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	<title>Observer &#187; ESPN.COM</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; ESPN.COM</title>
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		<title>How the Social Media Gold Rush Enabled ESPN Scammer Sarah Phillips</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2012/05/05082012-social-media-espn-scammer-sarah-phillip/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2012 08:30:52 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2012/05/05082012-social-media-espn-scammer-sarah-phillip/</link>
			<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/?p=238369</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><div id="attachment_238376" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 352px"><a href="http://www.observer.com/2012/05/05082012-social-media-espn-scammer-sarah-phillip/sarah-phill/" rel="attachment wp-att-238376"><img class="size-medium wp-image-238376" title="sarah-phill" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/sarah-phill.jpeg?w=342&h=300" alt="" width="342" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Sarah Phillips (Courtesy Deadspin)</p></div></p>
<p>The self-obsessed world of online journalism came close to a singularity moment early this month, when an up-and-coming young sports columnist was exposed as a garden-variety con artist. Over at the Gawker sports site Deadspin, John Koblin reconstructed <a href="http://deadspin.com/5906658/is-an-espn-columnist-scamming-people-on-the-internet">the luridly fascinating saga</a> of ESPN.com writer Sarah Phillips, who had landed a plum perch in the enormous, vastly profitable industry of sports journalism without benefit of a single in-person job interview. <!--more-->Ms. Phillips’ career path was largely a con job—she had previously set up shop as a sports-betting columnist at the betting site Covers.com, with no discernible background in either sports fandom or wagering—so perhaps it felt natural for her to set about gulling impressionable sports-minded writers and web proprietors out of piles of money on the promise that, together, they would all come into tidy fortunes by cracking wise about the sports world on the Internet. “I’m a writer for ESPN.com. And I have a plan to take over the world,” is how Ms. Phillips succinctly put things to one of her marks on Gchat.</p>
<p>The plan, such as it was, involved reviving a version of ESPN’s lapsed Page 2 franchise, and bulking it up into a network of sports-comedy blogs. “By my ESPN.com senior director estimates,” she explained in her world-conquering Gchat pitch, “each of the five of us [contributing content to the network] will be making over $100K. My ultimate goal, being that I work for ESPN, is to sell the site to ESPN and become a blog on ESPN.com.” But inevitably, there would be some strategic hitch along the way—photo rights to purchase, seed money to collect, advertising to pay for—and once Ms. Phillips had that stake in hand, she’d typically vanish.</p>
<p>The deal on offer probably sounded vaguely plausible in Ms. Phillips’ own head—the key to carrying off an effective scam, after all, is for scammers to project confidence in their own ornate fantasies; that confidence is what they are selling to their clientele. And since the managers at ESPN had already hired Ms. Phillips without even a minimal semblance of due diligence—so certain is the mass appeal of a comely young woman writer in the online sportswriting world—well, who’s to say what’s possible? (Mr. Koblin reports, by the way, that Phillips was not merely an online con artist, but also <a href="http://deadspin.com/5907349/">something of a sock puppet</a>: She had a history of channeling sports forecasts and betting odds by a longtime male confrere named Nilesh Prasad; the two had attended high school together in Oregon, and <a href="http://deadspin.com/5907081/sources-sarah-phillips-and-nilesh-prasad-picked-games-together-scammed-people-together-got-fired-from-t+mobile-together">worked at the same T-mobile store</a> until they’d both been fired for allegedly perpetrating another online scam there, involving the resale of company phones on Ebay.)</p>
<p>But like all cons, the Sarah Phillips episode is more interesting for what it reveals about the marks than about the perpetrator, whose motivations almost always turn out to be sad, venal, and banal. But since this con was aimed squarely at the great enabling myths of the rapidly monetizing world of social media, it speaks volumes about the ultimate end-uses we envision behind the frantic connectivity of our online lives.</p>
<p>Just consider the inner workings of the Phillips pitch. There was the testimony of the geektrepreneur who had swiftly monetized her own online brand—her identity, that is—and who was now extending the same bounty to a corps of web-savvy self-starters, just like her. There was the credibility of major online brands dangled before the marks as a classic inducement-cum-distraction.</p>
