YouTube Changes the Landscape of Sports Highlights
Jesse Spector
Issue date: 3/2/07 Section: Sports
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On the plus side, the Missouri quarterback threw for 244 yards and two touchdowns on Nov. 4, and broke his school's single-season record for passing yards. But he also threw a pair of interceptions, and his Tigers suffered a 34-20 loss to Nebraska.
The real downer, though, came after the game.
During the ABC telecast, cameras caught Daniel on the bench for a moment more embarrassing than any interception. Shot from behind, the sophomore signal caller could be seen reaching for his nose, peering at his finger, then bringing his hand to his mouth.
Those eight seconds were all it took for Daniel to become the unfortunate star in a video called "Chase Daniel likes boogers," complete with sound effects.
The clip _ and two copycats _ were viewed a combined 80,000 times in their first five days on YouTube, an Internet video site that is changing the landscape of sports highlights by allowing users to upload clips of everything from high school volleyball to obscene on-ice trash talk from the 1991 Stanley Cup Finals.
If you don't believe it, just ask Lamar Thomas, the broadcaster whose inflammatory comments during the Miami-Florida International brawl last month may have blown over had they not popped up on YouTube for the world to see and hear.
Instead, there was an uproar that didn't end until Thomas was fired.
The site is also making waves outside of sports. A YouTube video showing a police officer hitting a suspect in the face three months ago in Los Angeles has led to an FBI investigation into the officer's use of force.
YouTube, which was purchased for $1.65 billion last month by Google, has become the place to go on the Internet to see crazy things from the world of sports. The clips are not necessarily easy to find _ you have to know what you're looking for _ but once something becomes a hit, it spreads to other Web sites, thanks to an interface that allows bloggers to post YouTube videos on their own sites with ease.
"One of the funnier things was when Denis Leary showed up in the booth at a Red Sox game and he did a great thing on Kevin Youkilis and Mel Gibson," says Deadspin.com editor Will Leitch, who posted the YouTube video of it on his site. "If you weren't a Red Sox fan, if not for YouTube, that would have been lost."
It's not all laughs and giggles, though: Because the Leary routine took place on a Red Sox broadcast, it is copyrighted material owned by Major League Baseball, which has its own video presence on the Web and aggressively searches YouTube for clips that violate that copyright, and then has the offending clips removed.
2008 Woodie Awards

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