I mean, this could legimatly be considered a documentary
@nrmleigh
Ай бұрын
I didn’t see any
@supitzsammm
18 күн бұрын
someone add chapters to this lol
@EDF1919Ай бұрын
Uploaded 15 minutes ago, nearly 2 hours long, I have to leave for work in 40 minutes.... Yeah I got time.
@LeonardCloud100
Ай бұрын
Bro, I sympathize.
@markeastridge9649
Ай бұрын
Woof. Banging it at 1.25 speed and expecting to pause for looking up stuff.
@bjrnmagnusson5351
Ай бұрын
That's what 2x speed was made for! Listen faster, not longer!
@thelameg6
Ай бұрын
HAHAHAHAHAHAH
@toddjenkins2561
Ай бұрын
Simp
@owen______Ай бұрын
This might be the magnum opus of Baseball's Not Dead. The history of players' rights was covered in detail while being very digestable, and the tone created by the music choices and editing was poignant and emotion filled.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
I hope I have a few more magnum opuses (opi?, opeese?) left in me. Thanks!
@booradley6832
Ай бұрын
Probably opai. Not to be confused with oppai, which means big tits in Japanese culture. If you have those too, please start an account on a different site and let me know.
@GulsCult
Ай бұрын
@@booradley6832I like big oppai and I cannot lie.
@pathutchison7688
Ай бұрын
@@booradley6832”Baseball’s not Dead Only Fans…”
@tyray6180
Ай бұрын
@@booradley6832 I like the Japanese version better \
@DanDanThePhillieАй бұрын
This kind of video is why you’re in the upper echelon on baseball content creators, it was very well researched, well spoken, while also explaining complicated concepts and topics in a way that can be easily understood by all baseball fans. Great job dude 👏
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciated!
@BaseballHistorianАй бұрын
Marvin Miller coming back to life just to like this video
@warlordofbritannia
Ай бұрын
We could use him, ngl
@JohnCarver-ns9yr
27 күн бұрын
He is an amazingly charismatic man.
@warlordofbritanniaАй бұрын
I could listen Marvin Miller talk for hours, the man had such a unique mastery of communication. It’s no wonder how the players listened and learned from him.
@DrAnac-qh5dcАй бұрын
In 1939 fed min wage was 25 CENTS/hr (about $500/year). DiMaggio's $40k/yr was 80 times the minimum wage. Current fed min wage is $7.25/hr (about $15k/year). 80 times the fed min wage in 2024 ($15k/yr) would be $1.2m/yr. Curt Flood's 1964 $90k/yr was 38 times the fed min wage ATT ($1.15/hr); 38 times 2024 min wage would be $570k/yr. Ohtani's $46m/yr is over 3000 times the current fed min wage.
@dghhambo
Ай бұрын
How much money they making off him though.
@chrismac5560
Ай бұрын
People who believe major league athletes, specifically the stars/generational players need to stand with their principles/beliefs and not spend a single penny on that sport because they/you are the true problem and the reason those players make so much money. Ohtani is overpaid you say .... Ohtani will bring an additional 1.5 billion profit (honestly likely significantly more) to the Dodgers through ticket sales, jerseys/merchandise sale, food and beverage sales at the games, tv deals and more. Sports is a business for the owners, if you said to any average Joe on the street "hey I'll give you $1000 but you have to give a fraction of that back or else I won't give you anything and we can continue walking our own ways and you'll leave with exact what you have right now" every single person would take you up on the offer. When it comes to the generation talent whether that be Ohtani, Lebron/Antetokou, McDavid/Matthews, Mahomes, Ronaldo/Messi (I could name more) it is easier to argue that they are significantly underpaid then it is to claim they are overpaid; everyone knows who Lebron James is but practically nobody knows you reading this comment or me typing this comment
@chrismac5560
Ай бұрын
If nearly every person in the world boycotted professional sports for years on end then the owners would have no other choice, since revenue would be nearly evaporated losing them millions it would make ticket prices dirt cheap since nobody will buy them, merchandise and concession prices would barely be more than costs since nobody is at the games, athletes would make what they did 100 years ago since the owners aren't making millions/billions off of them, tv deals would be near non existent since the networks make nothing ..... but as long as the mass majority continue to watch games on tv, spend thousands buying tickets going to games and buying food and drink at the game, buying merchandise and so on the owners will continue to make millions and pay their athletes the millions they rightfully deserve
@JackieDaytona1776
Ай бұрын
@chrismac5560 OP never said he was overpaid, your tirade was pointless.
@chrismac5560
Ай бұрын
@@JackieDaytona1776 while he didn't directly say it his comment heavily implied it as he used numbers to compare earnings of a star from in 1939 and another player in 1964 with the biggest start in professional sports today. The other conclusion the OP heavily implied without direct saying it is that the wealth difference between the richest in the world and the average Joe has drastically increased over the last 100 years but as I indirectly pointed out that is because we the average Joe's continue to spend our hard earned money on what the richest are offering us whether that be sports tickets/merchandise, overpriced coffee from large corporations like Starbucks, personal entertainment like xbox's or alcohol from large brewing companies like Anheuser-Busch and so on. So no my previous comment was not worthless as the OP would have no need to make the original comment if we wasn't trying to point something out by comparing historic figures to current day
@harrisonlinden6552Ай бұрын
Legitimately one of the best baseball videos I’ve ever seen. We spend so much time on stats, technique, and players but this is a really important part of the sport’s history.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@bronxbomerpito7286
28 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
@ThomasBaxterАй бұрын
Really enjoying this! Oddly enough, this weekend I was reminiscing about what an absolute badass Curt Flood was for taking on the reserve clause the way he did. Looking forward to that part of the tale. Great job so far and I really appreciate the time and effort that went into this, especially the credits to the sources for the clips.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you very much!
@markeastridge9649
Ай бұрын
Flood can’t be brought up enough. The Hall’s special recognition in 2015 at HoF weekend was weak. Hope a future HoF has a display with the HoF grudge snubs part of the story.