<p>And there was, most of all, the the illicit allure of a hot-seeming twenty-something woman reaching out to shut-in geeks with the promise of easy money explicitly rewarding them for their pet obsessions—in other words, the very fantasy of transcendent personal specialness and irresistibly attractive genius that keeps most young men transfixed before the Internet for hours on end in the first place.</p>
<p>From the demand side of the equation, the Phillips scam also had to seem invitingly credible in a broader sense, as well. After all, the standard come-on of Web business prophets is that the self-generated marketing of your personality online is the hidden secret of online prosperity. “The new American Dream is to go viral,” burbles the <a href="http://www.tnr.com/article/books/magazine/96116/the-internet-intellectual">cyber-visionary hack Jeff Jarvis</a>. The interactivity of the Web has enhanced all manner of enterprise, announces the NYU <a href="http://www.thenation.com/article/158974/accelerated-grimace-cyber-utopianism&amp;amp;page=full">digital cheerleader Clay Shirky</a>, precisely “<em>because</em> there is no way to filter for quality in advance: the definition of quality becomes more variable, from one community to the next, than when there was broad consensus about mainstream writing (and music and film and so on).” Lay these entirely representative specimens of pat and content-free managementspeak side-by-side, and you have the high-theory version of Sarah Phillips’ business plan.</p>
<p>The ever-elusive quest for the optimally self-marketing kind of personality was also why my former corporate superiors at Yahoo News would obsess over the intangible magic of the online “voice” in the site’s coverage of the news cycle—even though the occasional appearance of a strong voice in a Yahoo-branded platform was also guaranteed to send them into operatic bouts of managerial fretting. One of the more curious sidelights of the Phillips affair, indeed, was a scam whereby the young hustler would purchase <a href="http://nilsenreport.ca/2012/05/01/former-espn-columnist-sarah-phillips-exposed/">individual Twitter accounts</a> outright to boost her own social media profile. This may be the saddest footnote to the Phillips saga: Madly seeking to monetize a Web-branded personality, the con artist is reduced to subcontracting the illusion of an appealing online persona.</p>
<p>It used to be an elementary job requirement for charming hucksters that they at least be colorful—but in today’s social-media-verse, all that evidently matters is that you seem popular. And that you don’t get caught.</p>
<p align="right">
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><div id="attachment_238376" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 352px"><a href="http://www.observer.com/2012/05/05082012-social-media-espn-scammer-sarah-phillip/sarah-phill/" rel="attachment wp-att-238376"><img class="size-medium wp-image-238376" title="sarah-phill" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/sarah-phill.jpeg?w=342&h=300" alt="" width="342" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Sarah Phillips (Courtesy Deadspin)</p></div></p>
<p>The self-obsessed world of online journalism came close to a singularity moment early this month, when an up-and-coming young sports columnist was exposed as a garden-variety con artist. Over at the Gawker sports site Deadspin, John Koblin reconstructed <a href="http://deadspin.com/5906658/is-an-espn-columnist-scamming-people-on-the-internet">the luridly fascinating saga</a> of ESPN.com writer Sarah Phillips, who had landed a plum perch in the enormous, vastly profitable industry of sports journalism without benefit of a single in-person job interview. <!--more-->Ms. Phillips’ career path was largely a con job—she had previously set up shop as a sports-betting columnist at the betting site Covers.com, with no discernible background in either sports fandom or wagering—so perhaps it felt natural for her to set about gulling impressionable sports-minded writers and web proprietors out of piles of money on the promise that, together, they would all come into tidy fortunes by cracking wise about the sports world on the Internet. “I’m a writer for ESPN.com. And I have a plan to take over the world,” is how Ms. Phillips succinctly put things to one of her marks on Gchat.</p>
<p>The plan, such as it was, involved reviving a version of ESPN’s lapsed Page 2 franchise, and bulking it up into a network of sports-comedy blogs. “By my ESPN.com senior director estimates,” she explained in her world-conquering Gchat pitch, “each of the five of us [contributing content to the network] will be making over $100K. My ultimate goal, being that I work for ESPN, is to sell the site to ESPN and become a blog on ESPN.com.” But inevitably, there would be some strategic hitch along the way—photo rights to purchase, seed money to collect, advertising to pay for—and once Ms. Phillips had that stake in hand, she’d typically vanish.</p>
