ESPN Sr. NASCAR Producer Arrested In Connecticut

The other thing is there used to be less NASCAR on television. But there was more dirt track racing, more late model racing, more ARCA, more USAR, more ASA and more everything else. Now, we're pretty much limited to NASCAR and IndyCar. And if you don't have VERSUS, you only get NASCAR.

Baloney. I've seen plentof WoO, their dirt late models, Hooters Pro Cup, midgets at the Chili Bowl, and ARCA this year along with several West Series races. Does the ASA even exist anymore?
 
Update on this pervert.....

From SceneDaily

Judge dismisses public indecency charges against former ESPN producer

Public indecency and disorderly conduct charges against former ESPN senior motorsports producer Neil Goldberg have been dropped, according to Connecticut criminal online records.

The charges stemmed from an October arrest following a peeping incident in which he was allegedly masturbating outside a neighbor’s window while watching her get dressed.

Goldberg appeared Thursday in Hartford Community Court in front of Judge Raymond Norko, who dismissed all charges, Goldberg attorney Richard Brown said Friday.

Goldberg, who lost his job at ESPN following the arrest, never admitted guilt and there was no finding of any criminal wrongdoing.

“Mr. Goldberg does not constitute a danger to the community. … Because of his otherwise unblemished record, he was given the benefit of the doubt,” Brown said.

Brown said Goldberg had no comment. When contacted, the state attorney’s office in Hartford would not discuss the case.

Goldberg was with ESPN from 1981-2000 before going to Fox Sports from 2001-2006 and then returning to ESPN as coordinating producer for ESPN’s motorsports coverage. He is considered one of the most accomplished TV producers in racing.
 
Seriously.

It's been, what, four years of this? It's not going to change, their coverage is going to eternally suck. Get over it and be glad they're even showing it because it sounds like nobody else was willing to.
Andy, back to you original statement about being "Non Televised," I'm going to conditionally agree with that. Speaking only for myself, I know that I liked NASCAR a whole lot better back when only about half of the races were televised live and the rest were either tape-delayed or just not televised at all.

I realize the following goes against the vast majority of current thought but...? I've be ostracised before.

I believe that this 365/24/7 news coverage of NA__AR has saturated the race fan with overload and I believe, to a measurable degree, plays into the current decline in following.
 
Baloney. I've seen plentof WoO, their dirt late models, Hooters Pro Cup, midgets at the Chili Bowl, and ARCA this year along with several West Series races. Does the ASA even exist anymore?
The name is still out there but it's founder, Rex Robbins, sold the series in 2003 and I believe that it is now headquatered in Daytona Beach and that Jim France is somehow tangentally connected with it?
 
Update on this pervert.....

From SceneDaily

Judge dismisses public indecency charges against former ESPN producer

Public indecency and disorderly conduct charges against former ESPN senior motorsports producer Neil Goldberg have been dropped, according to Connecticut criminal online records.

The charges stemmed from an October arrest following a peeping incident in which he was allegedly masturbating outside a neighbor’s window while watching her get dressed.

Goldberg appeared Thursday in Hartford Community Court in front of Judge Raymond Norko, who dismissed all charges, Goldberg attorney Richard Brown said Friday.

Goldberg, who lost his job at ESPN following the arrest, never admitted guilt and there was no finding of any criminal wrongdoing.

“Mr. Goldberg does not constitute a danger to the community. … Because of his otherwise unblemished record, he was given the benefit of the doubt,” Brown said.

Brown said Goldberg had no comment. When contacted, the state attorney’s office in Hartford would not discuss the case.

Goldberg was with ESPN from 1981-2000 before going to Fox Sports from 2001-2006 and then returning to ESPN as coordinating producer for ESPN’s motorsports coverage. He is considered one of the most accomplished TV producers in racing.
You and I would be in jail, or on a sex offenders list.
Just a dirtbag with connections.
MoMike
 
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