@YOSSARIAN313Ай бұрын
I studied labor history in college. This is one the best documentaries ive ever seen. This is a perfect example about the effectiveness of labor organizing. The capital owners will do anything to stop it because it works!!! Solidarity forever😀
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@JohnCarver-ns9yr
27 күн бұрын
@YOSSARIAN313 I know this is slightly old but, did it make you sad to see the Amazon workers reject the union? I didnt know much about it other than Amazon running propaganda against it. And if a company fights it, its generally something you want. People are pretty dumb. "I dont want to pay $15 a month for union dues, that's money out of my pocket" is so painful to hear when you realize they're not bothering to listen when people tell them how the union will get them an extra $400 a month to pay for it with.
@MarlinWilliams-ts5ul
27 күн бұрын
Right. Millionaires vs. Billionaires.
@YOSSARIAN313
27 күн бұрын
@@MarlinWilliams-ts5ul they are only millionaires due to the union. Highly paid workers are still workers and i will still have solidarity with them
@YOSSARIAN313
26 күн бұрын
@@JohnCarver-ns9yr yeah its not just warehouse workers or delivery drivers. Their tech staff has no solidarity either. Software engineers need to unionize badly
@jzk0517Ай бұрын
Wake up babe, Baseball’s Not Dead just dropped a movie
@dirkdiggler.
Ай бұрын
KZread needs to flag these cliche comments
@jaredbardell7431
Ай бұрын
Baseball might not be dead, but sadly Babe Ruth is
@realtexxxmancosplay
22 күн бұрын
This "KZreadr" has been awful to me. He's a bully who has called me horrible names.
@ThepotatocrusaderАй бұрын
This video is truly incredible, documentary tier video for free on KZread. I can only imagine the work it took to put this together but you should be extremely proud. One of the best videos I've seen on here
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@EthanNiedorowski
Ай бұрын
Ya it’s ok 👌 ❤ Some might say it’s “pretty good” 👍
@CrashPK77Ай бұрын
I can't even imagine the amount of work that went into a 2+ hour video - a WELL-DONE video. You're a beast, man. Thank you for a CLASSIC.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Took slightly more than 2 hours of work. Thanks!
@logani54Ай бұрын
The best in the game just educates us all on labor strife. Amazing
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Wow, thanks!
@TheManWithThePlan360Ай бұрын
Time to submit this to Sundance, hell yeah I'm only at the intro and I'm fuckin pumped to watch EDIT: Holy shit this is even better than I was initially prepared for. One of the best KZread videos I've watched in YEARS. Keep up the great work, BND. This platform needs creators like you more than ever.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@ritchie90921 күн бұрын
As a father and aspiring author and lifelong baseball fan, the ending of the first sixteen minutes has me in tears every time i watch it. When bartolo Colon retired i became older than every active majorleaguer, though pujols and i were the same age heading into his last season. this made his retirement tributes feel like a changing of an era for me. He and Ichiro were nl/al roy in 2001 so i think of ichiro, pujols and along with colon as being the same baseball age. . Thankfully i can still see guys in commercials portraying the same versions of themselves they portrayed when i was younger. Ken Griffey Jr's smile and manner of speech still reminds me of middle school. I remember thinking his Upper Deck Rookie card was way overvalued for what he had done up until then. He was barely a sprout! How could his rookie card be the most valuable object my 12 year old self had ever held? Inside of a case, in a card shop. Let's just say i'm sentimental and baseball has been so entwined with my whole life, it turns every baseball reference pageof a player who played since 1985 , into a personal memory book if i look hard enough. My baseball sentience first came into being during the royals world series run. I even have memories of the nlcs that year. I remember watching the games with my dad and trying not to be too annoying with my many questions (verbosity is a character trait i developed around that age as well) so that's why ANY attempt to discuss ANYTHING related to baseball turns me into a rambling sentimental fool. 🤎⚾‼❣‼❗❕❕❕❕‼❣
@MarlinWilliams-ts5ulАй бұрын
Now we have a Detroit Tiger shortstop with a $300 million contract batting .143.
@ScottServais-poetАй бұрын
Came for KZread's best intro, stayed for detailed and yet digestible info on important labor rights battles
@paulframe85
Ай бұрын
"right after the intro..."
@itsduracell9851Ай бұрын
Christ on a bike 2 hours??? I'm blessed
@leohmusic8676Ай бұрын
Man that jim bouton story is somethin else, cant believe theres another 1:40 left
@user-rh5ye7pe6dАй бұрын
Wake up babe, Baseball’s not Dead just dropped a soon to be academy award winning movie.
@wtkprolАй бұрын
Couldn’t help but shed a tear when Bouton came out on the field for Old Timer Day. You set that up well with the letter his son wrote. Still watching but I can tell it’s going to be a great video. Well done!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@wtkprol
Ай бұрын
@@BaseballsNotDead 100% bro. Great video. Thanks for putting in the effort for what is essentially free content. You are becoming the Jxmy of baseball content. You both have your own unique style but in the end two of the best sports content creator out there.
@PpP-dr1odАй бұрын
God I love this channel. This is Jon Bois level content, and it deserves Jon Bois level views.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
I'll never hold a candle to him, but thanks.
@darthredraider8128Ай бұрын
This this should an eye opener to what the average worker experiences. How many of you have heard "Don't discuss your pay with your coworkers" at your job? Including the general public being against any pay raise "They don't deserve it". That's a whole other rabbit hole. Great video, keep doing what you're doing ⚾
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@SupadupasebasАй бұрын
This is probably the best KZread Baseball video I ever saw. I like to always bring up when I can that prominent baseball KZreadrs should have a say in Seasonal awards and HoF voting because a lot of you guys just live and breathe baseball and this amazing historical breakdown of the history of player salaries and the MLBPA is S-Tier level evidence proving that point.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@jagaloon14
19 күн бұрын
I agree with the sentiment but they’d never because professional sports don’t like the implication that a fan outside of an organization might have just as good a mind for the sport as anyone, just maybe not the ability to play it. It’s one of those if you think you know better how about you coach or scout and then next thing you know they’re out of a job lol
@Droosie3Ай бұрын
A local lefty named Johnny "Bear tracks" Schmitz played for the Cubs and half a dozen other teams in the 40s and 50s. He had a late breaking pinpoint accurate curveball, and was a top pitcher for a few years until he got injured and lost his control. The only contract year available is 1951 when he was going downhill, and the contract was for $17,000. Adjusted for 2024 (and not considering lower cost of living) thats a little over $200,000. Not too shabby for a ballplayer back then.