<p>The deal on offer probably sounded vaguely plausible in Ms. Phillips’ own head—the key to carrying off an effective scam, after all, is for scammers to project confidence in their own ornate fantasies; that confidence is what they are selling to their clientele. And since the managers at ESPN had already hired Ms. Phillips without even a minimal semblance of due diligence—so certain is the mass appeal of a comely young woman writer in the online sportswriting world—well, who’s to say what’s possible? (Mr. Koblin reports, by the way, that Phillips was not merely an online con artist, but also <a href="http://deadspin.com/5907349/">something of a sock puppet</a>: She had a history of channeling sports forecasts and betting odds by a longtime male confrere named Nilesh Prasad; the two had attended high school together in Oregon, and <a href="http://deadspin.com/5907081/sources-sarah-phillips-and-nilesh-prasad-picked-games-together-scammed-people-together-got-fired-from-t+mobile-together">worked at the same T-mobile store</a> until they’d both been fired for allegedly perpetrating another online scam there, involving the resale of company phones on Ebay.)</p>
<p>But like all cons, the Sarah Phillips episode is more interesting for what it reveals about the marks than about the perpetrator, whose motivations almost always turn out to be sad, venal, and banal. But since this con was aimed squarely at the great enabling myths of the rapidly monetizing world of social media, it speaks volumes about the ultimate end-uses we envision behind the frantic connectivity of our online lives.</p>
<p>Just consider the inner workings of the Phillips pitch. There was the testimony of the geektrepreneur who had swiftly monetized her own online brand—her identity, that is—and who was now extending the same bounty to a corps of web-savvy self-starters, just like her. There was the credibility of major online brands dangled before the marks as a classic inducement-cum-distraction.</p>
<p>And there was, most of all, the the illicit allure of a hot-seeming twenty-something woman reaching out to shut-in geeks with the promise of easy money explicitly rewarding them for their pet obsessions—in other words, the very fantasy of transcendent personal specialness and irresistibly attractive genius that keeps most young men transfixed before the Internet for hours on end in the first place.</p>
<p>From the demand side of the equation, the Phillips scam also had to seem invitingly credible in a broader sense, as well. After all, the standard come-on of Web business prophets is that the self-generated marketing of your personality online is the hidden secret of online prosperity. “The new American Dream is to go viral,” burbles the <a href="http://www.tnr.com/article/books/magazine/96116/the-internet-intellectual">cyber-visionary hack Jeff Jarvis</a>. The interactivity of the Web has enhanced all manner of enterprise, announces the NYU <a href="http://www.thenation.com/article/158974/accelerated-grimace-cyber-utopianism&amp;amp;page=full">digital cheerleader Clay Shirky</a>, precisely “<em>because</em> there is no way to filter for quality in advance: the definition of quality becomes more variable, from one community to the next, than when there was broad consensus about mainstream writing (and music and film and so on).” Lay these entirely representative specimens of pat and content-free managementspeak side-by-side, and you have the high-theory version of Sarah Phillips’ business plan.</p>
<p>The ever-elusive quest for the optimally self-marketing kind of personality was also why my former corporate superiors at Yahoo News would obsess over the intangible magic of the online “voice” in the site’s coverage of the news cycle—even though the occasional appearance of a strong voice in a Yahoo-branded platform was also guaranteed to send them into operatic bouts of managerial fretting. One of the more curious sidelights of the Phillips affair, indeed, was a scam whereby the young hustler would purchase <a href="http://nilsenreport.ca/2012/05/01/former-espn-columnist-sarah-phillips-exposed/">individual Twitter accounts</a> outright to boost her own social media profile. This may be the saddest footnote to the Phillips saga: Madly seeking to monetize a Web-branded personality, the con artist is reduced to subcontracting the illusion of an appealing online persona.</p>
<p>It used to be an elementary job requirement for charming hucksters that they at least be colorful—but in today’s social-media-verse, all that evidently matters is that you seem popular. And that you don’t get caught.</p>
<p align="right">
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>ESPN Plays Court Jester to King James</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2010/07/espn-plays-court-jester-to-king-james/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jul 2010 21:41:50 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2010/07/espn-plays-court-jester-to-king-james/</link>
			<dc:creator>Zeke Turner</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2010/07/espn-plays-court-jester-to-king-james/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/0728james.jpg?w=204&h=300" />Last night at 1:30 a.m Eastern Time, ESPN published a story by reporter Arash Markazi about a night LeBron James spent out in the nightclub Tao in Las Vegas. It was a great read! By this morning, the story had been removed.&nbsp;</p>
