Here’s the favor I am asking of you:
If you want to see this project brought to television, please go to https://r.espn.go.com/members/contact/tvindex . When you get to this page, there will be a form to fill out. It will ask for your name, city, state, zip code, country and email address. Then it will ask what you’re writing about. Tell it you have a suggestion about something on ESPN and provide your satellite or cable provider. Under “Category” choose “Movies/Documentary.” Under “Item,” choose “Other.” And under “Topic,” choose “Other.” Then under “Subject” type, “Bowling Wars.” (That’s the name of this film.)
In the field called “Message,” feel free to write your own message, asking ABC/Disney to make the clips from “Pro Bowlers Tour” available to the filmmaker who is producing a documentary called “Bowling Wars” AND TELL THEM YOU WANT TO SEE THE MOVIE “BOWLING WARS” ON ESPN! Or just copy the following message and paste it in the box:
“I have recently learned of a documentary called "Bowling Wars" that is going to post-production but has been held up by ABC/Disney’s demand for exorbitant licensing fees for video clips that originally aired on ABC-TV’s long-running series "Pro Bowlers Tour.” These clips are part of bowling’s and the PBA’s history. Please, ABC/Disney: Release these clips so we bowling fans (who, by the way, are viewers of ESPN) can relive the history of our sport and hear its story told. Please stop holding hostage our sport’s history in your archival vault in return for ransom demands. Those “Pro Bowlers Tour” telecasts provided live coverage of actual American sporting events. They aired over what the FCC has deemed to be "public airwaves.” As such, this content belongs to all of us. I want to see “Bowling Wars” on ESPN. Please release the clips!”
If the form presents you with the opportunity to mark it as “URGENT,” please do so. Remember, our goal is to get this program ready for air as part of the World Series of Bowling telecasts that are fast approaching.
Or, if you feel so inclined, you can send them a letter via postal mail at the following address:
ESPN
ESPN Viewer Response
ESPN Plaza
Bristol, CT 06010
Friends, I know this is a big ask. You’ve already done a lot just by reading this far. And a letter writing campaign might even be a long shot. But here’s the deal: A letter writing campaign has worked before. The most famous example is when Star Trek was set for cancellation after its first season. Then a letter writing campaign organized by screenplay writer Dorothy Fontana prompted the network to rethink its decision to cancel, and the rest, as they say, is television history. The network knows full well that each email or letter that it receives represents thousands of other like-minded people who agree with what’s in the letter, but are not inclined to go to the trouble to send one of their own. If a couple hundred people were to write in, chances are good that the leverage will change and you might actually get to see this remarkable program that we’ve been working for months to bring you….that DON has been working ‘round-the-clock for months to bring you.
For the record, and in full disclosure, I have offered my services as a voiceover talent to Don on this project totally pro bono out of my love for our game. I was flattered that he asked, and was only too happy to provide my voiceover work simply for the privilege of being a part of this awesome project. I will receive no financial compensation from my participation in this project. The only thing I will get out of it, should the project move to completion, is the honor of having my voice used in the narration and my name in the film’s credits.
I appreciate you taking the time to read all the way to the end of this missive. Now, if you feel moved to act (and I hope you do), please go to the link I provided above and act now while it’s fresh on your mind.
Thanks!
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