@EthanNiedorowski
Ай бұрын
He had a cool nickname that’s a bad example ❤
@WoozlewuzzleableАй бұрын
What Ohtani got stolen from him(15 million), is more than what a whole baseball team made back in the day.
@LPVPisFr33
Ай бұрын
As soon as Alex Rodriguez sign with the Rangers 30 million a year and my Expos salary for the entire team was 33 million, I knew it was all over.
@JonSmith-hk1bq
Ай бұрын
"Back in the day" isn't that long ago. The Marlins had a sub-$15 million roster as late as 2006.
@deebo_____
Ай бұрын
@@JonSmith-hk1bqdamn sub 15 million in 2006 is insane
@JonSmith-hk1bq
Ай бұрын
@@deebo_____ What's even crazier is that they won the World Series just three seasons earlier.
@markeastridge9649
Ай бұрын
Ohtani got a cheap lesson at less than 5% of his current wealth without considering his future guarantees. Ironic tiny compensation getting Ippei’s baseball card collection.
@booradley6832Ай бұрын
15:48 "Welcome home" that one really feels good to watch.
@kensuter1441Ай бұрын
Of all the baseball videos I’ve watched over the years, this might be the best ever.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@Sklz711Ай бұрын
Lapsed fan and until now only occasional channel watcher, but you all but forced a sub with this one. I put this on initially for some background only to become engrossed in such a fantastic video from top to bottom with the music and dedication at the end being the cherry on top. You should be very proud of this beautiful work of art, history, and solidarity.💪
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@ScottServais-poet
Ай бұрын
Did you sub yet?
@SamAronowАй бұрын
BND, this is a masterpiece. I'm so glad I subbed for the movie accuracy rankings and opened up KZread to this. Keep up the great work.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@joshcopeland7883Ай бұрын
amazing, amazing video. i hardly knew any of this beforehand. thank you for all your effort on this
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@richiemartinez8078Ай бұрын
Bud Selig and co. don’t get enough blame, we deflect to steroids, but they are the reason the sport even needed a 98 HR race. Reinsdorf in Chicago also should foot that hatred too.
@amazingkook143Ай бұрын
That's a deep cut about the 1994 CBA being the HRE. I got a chuckle out of that one.
@ZeRo-bx7lpАй бұрын
incredible video, very detailed in its investigative aspect and one that highlights the player's real feelings towards owners during that era.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@brianmcghee3597Ай бұрын
I love it. Thank you again. On my second watch of this. Curt Flood should be in the HOF.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@kevinnovo2197Ай бұрын
Just want to say this was a great documentary. Hope you make more stuff like this in the future.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks, will do!
@doyce100Ай бұрын
Great video man. I love this stuff and you are great at the detail without being overwhelming
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
I had to pre-watch it with some friends that don't care about baseball at all to make sure it was easy to digest. After doing hours upon hours of research, sometimes you can make it too complex or with too much lingo. Appreciate the kind words!
@ramblinbopАй бұрын
Baseball's Not Dead always has quality content but this is some next level stuff. VERY informative, I learned so much. Amazing work!!!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@alwaysmindit9198Ай бұрын
This is the best baseball related video i’ve seen in my life. I don’t even want to know the incredible amount of hours that went into creating this masterpiece. As someone born after this century, this video taught me so many things about the history of baseball - basically everything prior the 2020 season was new to me. This history isn’t coveted much - and covering it in a way that can be super engaging - is incredible. Massive props for such a fantastic video
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@kythian28 күн бұрын
This video is not your typical KZread info snack. Instead, it is a full, two-hour long documentary that deserves wide circulation. While framed as a baseball video (or should I say, movie?), and it is, it is a fascinating and important look into labor negotiations in the world of professional sports. After watching this, I now have a significantly better understanding of just how and why baseball contracts are so ludicrously high. This is a very good documentary, and well worth the time, even for those who have no interest in baseball (specifically) or sports (generally). Astounding piece of media.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@justinllamas1Ай бұрын
before watching this movie I can probably guess the main reason involves the abolition of the reserve clause and the invention of free agency. so I can expect these names to be heavily involved : george earl toolson, curt flood, marvin miller, catfish hunter, andy messersmith, peter seitz, dave mcnally, bowie kuhn. and then eventually we’re gonna hear scott boras’ name. anyway gonna start watching this masterpiece. what have I done in my life to deserve this ? 🙌🏼🙌🏼 this is a gift from the baseball gods. thanks mate.
@guacodileАй бұрын
I really appreciate how willing you are to talk about money and contracts in your videos, and not just on field performance statistics types of things. It’s all incredibly interesting and worth learning about and learning from, that I think content creators avoid too much since it’s not the on field game.
@clintdodson5785Ай бұрын
This is honestly better than some baseball documentaries out there. I truly appreciate your dedication to doing the research on both sides of the table and ensuring the facts are laid out in an easy to comprehend formatting and style.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@sgtleobellaАй бұрын
This is one of the best baseball documentaries I've seen in a long time. I really appreciate you taking the time to produce this.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@YaboifatbackАй бұрын
Just wanna give props for how much time you put in editing this documentary. Not everyone is willing to go the distance for great quality content.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@blahstedd26 күн бұрын
I didn't start really caring about the MLB until this season. This channel has been great in teaching about some history of the game. Much appreciation bro this is quality stuff.
@BaseballsNotDead
26 күн бұрын
Glad to hear it!
@pathutchison7688Ай бұрын
I’m be already commented, but I gotta say it… this video is a work of art. Absolutely amazing. Thanks so much for taking all the time to make this.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you so much 😀
@ThomasBaxterАй бұрын
Second comment after watching: Unions for life. Unions for good. Unions forever. Queue me up Joe Hill, its time to raise to raise a glass for the union cause!
@UnionWireman292Ай бұрын
This is right up my alley in more ways than one. This video is absolutely a top-notch production and a credit to the industry. 👍🏻
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@pathutchison7688Ай бұрын
This is the definitive video on this subject. Incredible. A must watch for any baseball fan It’s really surprising that the owners didn’t collude to keep the market down in the 70’s. I guess that’s also why the lockout didn’t work. Owners weren’t unified.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@pathutchison7688
Ай бұрын
@@BaseballsNotDead thank YOU. Your channel is gonna blow up if you keep this up.
