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Lou Schwartz:
"When did you first decide that
you wanted to become a sportscaster?"
Bob Costas: "I think the notion first entered my mind
when I was nine or 10 years old because the announcers at the
time - Mel Allen, Red Barber, Marty Glickman, Lindsey Nelson,
Vin Scully - were as much a part of the game to me as the players.
They were the soundtrack of the game. All of them had very pleasing
styles and I wanted to be like them."
LS: "How did you start and when did you get your first
break?"
BC: "I went to Syracuse University because I knew they
had a strong program in journalism and broadcasting. I worked
at the campus radio station. That was my first on-air experience."
LS: " I'm sure there were hundreds of students who wanted
to get on the air. Why do you think they chose you?"
BC: "I guess I had some aptitude for it at the beginning.
Certainly I was raw but the way campus radio stations are set
up, they're designed to give as many students as possible an
opportunity. They were not tremendously selective, so I had
a reasonable shot at it. I gained a little on-air experience
that way and then I did some minor league hockey in my senior
year at Syracuse. My big break came about a year after I was
out of school, going to KMOX in St. Louis, one of the greatest
radio stations in the country to broadcast pro basketball, the
old ABA Spirits of St. Louis. That break put me in the orbit
of respected KMOX broadcasters like Jack Buck, Dan Kelly, Harry
Caray and Joe Garagiola. The list is long. It's a premiere station
so that got me some notice. From there I got some network assignments
and one thing led to another."
LS: "You are one of the few sportscasters today that
broadcasts such a wide variety of sporting events. What do you
enjoy doing the most?"
BC: "I enjoy baseball play-by-play and hosting the Olympics."
LS: "Do you find they generate the most excitement?"
BC: "I think those are the ones that are most suited
to my style. I have an anecdotal and observational style and
those assignments give me more room for that."
LS: "Is there a particular sports event that you covered
during your career that you enjoyed the most?
BC: "Hosting the Olympics in Barcelona in 1992 was the
favorite assignment I've ever had."
LS: "You will soon be broadcasting the baseball playoffs
and the World Series. How do you prepare for such major events
that will be seen by millions of people?"
BC: "I think you try to prepare all season long by following
the story lines and the pennant races. In the days preceding
the first broadcast, you get a barrage of materials from your
researchers and statisticians and you kind of try to pull it
all together and edit it in your own mind in terms of what's
pertinent and interesting and what's not. There is such an overload
of information now that its important not just to have information
but to be discerning about what's appropriate and how much of
it to use and when to use it. So that's part of what I do."
LS: "Before you start, do you have an outline of the
things you would like to say or certain areas that you want
to cover?"
BC: "No. I go through the information that I have and,
in addition to the conversations that I have with the managers
before the games, I just pull out whatever seems interesting.
Sometimes when you've done that you can find a pattern in a
series of notes and observations that tie together. But I don't
go in with any preconceived notions."
LS: "There are so many youngsters that write to us who
want to be sportscasters. What advice would you give them?"
BC: "I would say that you need to get as well rounded
an education as possible for two reasons. One, the greater your
frame of reference, the more interesting you'll be as a sports
broadcaster. But secondly, not all those sportscasting dreams
come true. People's interests change or they find they don't
get a break or they find they don't have the particular aptitude
required to become a broadcaster. If they put all their eggs
in one basket, they're going to be disappointed. I would say
get as broad an education as possible so you have some options.
In terms of pursuing a broadcasting career, you want to get
as much hands-on experience as you possibly can. You can't learn
to be a broadcaster in a classroom. You can only learn it by
going on the air or by sitting with a tape recorder and learning
from your own mistakes."
LS: "It's very difficult to start. As you know, I used
to own a small radio station in Geneva, New York, and we used
to have 10 to 20 individuals that would work for $25 a play-by-play
assignment. How does someone even get to that point and what
do you suggest a person should do to get the hands-on opportunity?"
BC: "That's one of the things about a sportscasting career,
unless you're extremely lucky and get a big break early, you
have to be prepared to go to almost any market in the country
for relatively little pay and build a resume. You have to send
out your tapes and your applications to dozens and dozens of
stations. If you want to be a sportscaster, I think you're better
off taking a job doing high school basketball in Decatur, Illinois,
than you are taking a job as a weather man in Boston. The only
way to learn to do it, is to do it."
LS: "I understand that you were a great fan of Mickey
Mantle's and that you carry around his baseball card. What is
your fascination with Mickey?"
BC: "I think it's just whoever your favorite baseball
player is. It might be Willie Mays or Stan Musial. For somebody
today it might be Ken Griffey Jr., Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa
or Cal Ripken. It's just whoever you're first favorite baseball
player is when you were a kid, it kind of sticks with you."
LS: "What do you want people to know about Bob Costas?"
BC: "My notion of sports broadcasting is that it's a
combination of enhancing and enjoying the drama and excitement
of sports, but at the same time there should also be a place
for journalism and commentary. I don't think that they are incompatible.
I think that you can be a fan as a broadcaster, not rooting
for one team or the other, but a fan of the sport and try to
capture the enjoyment and emotion of it, but at the same time
take a clear-eyed view of some of the issues involved. I think
that good broadcasting should be a combination of those two."
LS: "You are one of the few sportscasters that has had
so many diversified assignments at NBC. Are there any assignments
that you really didn't enjoy?
BC: "I have enjoyed everything I've done. There are some
you enjoy more than others but there hasn't been an assignment
that I didn't enjoy."
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