ESPN Would Rather Not Use Their Own Phones
We know the big ESPN interoffice complaint memorandum we posted yesterday was enormous and unwieldy, but seriously, folks: It's an absolute treasure trove of gorgeous goodness. So, for the rest of the week, we'll be highlighting two particularly hilarious and illustrative segments from the memo each day. Right now: ESPN's faith in its own products!
Question: With the switch to Verizon for ESPN phone content, will our company phones, (Treos), be switched to Verizon? Answer:There are no plans to switch to Verizon. Verizon does not offer international coverage and it would be a lot of work to constantly swap a Verizon phone for a Cingular phone based on international travel. It also would require two processes to manage the phones, one for each vendor. Currently our rates are the same, if not better, with Cingular.
As most of you know, Verizon is the carrier for the new revamped ESPN Mobile; you need a Verizon plan to get the service. ESPN employees, logically, wonder if this means they have to switch. Skipper informs that not only do they not have to switch, but that the Verizon competitor ESPN regularly uses has cheaper rates that the company ESPN has a multi-million-dollar deal with.
We're sure Verizon is just doing backflips to learn that the head of ESPN is openly telling his employees that their phone service is inferior.
Texas Tech's Opponents Should Refuse to Play Brendan Sorsby
The New York Knicks Are Inevitable
Top Storylines to Watch as the 2026 FIFA World Cup Kicks Off
Six Things That Must Happen for USMNT to Win the World Cup
Best Betting Picks for Day 1 of the 2026 FIFA World Cup
- Three World Cup Futures Bets Worth Making Before Kickoff
- Tuesday MLB Best Bets: June 9th Pitcher Props Worth Targeting
- NBA Finals Game 2 Betting Picks and Predictions Spurs vs. Knicks
- MLB Picks Today: Two Sunday Bets Worth Backing
- MLB Predictions and Best Bets for Saturday's Biggest Games
- UFC Vegas 118 Betting Picks: Three Fights to Target on Saturday Night
- MLB Picks Today: Two Pitchers Set Up To Fall Short On Outs Props