@BrettShadowАй бұрын
Not even remotely joking.... this is a better baseball documentary than anything....ANYTHING.... Ken Burns has ever done.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@shal6178Ай бұрын
This may be one of the best videos about baseball history ever done, I watched it with my little bro and had fun watching and understanding the concepts you talked about in a pretty understandable and easy way
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
@hawtsausetw6447Ай бұрын
I open up KZread to watch something while I eat and this masterpiece pops up 😊
@johnknight9762Ай бұрын
Fantastic work! It made me order Marvin Millers book from a different university to check out more in depth
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
It's a pretty solid book outside maybe the stuff about the late 80s and 90s. Those topics was the first time I went "I don't really agree with him here." Thanks!
@Mike4471517 күн бұрын
This video is superlative. I really enjoy your videos but the research and footage in this one are next-level
@BaseballsNotDead
17 күн бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@mrsinister894324 күн бұрын
Excellent video and one of the best I've ever watched about baseball and in general. Guys like Marvin Miller and Curtis Flood are heroes and badass men. Never knew exactly how greedy the owners can be and it's eye opening. 1990-94 baseball for me was the greatest time ever. Being a kid and watching baseball tonight every night. As I get older the more I appreciate the beauty and sounds of baseball. America's pastime.
@EthanNiedorowskiАй бұрын
11 mins left, shit ! rewind , I’m not ready to end this. I’m dumb enough to forget 96 % of what I’ve seen anyway probably for the best.
@JoeyArmstrong280028 күн бұрын
My new favorite sports channel.This guy is brilliant.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@SomeGuyNamedMack28 күн бұрын
As a Labour Studies graduate, this tickles the right part of my brain. Thank you so much!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@LuxRoyaleАй бұрын
Your channel is by far and away the best baseball channel on KZread I mean it!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@JWickyJr13Ай бұрын
I could watch a five hour video of stuff like this. I am a transaction/front office/draft/free agent/trades whatever fiend. Also, the progression of Tony Clark's facial hair in this is incredible to watch.
@jgray2718Ай бұрын
Every time I watch a BND video I'm incredibly impressed with the intro. It's so good.
@CSDonohue11Ай бұрын
Wow…. I hear the Football Guys voice and then I hear 1 of Thee Best Videos on YT & it’s about BASEBALL Because it’s NOT DEAD Well Done 👏👏 Great Doc
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@yommishАй бұрын
Oh hell yeah Jim Bouton and Curt Flood. Great men. Can’t wait to watch this in its entirety.
@thrasher829Ай бұрын
This is so well researched and informative while still being very entertaining. Great video man!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@xxSLAV33xxАй бұрын
If there is one thing George Steinbrenner was good at it was holding a grudge.
@WhatHappenedtoBaseballАй бұрын
This video is a masterpiece
@gdn86Ай бұрын
I had to spend an entire day watching this, but it was well worth it. I learned so much. Thank you for making this.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@paulframe85Ай бұрын
A Baseball's Not Dead day is always a great day!
@justinllamas1Ай бұрын
just finished watching this masterpiece of a film. please invite me to ur oscar ceremony.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Invite in the mail!
@booradley6832Ай бұрын
Also I think you did slightly skip over how big both Angelos and Ripken were to the 1994 strike. Angelos made it so the owners never had a united front at all, effectively dooming any actions they wanted to take in retaliation. Ripken was the sword of Damocles hanging over them with his record. Not to mention how, once it ended and everyone was pissed, it was incredible how drastically the mood around baseball changed in September when the chase was nearing the end. And he really was a great face for baseball to use for its "love of the game" image they wanted after the strike. Obviously you couldnt talk about everything so I dont fault you at all just adding an addendum for anyone who wants to look into it. As much as Angelos was (inappropriately) disliked in Baltimore, the man stuck to his principles when it mattered most. Among baseball owners, the only single other instance I can think of someone taking the stance they knew was the right thing to do despite being the lone man in his corner is Branch Rickey. They arent of the same magnitude of course but still, deserves some commendation.
@post-leftludditeАй бұрын
Curt Flood is a hero....it takes a lot of courage to stand on your principles even when it comes at great cost
@ryanlinder4584Ай бұрын
Awesome video. Easy to follow and was captivating. Learned a lot i never knew. Keep up the awesome work, looking forward to seeing what’s next!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@schlootleАй бұрын
This was a fantastic and interesting watch. Thank you for taking the time to make this, it is wonderfully done.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@birdchatterbaseball202423 күн бұрын
Fantastic video. Your channel is one to strive for. Really like your work.
@neddy4988Ай бұрын
Incredible video... Can't imagine now long this would have taken to do from research to editing... Keep up the great work!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@davetron3030Ай бұрын
Without a doubt your finest work yet 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Appreciate that
@dukedubАй бұрын
Excellent work putting this into context for us. Bravo 🎉
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@timsweeney6209Ай бұрын
Well this is just the best. Baseball's Not Dead is Mozart and i am Salieri.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Weird... I just saw this same line refenced on the news recently.
@timsweeney6209
Ай бұрын
@@BaseballsNotDead I didn't even know Huey Lewis was on tour
@andrewmartinfarrell8167Ай бұрын
I can't believe you can still get epic content like this, for free, on KZread. You should be getting paid. Great video. Thank you.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@metsfan1324Ай бұрын
This was such an amazing video. Thank you for it. Amazing work.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@UWHuskies94Ай бұрын
What a banger of a video (documentary?) loved hearing the major moments of how we got to baseball today in terms of players and their compensation. Very informative!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks you!
@virahpayamАй бұрын
Such a great video!! It doesn't matter what industry or time period you're in; if you're a worker, you need collective bargaining power. Without that, it doesn't matter how much you're making, you're still getting 🔩'd out of what you're worth. ✊🏻✊🏼✊🏽✊🏾✊🏿
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@jgray2718Ай бұрын
This is peak BND. The best of the best on an already great channel.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@tommypierce7802Ай бұрын
Keep up the good work man. You make high quality, unique as hell content
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks, will do!
