

As I write this on 11-11-21, it's now 35 years for me at ESPN, the only real job I’ve ever had. I joined merely to help with the upcoming America’s Cup in Australia. I was told it would be for three months at all of $5.50 per hour. I like to say I simply kept showing up. I’ve worked on almost every sport, plus answered viewer calls and letters (people used to write!), given tours, written the company newsletter and once drove NASCAR’s Jeff Gordon to the local airport. My travels have been varied…I’ve been to Martinsville, Darlington, Indy and Super Bowls; the America’s Cup (all 3) in San Diego and College GameDay in the sport’s meccas such as Eugene, Auburn, Lubbock, Stillwater and more; the NBA Finals, Wimbledon (16 times and counting) and the “other Bristol,” the one with a race track in Tennessee. These days, my main areas are tennis, UFC, boxing, network-wide ratings (by month/quarter/year), and corporate communications documents, including fact sheets, chronologies, lists and nearly 35 of the Year in Review press releases. UPDATE EXACTLY ONE YEAR LATER: Today, November 11, 2022, I am retiring from ESPN -- 36 years to the day I began. As I ride off into the sunset – top down and E Street Radio blaring – I do so with so many wonderful memories, proud of my contributions and a heart full of gratitude for the opportunity. 
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