Finebaum |
According to the New Yorker article Finebaum is, by his own
admission, an unlikely candidate for the voice of the South: he is fifty-seven,
Jewish, and bald, prefers MSNBC to ESPN, and expresses surprise that he has not
ended up in a more academic profession (during one show, he made a reference to
Sartre’s “No Exit” to explain his trouble ending an irritating interview).
Boisterous radio callers are hardly a new phenomenon, but
Finebaum’s have developed a particular reputation for volume, crudeness, and
blind loyalty to their teams of choice. Some call multiple times a day. Some write out
scripts. They have names like Moondog and Legend and Charles Allen Head, who
calls nearly every week to deliver an original, football-themed poem.
Finebaum thinks of his show as a soap opera, on which he is
the lead writer, conversing intelligently with his more lucid callers while
also pushing the plot to the edges of sensibility.
Writer Reeves Wiedeman discusses Finebaum’s background and
career, offers an overview of the rivalry between the football teams of Auburn
University and the University of Alabama that animates Finebaum’s show, and
introduces some of Finebaum’s most well-known callers, several of whom have
become local celebrities themselves, because of their calls to the show.
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