@mickiecassady6842Ай бұрын
Incredible documentary
@NilphinhoАй бұрын
Thank you Mr. Baseball's Not Dead. I thoroughly enjoy and appreciate the content.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
No, thank you!
@JimmyDrumTech15 күн бұрын
This was such a good watch!!! Well done!!! Just finished and had to go to my phone to comment my appreciation lolol
@LadyJay114Ай бұрын
Fantastic research and presentation. This is one of the best videos about the business of baseball. Well done!!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Much appreciated!
@Checkmate34851Ай бұрын
Excellent documentary!! Thanks for educating me!!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Any time!
@jonathanrabeno6349Ай бұрын
Great video! Super informative. Thanks for all the hard work put into this!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@saulspeaks2557Ай бұрын
You're simply the best at this, dude.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@TheTEN24Ай бұрын
Just over an hour in and this is an incredible video. Super informative and quite honestly I never read up on how free agency exactly came to be. As a baseball diehard this is awesome to learn about thanks my man.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@mvteubesАй бұрын
This was an awesome piece of work.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@ChristopherBowenSuperbusАй бұрын
This is... an exceptional video. Unbelievably informative, well researched, well edited, and educational in an era when union power has taken significant hits.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@its-dg2987Ай бұрын
Always wanted an in depth explanation on Curt Floods impact. I always had an idea that he helped with free agency but never saw the actual timeline. What a guy.
@mzxeternalАй бұрын
Wow what a phenomenal piece. This is absolutely exceptional. Great work!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you! Cheers!
@zachinn5988Ай бұрын
Amazing video, I loved every minute of it. Please keep up the amazing work!! 🤙
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Will do! Thanks!
@jmwburnerАй бұрын
Marvin Miller’s interviews in Ken Burns’ doc are also very good.
Пікірлер: 696
Bro dropped a fucking movie 🔥🔥🔥
@AndreIguodalaFan55
Ай бұрын
I mean, this could legimatly be considered a documentary
@nrmleigh
Ай бұрын
I didn’t see any
@supitzsammm
18 күн бұрын
someone add chapters to this lol
Uploaded 15 minutes ago, nearly 2 hours long, I have to leave for work in 40 minutes.... Yeah I got time.
@LeonardCloud100
Ай бұрын
Bro, I sympathize.
@markeastridge9649
Ай бұрын
Woof. Banging it at 1.25 speed and expecting to pause for looking up stuff.
@bjrnmagnusson5351
Ай бұрын
That's what 2x speed was made for! Listen faster, not longer!
@thelameg6
Ай бұрын
HAHAHAHAHAHAH
@toddjenkins2561
Ай бұрын
Simp
This might be the magnum opus of Baseball's Not Dead. The history of players' rights was covered in detail while being very digestable, and the tone created by the music choices and editing was poignant and emotion filled.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
I hope I have a few more magnum opuses (opi?, opeese?) left in me. Thanks!
@booradley6832
Ай бұрын
Probably opai. Not to be confused with oppai, which means big tits in Japanese culture. If you have those too, please start an account on a different site and let me know.
@GulsCult
Ай бұрын
@@booradley6832I like big oppai and I cannot lie.
@pathutchison7688
Ай бұрын
@@booradley6832”Baseball’s not Dead Only Fans…”
@tyray6180
Ай бұрын
@@booradley6832 I like the Japanese version better \
This kind of video is why you’re in the upper echelon on baseball content creators, it was very well researched, well spoken, while also explaining complicated concepts and topics in a way that can be easily understood by all baseball fans. Great job dude 👏
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciated!
Marvin Miller coming back to life just to like this video
@warlordofbritannia
Ай бұрын
We could use him, ngl
@JohnCarver-ns9yr
27 күн бұрын
He is an amazingly charismatic man.
I could listen Marvin Miller talk for hours, the man had such a unique mastery of communication. It’s no wonder how the players listened and learned from him.
In 1939 fed min wage was 25 CENTS/hr (about $500/year). DiMaggio's $40k/yr was 80 times the minimum wage. Current fed min wage is $7.25/hr (about $15k/year). 80 times the fed min wage in 2024 ($15k/yr) would be $1.2m/yr. Curt Flood's 1964 $90k/yr was 38 times the fed min wage ATT ($1.15/hr); 38 times 2024 min wage would be $570k/yr. Ohtani's $46m/yr is over 3000 times the current fed min wage.
@dghhambo
Ай бұрын
How much money they making off him though.
@chrismac5560
Ай бұрын
People who believe major league athletes, specifically the stars/generational players need to stand with their principles/beliefs and not spend a single penny on that sport because they/you are the true problem and the reason those players make so much money. Ohtani is overpaid you say .... Ohtani will bring an additional 1.5 billion profit (honestly likely significantly more) to the Dodgers through ticket sales, jerseys/merchandise sale, food and beverage sales at the games, tv deals and more. Sports is a business for the owners, if you said to any average Joe on the street "hey I'll give you $1000 but you have to give a fraction of that back or else I won't give you anything and we can continue walking our own ways and you'll leave with exact what you have right now" every single person would take you up on the offer. When it comes to the generation talent whether that be Ohtani, Lebron/Antetokou, McDavid/Matthews, Mahomes, Ronaldo/Messi (I could name more) it is easier to argue that they are significantly underpaid then it is to claim they are overpaid; everyone knows who Lebron James is but practically nobody knows you reading this comment or me typing this comment
@chrismac5560
Ай бұрын
If nearly every person in the world boycotted professional sports for years on end then the owners would have no other choice, since revenue would be nearly evaporated losing them millions it would make ticket prices dirt cheap since nobody will buy them, merchandise and concession prices would barely be more than costs since nobody is at the games, athletes would make what they did 100 years ago since the owners aren't making millions/billions off of them, tv deals would be near non existent since the networks make nothing ..... but as long as the mass majority continue to watch games on tv, spend thousands buying tickets going to games and buying food and drink at the game, buying merchandise and so on the owners will continue to make millions and pay their athletes the millions they rightfully deserve
@JackieDaytona1776
Ай бұрын
@chrismac5560 OP never said he was overpaid, your tirade was pointless.
