Grantland is dead. Here are 11 of the best stories it ever published.
Today, ESPN announced it was shutting down Grantland, the sports and pop culture website launched by Bill Simmons in 2011. In its short but brilliant life, the site employed some of the most talented writers on the internet. Here are 11 of the best pieces Grantland published over the hell of a run they had.
The Valley Plays Itself
By: Molly Lambert
The sports part of Grantland really dominated the “sports and pop culture” formula that the site strived to perfect. But sometimes, such as during Paul Thomas Anderson week, the “pop” side flexed its muscles. That was clearest in Molly Lambert’s feature that doubles as a love letter to the way the director treats San Fernando Valley as a character and travelogue of the real-world locations that were used in movies like Boogie Nights and Magnolia.
A Fighter Abroad
By: Brian Phillips
This story, about a freed slave who traveled to England in 1810 to become a boxer, is just plain cinematic. It’s been years since this was published—someone make this into a movie, already.
Mr. DNA: How Hollywood Tinkers With Evolution to Grow New Spielbergs in a Lab
By: Alex Pappademas
Pappademas was probably Grantland’s secret weapon. This feature appeared under the banner of the Hollywood Prospectus vertical/sub-blog on the site, but it’s more than a blog post. It’s kind of messed up how Hollywood gives white indie directors tentpole films with little experience, right? This story lays out perfectly how and why it keeps happening.
‘The Bragging Rights’ series
By: Staff
These were all great, but I want to point out Katie Baker‘s contributions. She’s a great writer, versatile enough to cover the Olympics, report a true crime story, annotate the New York Times‘ Vows section, and still do a regular mailbag column. Something about her weighing the merits of the cast and crew of Dazed and Confused just works.