
ESPN went on the air on Sept. 7, 1979. Entrepreneurial daring and irrepressible enthusiasm gave the world the first 24-hour television network. Once unleashed upon sports fans, ESPN's impact forever changed the way we watch television. The man who had the dream, the founder of ESPN, is Bill Rasmussen. Rasmussen's innovations in sports and broadcasting include "Sports Center," wall-to-wall coverage of NCAA regular season and "March Madness" college basketball, and coverage of the NFL Draft."
Sports Junkies Rejoice is the fast-paced account of an incredible 14 month journey that led to the September 7, 1979 launch of ESPN.Bill Rasmussen introduces you to all the players that made it possible and shares with you the frustrations, tensions, emotions and excitement from concept to launch!When ESPN debuted on September 7th at 7:00 PM, there were no 24 hour networks. The "Big Three" ABC, CBS, NBC did not broadcast from 1:00 - 7:00 AM. HBO was live only five hours nightly. CNN and FNC hadn't yet begun to blanket us with news 24/7. As for MTV, The Weather Channel, The Discovery Channel, The History Channel and many others - they all came later. Over 90% of all cable systems in America had only 12 channels available and with over 50 new channels proposed ESPN led the way and became America's first 24 / 7 cable network.In 1979, Sports Illustrated opined, "ESPN may become the biggest thing in TV Sports since Monday Night Football and nighttime World Series Games." How prophetic!
Entrepreneurial daring, irrepressible enthusiasm and a dash of good luck gave America its first 24 hour sports network in 1979, This book is about the agony and the ecstasy, the excitement, effort and frustration that led to the launch of the Worldwide Leader in Sports. A $9,000 credit card advance, a landfill in Bristol, CT, new satellite technology and a father and son's unshakeable belief in the insatiable appetite of America's sports fans came together to fuel an incredible journey....a journey that culminated in ESPN's inaugural show at 7:00 PM (EDT) Friday, September 7, 1979.
Sports Junkies Rejoice is the fast-paced account of an incredible 14 month journey that led to the September 7, 1979 launch of ESPN. Bill Rasmussen introduces you to all the players that made it possible and shares with you the frustrations, tensions, emotions and excitement from concept to launch! When ESPN debuted on September 7th at 7:00 PM, there were no 24 hour networks. The "Big Three" ABC, CBS, NBC did not broadcast from 1:00 - 7:00 AM. HBO was live only five hours nightly. CNN and FNC hadn't yet begun to blanket us with news 24/7. As for MTV, The Weather Channel, The Discovery Channel, The History Channel and many others - they all came later. Over 90% of all cable systems in America had only 12 channels available and with over 50 new channels proposed ESPN led the way and became America's first 24 / 7 cable network. In 1979, Sports Illustrated opined, "ESPN may become the biggest thing in TV Sports since Monday Night Football and nighttime World Series Games." How prophetic!
Grand Prize Winner New England Book Festival Winner Southern California Book Festival A walk through sports history with the man who changed it.
by Bill Rasmussen
by Bill Rasmussen
Word Girdle Game Book 1, Racecar Red Edition, contains 100 NEW, pencil-ready games, plus more than 100 seven-letter game word suggestions.What is Word Girdle?Word Girdle is a single-player, pen & paper, brain-teaser word game that challenges you to SQUEEZE the most out of every letter in your A-Z Supply.Word Girdle is a puzzling word workout that requires you to add exactly 7 WORDS to an ever-tightening GIRDLE of available spaces, one word at a time.Word Girdle is a punishing letter & grid combo that CINCHES IN as you play, rewards you for avoiding unused letter penalties, and boosts your score with 6 & 7 letter word bonuses, high-value letters and victory point multipliers.Learn How to Play at
by Bill Rasmussen
by Bill Rasmussen
by Bill Rasmussen
by Bill Rasmussen
Shane Lampworker Extraordinaire. Tutorials by Leigh Adams, Dolores Barrett, Stephanie Bonniwell, Lauri Copeland, Deb Crowley, Larr Cunningham, Kevin Ivey, Wil Menzies, Bill Rasmussen, Karl Taylor, Patricia Trout, and Hayley Tsang.
by Bill Rasmussen
by Bill Rasmussen
by Bill Rasmussen
by Bill Rasmussen
by Bill Rasmussen