@chrismac5560
Ай бұрын
@@JackieDaytona1776 while he didn't directly say it his comment heavily implied it as he used numbers to compare earnings of a star from in 1939 and another player in 1964 with the biggest start in professional sports today. The other conclusion the OP heavily implied without direct saying it is that the wealth difference between the richest in the world and the average Joe has drastically increased over the last 100 years but as I indirectly pointed out that is because we the average Joe's continue to spend our hard earned money on what the richest are offering us whether that be sports tickets/merchandise, overpriced coffee from large corporations like Starbucks, personal entertainment like xbox's or alcohol from large brewing companies like Anheuser-Busch and so on. So no my previous comment was not worthless as the OP would have no need to make the original comment if we wasn't trying to point something out by comparing historic figures to current day
Legitimately one of the best baseball videos I’ve ever seen. We spend so much time on stats, technique, and players but this is a really important part of the sport’s history.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@bronxbomerpito7286
28 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
Really enjoying this! Oddly enough, this weekend I was reminiscing about what an absolute badass Curt Flood was for taking on the reserve clause the way he did. Looking forward to that part of the tale. Great job so far and I really appreciate the time and effort that went into this, especially the credits to the sources for the clips.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you very much!
@markeastridge9649
Ай бұрын
Flood can’t be brought up enough. The Hall’s special recognition in 2015 at HoF weekend was weak. Hope a future HoF has a display with the HoF grudge snubs part of the story.
I studied labor history in college. This is one the best documentaries ive ever seen. This is a perfect example about the effectiveness of labor organizing. The capital owners will do anything to stop it because it works!!! Solidarity forever😀
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@JohnCarver-ns9yr
27 күн бұрын
@YOSSARIAN313 I know this is slightly old but, did it make you sad to see the Amazon workers reject the union? I didnt know much about it other than Amazon running propaganda against it. And if a company fights it, its generally something you want. People are pretty dumb. "I dont want to pay $15 a month for union dues, that's money out of my pocket" is so painful to hear when you realize they're not bothering to listen when people tell them how the union will get them an extra $400 a month to pay for it with.
@MarlinWilliams-ts5ul
27 күн бұрын
Right. Millionaires vs. Billionaires.
@YOSSARIAN313
27 күн бұрын
@@MarlinWilliams-ts5ul they are only millionaires due to the union. Highly paid workers are still workers and i will still have solidarity with them
@YOSSARIAN313
26 күн бұрын
@@JohnCarver-ns9yr yeah its not just warehouse workers or delivery drivers. Their tech staff has no solidarity either. Software engineers need to unionize badly
Wake up babe, Baseball’s Not Dead just dropped a movie
@dirkdiggler.
Ай бұрын
KZread needs to flag these cliche comments
@jaredbardell7431
Ай бұрын
Baseball might not be dead, but sadly Babe Ruth is
@realtexxxmancosplay
22 күн бұрын
This "KZreadr" has been awful to me. He's a bully who has called me horrible names.
This video is truly incredible, documentary tier video for free on KZread. I can only imagine the work it took to put this together but you should be extremely proud. One of the best videos I've seen on here
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@EthanNiedorowski
Ай бұрын
Ya it’s ok 👌 ❤ Some might say it’s “pretty good” 👍
I can't even imagine the amount of work that went into a 2+ hour video - a WELL-DONE video. You're a beast, man. Thank you for a CLASSIC.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Took slightly more than 2 hours of work. Thanks!
The best in the game just educates us all on labor strife. Amazing
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Wow, thanks!
Time to submit this to Sundance, hell yeah I'm only at the intro and I'm fuckin pumped to watch EDIT: Holy shit this is even better than I was initially prepared for. One of the best KZread videos I've watched in YEARS. Keep up the great work, BND. This platform needs creators like you more than ever.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
As a father and aspiring author and lifelong baseball fan, the ending of the first sixteen minutes has me in tears every time i watch it. When bartolo Colon retired i became older than every active majorleaguer, though pujols and i were the same age heading into his last season. this made his retirement tributes feel like a changing of an era for me. He and Ichiro were nl/al roy in 2001 so i think of ichiro, pujols and along with colon as being the same baseball age. . Thankfully i can still see guys in commercials portraying the same versions of themselves they portrayed when i was younger. Ken Griffey Jr's smile and manner of speech still reminds me of middle school. I remember thinking his Upper Deck Rookie card was way overvalued for what he had done up until then. He was barely a sprout! How could his rookie card be the most valuable object my 12 year old self had ever held? Inside of a case, in a card shop. Let's just say i'm sentimental and baseball has been so entwined with my whole life, it turns every baseball reference pageof a player who played since 1985 , into a personal memory book if i look hard enough. My baseball sentience first came into being during the royals world series run. I even have memories of the nlcs that year. I remember watching the games with my dad and trying not to be too annoying with my many questions (verbosity is a character trait i developed around that age as well) so that's why ANY attempt to discuss ANYTHING related to baseball turns me into a rambling sentimental fool. 🤎⚾‼❣‼❗❕❕❕❕‼❣
Now we have a Detroit Tiger shortstop with a $300 million contract batting .143.
Came for KZread's best intro, stayed for detailed and yet digestible info on important labor rights battles
@paulframe85
Ай бұрын
"right after the intro..."
Christ on a bike 2 hours??? I'm blessed
Man that jim bouton story is somethin else, cant believe theres another 1:40 left
Wake up babe, Baseball’s not Dead just dropped a soon to be academy award winning movie.
Couldn’t help but shed a tear when Bouton came out on the field for Old Timer Day. You set that up well with the letter his son wrote. Still watching but I can tell it’s going to be a great video. Well done!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@wtkprol
Ай бұрын
@@BaseballsNotDead 100% bro. Great video. Thanks for putting in the effort for what is essentially free content. You are becoming the Jxmy of baseball content. You both have your own unique style but in the end two of the best sports content creator out there.
God I love this channel. This is Jon Bois level content, and it deserves Jon Bois level views.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
I'll never hold a candle to him, but thanks.
