Americans Want Sports Documentaries on Muhammad Ali, Babe Ruth

July 2024 · 2 minute read

ESPN’s decision to fast-track “The Last Dance,” its 10-part series on Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls, proved to be one of the shrewdest programming decisions of the pandemic, resulting in a record average live audience of 5.6 million viewers per episode across five Sunday nights in April and May. But its successor in the time slot, a two-part installment in its “30 for 30” series chronicling the controversial career of cyclist Lance Armstrong, averaged 824,000 over the past two Sunday evenings, just a smidge higher than the 811,000 viewers a similar two-part piece on former NFL quarterback Michael Vick drew on Thursday nights prior to the pandemic.

As ESPN moves ahead with its Sunday night films and other sports networks fill their lineups with documentary content, the results of a recent Morning Consult/The Hollywood Reporter poll show that boxer Muhammad Ali, who died in 2016, is the athlete that U.S. adults are most interested seeing profiled in a new sports documentary series or film. Forty-nine percent of respondents expressed interest in Ali as a documentary subject, including 24 percent who said they would be “very interested.”

Ali has previously been the subject of several documentary films. “When We Were Kings,” which focused on his famous “Rumble in the Jungle” against George Foreman in 1974, won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1996. More recently, ESPN chronicled Ali’s fourth and final bout against Larry Holmes as part of its “30 for 30” series in 2009 with “Muhammad and Larry." Last year, HBO aired “What's My Name: Muhammad Ali,” a two-part film that delved into Ali’s social activism, a topic that’s become more relevant amid Black Lives Matter demonstrations over the killing of George Floyd.

Baseball Hall of Famer Babe Ruth was the next most popular choice among the 21 current and former athletes included in the survey, with 48 percent of adults exhibiting interest in a film or series based on his life and career. Ruth, who died in 1948, much longer ago than any other athlete included in the survey, was most recently featured in a 2015 documentary from MLB’s production arm called “American Hercules: Babe Ruth.” 

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