
See that box on the right at the top of the stairs? That’s ESPN’s set in Mandela Square. On the left is Sony’s huge dome where the latest in 3D technology is on display.
Mandela Square is at the center of a busy shopping district. Celebrities and mobs of fans pass through on a regular basis. Restaurants line the plaza. High-end stores and hotels fill the surrounding buildings.
The ESPN operation is busiest in the evening and overnight past 2am. This is to accommodate time zones in North America. The night begins at 5pm local time with a live edition of SportCenter Latin South. Then a few shows and segments are taped for Latin North and ESPN Deportes. At 9pm Los Capitanes is live followed by SportsCenter Mexico and Jorge Ramos y Su Banda live. Then comes shows in English. Sports Center Pacific Rim tapes some segments along with Press Pass, a soccer show for the UK, South Africa and Australia ESPN networks. Last, at 1pm, Cronometro is broadcast live. That’s the Spanish version of popular PTI on ESPN domestic. Not a bad day (night) of television if you ask me.
The control room during ESPN Deportes’ live broadcast of the radio show Jorge Ramos y Su Banda
The production office is full of producers, talent and operations personnel. There is someone in charge of all the logistics, making sure everyone gets a ride home at the end of the day for example. Next door is a tiny ESPN Deportes Radio studio. Outside the office is the TV truck where all the shows are mixed. It’s in a large van and pretty tight but gets the job done. It’s in standard definition to accommodate the receiving networks. Everything is sent by fiber (there’s a satellite backup) to the IBC across town. From there the video is sent through fiber again all the way to the United States.