This this should an eye opener to what the average worker experiences. How many of you have heard "Don't discuss your pay with your coworkers" at your job? Including the general public being against any pay raise "They don't deserve it". That's a whole other rabbit hole. Great video, keep doing what you're doing ⚾
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
This is probably the best KZread Baseball video I ever saw. I like to always bring up when I can that prominent baseball KZreadrs should have a say in Seasonal awards and HoF voting because a lot of you guys just live and breathe baseball and this amazing historical breakdown of the history of player salaries and the MLBPA is S-Tier level evidence proving that point.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@jagaloon14
19 күн бұрын
I agree with the sentiment but they’d never because professional sports don’t like the implication that a fan outside of an organization might have just as good a mind for the sport as anyone, just maybe not the ability to play it. It’s one of those if you think you know better how about you coach or scout and then next thing you know they’re out of a job lol
A local lefty named Johnny "Bear tracks" Schmitz played for the Cubs and half a dozen other teams in the 40s and 50s. He had a late breaking pinpoint accurate curveball, and was a top pitcher for a few years until he got injured and lost his control. The only contract year available is 1951 when he was going downhill, and the contract was for $17,000. Adjusted for 2024 (and not considering lower cost of living) thats a little over $200,000. Not too shabby for a ballplayer back then.
@EthanNiedorowski
Ай бұрын
He had a cool nickname that’s a bad example ❤
What Ohtani got stolen from him(15 million), is more than what a whole baseball team made back in the day.
@LPVPisFr33
Ай бұрын
As soon as Alex Rodriguez sign with the Rangers 30 million a year and my Expos salary for the entire team was 33 million, I knew it was all over.
@JonSmith-hk1bq
Ай бұрын
"Back in the day" isn't that long ago. The Marlins had a sub-$15 million roster as late as 2006.
@deebo_____
Ай бұрын
@@JonSmith-hk1bqdamn sub 15 million in 2006 is insane
@JonSmith-hk1bq
Ай бұрын
@@deebo_____ What's even crazier is that they won the World Series just three seasons earlier.
@markeastridge9649
Ай бұрын
Ohtani got a cheap lesson at less than 5% of his current wealth without considering his future guarantees. Ironic tiny compensation getting Ippei’s baseball card collection.
15:48 "Welcome home" that one really feels good to watch.
Of all the baseball videos I’ve watched over the years, this might be the best ever.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
Lapsed fan and until now only occasional channel watcher, but you all but forced a sub with this one. I put this on initially for some background only to become engrossed in such a fantastic video from top to bottom with the music and dedication at the end being the cherry on top. You should be very proud of this beautiful work of art, history, and solidarity.💪
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
@ScottServais-poet
Ай бұрын
Did you sub yet?
BND, this is a masterpiece. I'm so glad I subbed for the movie accuracy rankings and opened up KZread to this. Keep up the great work.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
amazing, amazing video. i hardly knew any of this beforehand. thank you for all your effort on this
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
Bud Selig and co. don’t get enough blame, we deflect to steroids, but they are the reason the sport even needed a 98 HR race. Reinsdorf in Chicago also should foot that hatred too.
That's a deep cut about the 1994 CBA being the HRE. I got a chuckle out of that one.
incredible video, very detailed in its investigative aspect and one that highlights the player's real feelings towards owners during that era.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
I love it. Thank you again. On my second watch of this. Curt Flood should be in the HOF.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
Just want to say this was a great documentary. Hope you make more stuff like this in the future.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks, will do!
Great video man. I love this stuff and you are great at the detail without being overwhelming
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
I had to pre-watch it with some friends that don't care about baseball at all to make sure it was easy to digest. After doing hours upon hours of research, sometimes you can make it too complex or with too much lingo. Appreciate the kind words!
Baseball's Not Dead always has quality content but this is some next level stuff. VERY informative, I learned so much. Amazing work!!!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
This is the best baseball related video i’ve seen in my life. I don’t even want to know the incredible amount of hours that went into creating this masterpiece. As someone born after this century, this video taught me so many things about the history of baseball - basically everything prior the 2020 season was new to me. This history isn’t coveted much - and covering it in a way that can be super engaging - is incredible. Massive props for such a fantastic video
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
This video is not your typical KZread info snack. Instead, it is a full, two-hour long documentary that deserves wide circulation. While framed as a baseball video (or should I say, movie?), and it is, it is a fascinating and important look into labor negotiations in the world of professional sports. After watching this, I now have a significantly better understanding of just how and why baseball contracts are so ludicrously high. This is a very good documentary, and well worth the time, even for those who have no interest in baseball (specifically) or sports (generally). Astounding piece of media.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
before watching this movie I can probably guess the main reason involves the abolition of the reserve clause and the invention of free agency. so I can expect these names to be heavily involved : george earl toolson, curt flood, marvin miller, catfish hunter, andy messersmith, peter seitz, dave mcnally, bowie kuhn. and then eventually we’re gonna hear scott boras’ name. anyway gonna start watching this masterpiece. what have I done in my life to deserve this ? 🙌🏼🙌🏼 this is a gift from the baseball gods. thanks mate.
I really appreciate how willing you are to talk about money and contracts in your videos, and not just on field performance statistics types of things. It’s all incredibly interesting and worth learning about and learning from, that I think content creators avoid too much since it’s not the on field game.
This is honestly better than some baseball documentaries out there. I truly appreciate your dedication to doing the research on both sides of the table and ensuring the facts are laid out in an easy to comprehend formatting and style.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
This is one of the best baseball documentaries I've seen in a long time. I really appreciate you taking the time to produce this.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
Just wanna give props for how much time you put in editing this documentary. Not everyone is willing to go the distance for great quality content.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
I didn't start really caring about the MLB until this season. This channel has been great in teaching about some history of the game. Much appreciation bro this is quality stuff.
@BaseballsNotDead
26 күн бұрын
Glad to hear it!
I’m be already commented, but I gotta say it… this video is a work of art. Absolutely amazing. Thanks so much for taking all the time to make this.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you so much 😀
Second comment after watching: Unions for life. Unions for good. Unions forever. Queue me up Joe Hill, its time to raise to raise a glass for the union cause!
This is right up my alley in more ways than one. This video is absolutely a top-notch production and a credit to the industry. 👍🏻
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
This is the definitive video on this subject. Incredible. A must watch for any baseball fan It’s really surprising that the owners didn’t collude to keep the market down in the 70’s. I guess that’s also why the lockout didn’t work. Owners weren’t unified.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@pathutchison7688
Ай бұрын
@@BaseballsNotDead thank YOU. Your channel is gonna blow up if you keep this up.
