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  1. #1
    Silence surpasses speech. duncan228's Avatar
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    Shaq heads back to school for new career

    Shaquille O'Neal is in training for his next career.

    The 7-foot-1 center for the Phoenix Suns is taking a broadcasting class at Syracuse University known as Sportscaster U, a crash course designed to teach athletes about the broadcasting industry. He arrived in Syracuse on Sunday and started school Monday at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

    Instructor Dave Ryan, an ESPN play-by-play announcer who started the program, says O'Neal is spending the time taping mock stand-ups, scripting material, and conducting interviews.

    O'Neal even scored the first on-camera interview with former Duke point guard Greg Paulus since he announced his decision to play football at Syracuse in the fall.

  2. #2
    Veteran lurker's Avatar
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    Shaq was born for this.

    I also heard he's been filming a reality tv show.

  3. #3
    Banned
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    i wonder how low his chair will be in the studio. he hovers above that jackass stu

  4. #4
    Dragon style JamStone's Avatar
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    I'm not a huge Shaq fan, but one very cool thing about him is that he has never limited himself to just being a professional athlete. He has used his fame and money to explore different things in life other than just buying expensive cars and vacationing like all too many athletes do, and while he's still playing as well. I think that's really cool about him.

  5. #5
    Silence surpasses speech. duncan228's Avatar
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    Shaquille O’Neal Takes Course in Broadcasting at Syracuse
    Kevin Rivoli for The New York Times

    SYRACUSE — Shaquille O’Neal has starred in everything from rap videos to video games. He has filmed, by his own count, about 250 television commercials over the past 10 years. He has completed enough postgame interviews on TNT to have critiqued nearly all of Craig Sager’s purple suits.

    Still, O’Neal found himself at Syracuse University on Tuesday, celebrating the successful completion of a mock four-minute interview as if it were a playoff buzzer beater.

    “Bam,” he screamed, pointing at a computer monitor. “Exactly four minutes.”

    The 37-year-old O’Neal insists he will play four more N.B.A. seasons, but he plans on having his own radio and television shows after retirement. He envisions something similar to HBO’s “Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel.”

    That was why he found himself in broadcast hot seats across the Syracuse campus this week in an intriguing role reversal — conducting interviews instead of giving them.

    O’Neal’s three-day broadcast boot camp at Syracuse is a spinoff of the second-year program that the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications runs in concert with the N.B.A.’s players association for players interested in pursuing broadcasting after their careers. Players pay $5,200 for the program. But because O’Neal wanted his own private session, he had to fork over more than $15,000.

    “You have to know what you’re doing,” O’Neal said of the basics of broadcasting. “There are a lot of guys who are great speakers, but it doesn’t come off that way unless you have all the other elements. I needed to learn the secrets.”

    O’Neal has two full-time teachers here to unlock the secrets, the adjunct professors Matt Park and Dave Ryan. Park is the play-by-play voice for Syracuse football and basketball, and Ryan is a jack-of-all trades play-by-play man for ESPN. Both are graduates of Syracuse’s broadcast program, which has produced Bob Costas, Marv Albert, Stockton, Mike Tirico and Sean McDonough.

    Park and Ryan agreed that O’Neal, a likely Hall of Fame center now with the Phoenix Suns, was an eager student and a quick learner. Ryan called him “the best possible student that I can imagine.”

    Considering that O’Neal could coax a hefty contract out of any network without learning the basics of broadcasting, it was impressive that he even showed up. But O’Neal said he wanted to learn things the right way.

    “The fact that he did this instead of just calling and exerting his influence on a network, I think speaks volumes toward his professionalism,” Park said.

    O’Neal’s basic goal heading into the program was counteracting what he considered his most glaring broadcast deficiencies — voice fluctuation and nerves. O’Neal has always spoken in a monotone, so Park and Ryan grilled him on how and when to stress words.

    “Enunciation, diction, all that stuff,” O’Neal said. “None of that is in my personality.”

    O’Neal said that learning the broadcasting basics had also calmed his nerves. He has learned that preparation can make the butterflies disappear.

    “More than anything, you get a newfound respect for television and the nuances of putting it together,” said Eric Snow, who took the program last summer and is now an analyst with NBA TV. “You learn from every perspective, behind the scenes and on the scene.”

    O’Neal’s training over the past three days ranged from 15-second spots to a long-form, stand-up mock television preview of Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals. On Tuesday, Park taught O’Neal that every good radio interview has a beginning, middle and end, reminding him to “reset” the interview midway and have exit cues.

    “Know the end before you start,” Park said.

    “Ohhhh,” O’Neal said, repeating the advice. “I like that.”

    He has also been tutored on the intricacies of interviewing. “Don’t ask three questions at once,” Ryan advised, saying that simple statements should be followed with questions like “Why?” or “How?” to guide the interviewee.

    The program was light on notes and lectures and emphasized on-the-job training. O’Neal did a television interview with Greg Paulus, the new Syracuse quarterback and former Duke point guard. O’Neal also did a mock radio spot with Stephen Curry before the N.B.A. draft lottery.

    Throughout the interviews on Tuesday, O’Neal’s gregarious personality shone through. Talking with Tirico before grilling him on Tirico’s radio show, O’Neal warned Tirico not to use the “SHAM” method.

    “That’s the short answer method,” O’Neal said of a tactic he often used with reporters. “I invented that method.”

    O’Neal told Tirico that via the “transitive property,” he had learned from him because Tirico had been a mentor for Ryan and Park. O’Neal showed his softer side in asking Leo Rautins, a former Syracuse star and current Toronto Raptors analyst, if he pressured any of his four boys into playing basketball. He showed the expanse of his basketball depth by dropping John Wooden’s name.

    O’Neal said that before taking on a complex role like the one Gumbel has on HBO, he would like to start his broadcasting career on a show similar to ESPN’s “First Take.”

    “I love Bryant Gumbel, I like guys that are very intelligent,” O’Neal said. “I love guys with beautiful voices. I love guys with personalities. I love guys who know what they’re talking about. I can’t understand how Skip Bayless can make a comment about Tim Duncan. My question is, How do you know?”

  6. #6
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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    Shaq's a funny guy, but he's too slow and his voice is awful for doing color. He'd be great with Ernie, Kenny, and Charles though on TNT though.

  7. #7
    Banned
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    his ego would be too big to make fun of himself i think?

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