11/11/13, "MTV and Major League Baseball announce partnership," AP via Newsday
"As if winning the World Series MVP wasn't enough, Boston Red Sox
slugger David Ortiz is becoming a producer of his own MTV television
show.
MTV Networks and Major League Baseball
said Monday they are collaborating on a weekly 30-episode series that
melds pop culture and baseball. Ortiz and Pittsburgh Pirates All-Star
outfielder Andrew McCutchen are both executive producers of the series,
set to begin next spring around the start of the new season.
The untitled series will likely air on
MTV2, which tends to have a higher proportion of male viewers than its
sister station. It will be shot at the MLB Fan Cave, a facility built at
an abandoned Tower Records store in Manhattan that has fan features,
interactive elements and occasional pop music concerts.
MTV had expressed interest in
Ortiz after seeing a fan cave feature depicting him walking through
enemy territory in New York asking Yankee fans for a hug, said Tim
Brosnan, MLB executive vice president for business.
The fan cave hosts visits from Major
League players. In its archive of video segments are ones featuring
McCutchen doing a Tom Cruise impersonation, Yankees second baseman
Robinson Cano visiting a sick fan and a prank involving pitchers David
Price and James Shields.
When MTV heard Ortiz described as the
musical director of the Red Sox clubhouse, it was sold, said Stephen
Friedman, MTV president. "That's gold for us," he said.
Ortiz has done more things for the fan
cave than pretty much any player, Brosnan said. One of the biggest
roles for him and McCutchen will be to encourage other players to get
involved. Ortiz suggested that shouldn't be difficult.
"Players want to be musicians and
musicians want to be players," he said. "So it's going to be pretty easy
to get my friends in baseball to have fun on MTV."
Friedman said MTV viewers have plenty
of interest in athletes; its old series "Cribs" frequently featured
tours of over-the-top homes owned by pro sports figures. "We're always looking for ways to connect our audience with the stars they revere and want a closer connection to," he said.
The show might discuss some things
that are happening on the field, but that's not really the main purpose.
Like the fan cave, the big idea is to promote the game and its players
with a young generation, Brosnan said....
MTV and baseball have also agreed to
look for ways to spread content throughout other MTV shows and
platforms, but no details are available on that yet." image, David Ortiz, ALDS game 3, Oct. 7, 2013, ap
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