Not even remotely joking.... this is a better baseball documentary than anything....ANYTHING.... Ken Burns has ever done.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
This may be one of the best videos about baseball history ever done, I watched it with my little bro and had fun watching and understanding the concepts you talked about in a pretty understandable and easy way
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
I open up KZread to watch something while I eat and this masterpiece pops up 😊
Fantastic work! It made me order Marvin Millers book from a different university to check out more in depth
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
It's a pretty solid book outside maybe the stuff about the late 80s and 90s. Those topics was the first time I went "I don't really agree with him here." Thanks!
This video is superlative. I really enjoy your videos but the research and footage in this one are next-level
@BaseballsNotDead
17 күн бұрын
Wow, thank you!
Excellent video and one of the best I've ever watched about baseball and in general. Guys like Marvin Miller and Curtis Flood are heroes and badass men. Never knew exactly how greedy the owners can be and it's eye opening. 1990-94 baseball for me was the greatest time ever. Being a kid and watching baseball tonight every night. As I get older the more I appreciate the beauty and sounds of baseball. America's pastime.
11 mins left, shit ! rewind , I’m not ready to end this. I’m dumb enough to forget 96 % of what I’ve seen anyway probably for the best.
My new favorite sports channel.This guy is brilliant.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
As a Labour Studies graduate, this tickles the right part of my brain. Thank you so much!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
Your channel is by far and away the best baseball channel on KZread I mean it!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
I could watch a five hour video of stuff like this. I am a transaction/front office/draft/free agent/trades whatever fiend. Also, the progression of Tony Clark's facial hair in this is incredible to watch.
Every time I watch a BND video I'm incredibly impressed with the intro. It's so good.
Wow…. I hear the Football Guys voice and then I hear 1 of Thee Best Videos on YT & it’s about BASEBALL Because it’s NOT DEAD Well Done 👏👏 Great Doc
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Appreciate it!
Oh hell yeah Jim Bouton and Curt Flood. Great men. Can’t wait to watch this in its entirety.
This is so well researched and informative while still being very entertaining. Great video man!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
If there is one thing George Steinbrenner was good at it was holding a grudge.
This video is a masterpiece
I had to spend an entire day watching this, but it was well worth it. I learned so much. Thank you for making this.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
A Baseball's Not Dead day is always a great day!
just finished watching this masterpiece of a film. please invite me to ur oscar ceremony.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Invite in the mail!
Also I think you did slightly skip over how big both Angelos and Ripken were to the 1994 strike. Angelos made it so the owners never had a united front at all, effectively dooming any actions they wanted to take in retaliation. Ripken was the sword of Damocles hanging over them with his record. Not to mention how, once it ended and everyone was pissed, it was incredible how drastically the mood around baseball changed in September when the chase was nearing the end. And he really was a great face for baseball to use for its "love of the game" image they wanted after the strike. Obviously you couldnt talk about everything so I dont fault you at all just adding an addendum for anyone who wants to look into it. As much as Angelos was (inappropriately) disliked in Baltimore, the man stuck to his principles when it mattered most. Among baseball owners, the only single other instance I can think of someone taking the stance they knew was the right thing to do despite being the lone man in his corner is Branch Rickey. They arent of the same magnitude of course but still, deserves some commendation.
Curt Flood is a hero....it takes a lot of courage to stand on your principles even when it comes at great cost
Awesome video. Easy to follow and was captivating. Learned a lot i never knew. Keep up the awesome work, looking forward to seeing what’s next!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
This was a fantastic and interesting watch. Thank you for taking the time to make this, it is wonderfully done.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
My pleasure!
Fantastic video. Your channel is one to strive for. Really like your work.
Incredible video... Can't imagine now long this would have taken to do from research to editing... Keep up the great work!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
Without a doubt your finest work yet 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Appreciate that
Excellent work putting this into context for us. Bravo 🎉
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
Well this is just the best. Baseball's Not Dead is Mozart and i am Salieri.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Weird... I just saw this same line refenced on the news recently.
@timsweeney6209
Ай бұрын
@@BaseballsNotDead I didn't even know Huey Lewis was on tour
I can't believe you can still get epic content like this, for free, on KZread. You should be getting paid. Great video. Thank you.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching!
This was such an amazing video. Thank you for it. Amazing work.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
What a banger of a video (documentary?) loved hearing the major moments of how we got to baseball today in terms of players and their compensation. Very informative!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks you!
Such a great video!! It doesn't matter what industry or time period you're in; if you're a worker, you need collective bargaining power. Without that, it doesn't matter how much you're making, you're still getting 🔩'd out of what you're worth. ✊🏻✊🏼✊🏽✊🏾✊🏿
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thank you!
This is peak BND. The best of the best on an already great channel.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
Keep up the good work man. You make high quality, unique as hell content
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks, will do!
Incredible documentary
Thank you Mr. Baseball's Not Dead. I thoroughly enjoy and appreciate the content.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
No, thank you!
This was such a good watch!!! Well done!!! Just finished and had to go to my phone to comment my appreciation lolol
Fantastic research and presentation. This is one of the best videos about the business of baseball. Well done!!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Much appreciated!
Excellent documentary!! Thanks for educating me!!
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Any time!
Great video! Super informative. Thanks for all the hard work put into this!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
You're simply the best at this, dude.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Thanks!
Just over an hour in and this is an incredible video. Super informative and quite honestly I never read up on how free agency exactly came to be. As a baseball diehard this is awesome to learn about thanks my man.
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
This was an awesome piece of work.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
This is... an exceptional video. Unbelievably informative, well researched, well edited, and educational in an era when union power has taken significant hits.
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you!
Always wanted an in depth explanation on Curt Floods impact. I always had an idea that he helped with free agency but never saw the actual timeline. What a guy.
Wow what a phenomenal piece. This is absolutely exceptional. Great work!
@BaseballsNotDead
27 күн бұрын
Thank you! Cheers!
Amazing video, I loved every minute of it. Please keep up the amazing work!! 🤙
@BaseballsNotDead
Ай бұрын
Will do! Thanks!
Marvin Miller’s interviews in Ken Burns’ doc are also very good.