<p>A spokeswoman for ESPN said that the story was published by accident. "The story should have never been published," she wrote in an email to the Media Mob. "The draft was inadvertently put on the server before going through the usual editorial process. We are in the midst of looking into the matter."</p>
<p><a href="http://deadspin.com/5598719/">Deadspin</a> obtained an image of the published story. There is nothing here that seems to suggest that it went without an edit:</p>
<blockquote><p>Five security guards are stationed around him, one at each corner of the table he's about to sit at and another roving around with him, watching his every move. Anyone who takes two steps toward James is stopped and must have James' approval to come closer. The waiter bringing him his cup of green tea with a spoonful of honey and a dash of lemon juice makes the cut, as does the scantily clad brunette with a tattoo of a heart on her right shoulder.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>We asked a spokeswoman for ESPN if there was any policy against taking stories off the web. "This was just a rare case&nbsp; &mdash; it was an error," she said. "As far as policy, this is irrelevant to that."</p>
<p>"They realized it was published accidentally, and they took it down for that reason alone," she added.</p>
<p>Hmmm! Earlier this month, when LeBron James was announcing which team he would play for next, ESPN <a href="/2010/media/lebron-espn-commercial">ceded control of primetime space on the network</a> to Mr. James, in exchange for an exclusive. ESPN allowed Mr. James to control the location of the interview and which reporter would interview him, while his marketing team, LRMR Marketing, selected advertisers for the special. CNBC's <a href="http://twitter.com/darrenrovell1/status/19762770254">Darren Rovell</a> talked to Mr. James' business team today, and they (like ESPN) claimed they had nothing to do with spiking the story.</p>
<p>Unless ESPN.com's editors can show evidence that there are errors in the piece, this&nbsp;was a terrible mistake. Their motives, to say the least, are suspect. We'll be curious to see what ESPN's published version looks like if it's ever actually published again.</p>
<p><strong>Later</strong>: [<a href="/2010/media/espn-explains-decision-unpublish">ESPN Explains Why it Pulled the Story About Lebron's Night Out</a>]</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/0728james.jpg?w=204&h=300" />Last night at 1:30 a.m Eastern Time, ESPN published a story by reporter Arash Markazi about a night LeBron James spent out in the nightclub Tao in Las Vegas. It was a great read! By this morning, the story had been removed.&nbsp;</p>
<p>A spokeswoman for ESPN said that the story was published by accident. "The story should have never been published," she wrote in an email to the Media Mob. "The draft was inadvertently put on the server before going through the usual editorial process. We are in the midst of looking into the matter."</p>
<p><a href="http://deadspin.com/5598719/">Deadspin</a> obtained an image of the published story. There is nothing here that seems to suggest that it went without an edit:</p>
<blockquote><p>Five security guards are stationed around him, one at each corner of the table he's about to sit at and another roving around with him, watching his every move. Anyone who takes two steps toward James is stopped and must have James' approval to come closer. The waiter bringing him his cup of green tea with a spoonful of honey and a dash of lemon juice makes the cut, as does the scantily clad brunette with a tattoo of a heart on her right shoulder.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>We asked a spokeswoman for ESPN if there was any policy against taking stories off the web. "This was just a rare case&nbsp; &mdash; it was an error," she said. "As far as policy, this is irrelevant to that."</p>
<p>"They realized it was published accidentally, and they took it down for that reason alone," she added.</p>
<p>Hmmm! Earlier this month, when LeBron James was announcing which team he would play for next, ESPN <a href="/2010/media/lebron-espn-commercial">ceded control of primetime space on the network</a> to Mr. James, in exchange for an exclusive. ESPN allowed Mr. James to control the location of the interview and which reporter would interview him, while his marketing team, LRMR Marketing, selected advertisers for the special. CNBC's <a href="http://twitter.com/darrenrovell1/status/19762770254">Darren Rovell</a> talked to Mr. James' business team today, and they (like ESPN) claimed they had nothing to do with spiking the story.</p>
<p>Unless ESPN.com's editors can show evidence that there are errors in the piece, this&nbsp;was a terrible mistake. Their motives, to say the least, are suspect. We'll be curious to see what ESPN's published version looks like if it's ever actually published again.</p>
<p><strong>Later</strong>: [<a href="/2010/media/espn-explains-decision-unpublish">ESPN Explains Why it Pulled the Story About Lebron's Night Out</a>]</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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