Obvious name and logo theft aside, NBC Sports' Caught Looking is worth watching.
Anyone who played baseball at any semi-serious level growing up knows that the sport is as much about surviving a long season as it is about winning individual games. Most of us, however, follow Major League Baseball by watching live contests and recorded highlights, putting all of our emphasis as fans on the three-hour-long games and ignoring the other 21 hours in the day. Even though we (especially us Braves fans) understand that the key to a championship is reaching the playoffs healthy and motivated, very little televised baseball content covers this facet of the sport (unless it's about shutting down Stephen Strasburg, of course). Caught Looking does a great job trying to change that, covering in detail the behind-the-scenes aspects of baseball that we rarely see.
This week's episode covered a series between the Cardinals and the Reds at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati. Much like Buzz Bissinger's excellent work of non-fiction Three Nights in August, the show provides an insider's perspective to the traditionally closed-door nature of a Major League Baseball series. While still taking its viewers through the series' highlights and top plays, Caught Looking focuses more on what the players and coaches are thinking, seeing and saying while standing on the field or sitting in the dugouts. The show lets you feel like you're part of the organization by granting access to conversations between opposing players, teammates, managers and umpires, and more. This show might be the closest I ever get to a MLB clubhouse or dugout, and I'm really enjoying the opportunity to better understand the conversations that drive a 162-game season.
Caught Looking isn't perfect, however. The show seems to drag at times, and in an effort to add a cohesive story to each episode the content often focuses on one or two players that you may or may not really care about. The Cardinals and Reds series coverage, for example, centered around Reds rookie Todd Frazier, who has done a great job this year playing third and first while filling in for Scott Rolen and Joey Votto. While Frazier is a legitimate Rookie of the Year candidate who deserves more national attention than he gets, after half an hour I was ready to move on to another "character." Given that the show is new, however, I'm happy to overlook this one minor criticism and continue to watch Caught Looking. With a name and a logo this great, how can NBC Sports' new show not be a success?
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