Goto

Collaborating Authors

 fox sport


These 3 talking heads worked at Fox Sports and have something to say about Skip Bayless, Joy Taylor lawsuit

Los Angeles Times

Reactions to the allegations in a lawsuit that longtime Fox Sports talk show host Skip Bayless sexually harassed his hairstylist and that FS1 host Joy Taylor had romantic relationships with two prominent co-workers are littering social media. It was no surprise that three of the most prominent voices in sports talk television -- all of whom previously worked at Fox Sports -- cleared their throats and let it fly. For Marcellus Wiley, a former NFL player who previously worked at FS1, the lawsuit confirmed what he already suspected. Former Fox Sports host Jason Whitlock congratulated himself for being wary of women in the network's makeup room, then went over the top with sexist comments about Taylor. And Stephen A. Smith, who pioneered debate sports TV with Bayless on ESPN's "First Take" from 2012-16, essentially became a character witness for Bayless while underscoring that the lawsuit should be taken seriously.


FOX Sports expands Google Cloud partnership, generative AI to automate archived sports video search

FOX News

Fox News Flash top sports headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. Over the past nearly three decades, FOX Sports, a unit of FOX Corp., parent to Fox News and FOX Business, has accumulated a countless amount of video footage. Millions of hours' worth of sports-related content live within vast archives. At any given time, various individuals have been tasked with sorting through the seemingly endless amount of footage in order to produce new pieces of content.


Fox Sports will use drones in World Series broadcasts for the first time

Engadget

Drones aren't new tools for live sports production, but when the World Series begins this Friday, Fox Sports will use a fleet of three compact aircraft during the Fall Classic for the first time ever. Previously, the network used drones during baseball games for coverage of the All-Star and Field of Dreams games. Fox also employs drones for its broadcasts of USFL and first began using them for production in 2015. For the World Series, Fox plans to use the trio of drones to capture moments like relief pitchers coming in from the bullpen, warm-ups between innings and pitchers leaving the mound. The network collaborated with Beverly Hills Aerials on the customized fleet and that company will operate them.


5 best streaming devices in 2023

FOX News

Kurt "CyberGuy" Knutsson helps you to find parking spots with this easy to use Apple Maps feature. An increasing number of you are turning to streaming as your primary way of consuming media. New streaming services and original content are also expected to drive growth in the industry. With all of this in mind, we want to ensure that you can watch all the content you love, so we've gathered up five of the best streaming devices on the market. CLICK TO GET KURT'S CYBERGUY NEWSLETTER WITH QUICK TIPS, TECH REVIEWS, SECURITY ALERTS AND EASY HOW-TO'S TO MAKE YOU SMARTER With over 208,000 reviews on Amazon and an 84% approval rating at the time of publishing, the Amazon Fire Stick is an excellent streaming device choice.


Covering the World Cup 2018 with AI and automation – Global Editors Network – Medium

#artificialintelligence

The World Cup 2018 is all over. Germany was kicked out in the group stages, Brazil was beaten by Belgium, football didn't come home to England, Croatia with its population of four million people reached the final for the first time ever, only to lose to France in the end. Beyond being glued to our screens to watch the action on pitch, we've been looking at what newsrooms are doing off-pitch to cover the competition… with automation and artificial intelligence. Fox Sports (US) teamed up with IBM Watson to make AI-powered highlight videos, French publication Le Figaro created automated visual summaries, and The Times (UK) launched its very own World Cup Alexa Skill. The US didn't qualify for the World Cup this year, but that didn't stop Fox Sports from airing all 64 matches and teaming up with IBM Watson to create the World Cup highlight machine.


IBM & FOX Sports Team Up to Enhance Sports Viewing Experience with AI

#artificialintelligence

As fans around the world get ready to head to Russia for the 2018 FIFA World Cup this June, FOX Sports and IBM are launching a historical AI collaboration across multiple FOX Sports properties and programming-- the first of its kind for the broadcaster. Beginning with the 2018 FIFA World Cup, FOX Sports is tapping IBM Watson Media's specialized AI video technology and IBM iX's proven expertise in designing user experiences to streamline production workflows to quickly classify, edit and access match highlights in near real-time. The advancements to production and distribution will enable FOX Sports to curate engaging video clips and match highlights so that sports enthusiasts back home don't miss a single play, penalty kick, or goal. With 64 matches played over 32 days by 32 competing teams, the World Cup is one of the most highly anticipated global sporting events. The 2014 World Cup attracted 3.2 billion viewers on television and an estimated 280 million online viewers.


Fox Sports' World Cup highlight machine is powered by IBM's Watson

Engadget

And for soccer (er, football) fans in the US, Fox Sports will be the TV network responsible for bringing them all 64 games from Russia, at least if they want to watch them in English. But, beyond its broadcast offerings, Fox Sports wants to keep people engaged in the competition in different ways. Aside from its partnership with Twitter, which comes in the form of a show that'll stream live from Russia, Fox Sports has teamed up with IBM to build the ultimate World Cup highlight machine. Powered by Watson artificial intelligence, this video hub lets you create on-demand clips from every FIFA World Cup tournament dating back to 1958. Fox Sports says there are 300 archived matches that Watson is capable of analyzing, which you can filter out by World Cup year, team, player, game, play type or any combination of these.


Waymo leads the self-driving car race, Fox scores Thursday Night Football, and more trending news

#artificialintelligence

The news professionals are talking about now, curated by LinkedIn's editors. Waymo's self-driving cars logged the most miles of all driverless vehicle companies in California, according to a report from the state's DMV. Waymo drove 352,545 miles in the year ending in November 2017 (roughly 50% less than the year prior, due to shifting much of its fleet to Phoenix). In second place, GM's Cruise division logged 131,676 miles. "This is still Waymo (née Google) and GM's party, and everyone else is playing catch-up," says The Verge.