5 Things You Should Know About Bill Simmons
You know him as a famed American sports columnist, author, and podcaster. But this year, Grantland's Bill Simmons also became a member of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences (IADAS). That means he'll be one of several new luminaries judging The 20th Annual Webby Awards. Here are 5 things you should know about his incredible career.
Once upon a time, Bill Simmons was a broke bartender in his beloved Boston, trying to find more work as a sportswriter as he approached the completion of his graduate degree in journalism. AOL’s “Digital City Boston” hosted his Website, bostonsportsguy.com. In his words, it was adorably early-Internet: “I would have done this sooner if I knew how simple the technology is today. Back in the days of the BSG site, I had to add every single HTML tag myself before posting whatever I wrote. Crazy.”
The site grew quickly, both through AOL and word-of-mouth. By 2001, he was hired by ESPN to write guest features. His first column was immediately the site’s most popular piece that day, and he soon not only became ESPN.com’s most popular writer, but the most-read sportswriter in the US.
One of Simmons’s most popular outlets is his podcast, The B.S. Report, which opens with intense electronic music and the voice of a hokey-sounding guy introducing Simmons. This is Ronald Jenkees, the renowned, reclusive synth music savant from YouTube. He composed a track called “Derty” for the podcast in 2007, and it has opened the show ever since. (Bonus fact: The B.S. Report has hosted luminaries from Nate Silver to Barack Obama.)
Grantland is Simmons’s treehouse of sports fandom that hosts exhaustive, in-depth features, word-of-mouth retrospectives, savvy pop culture podcasts, and a full video network on YouTube. The name is an homage to the seminal sportswriter Grantland Rice, pictured above.
Simmons, a fountain of sports opinions (usually involving Boston), decided in 2009 that it was time to put them to practical use. So he hopped on Twitter and lobbied to become the Minnesota Timberwolves’ GM. He even racked-up high-profile endorsements from the likes of Malcolm Gladwell. And though he didn’t get the gig, he still hasn’t let the issue drop.
Want to watch what happened at the 20th Annual Webby Awards? Watch the show on WebbyAwards.com and all the highlights now!
More from Features
-
28th Annual Webby Awards On Your Rubric: Rachael King, CEO of Pod PeopleOctober 12, 2023
We spoke with Rachael King—expert audio storyteller and new Webby Judge—to find out what she has on her rubric for this year’s entries at the 28th Annual Webby Awards.
-
28th Annual Webby Awards Introducing the Newest Judges for The Webby AwardsSeptember 11, 2023
We’re kicking off our 28th Annual season by welcoming industry-shaping leaders to our judging body—including Law Roach, Tobe Nwigwe, Marian Croak, Shigetaka Kurita, and more.
-
27th Annual Webby Awards A Deep Dive into Sustainable TechApril 14, 2023
Whether it’s using technology to transform sustainability or transforming tech itself to be sustainable, the roadmap to full integration is complex. But it’s worth it.