My Sport Media consumption diet includes mostly Instagram, Twitter, and Youtube. Instagram provides me with short clips of highlights from a game the night before or even a game happening that day. To me Instagram is perfect for seeing the most important plays of what’s happening across professional sports. The comments that appear under these posts have to be some of the  funniest comments on the internet. Twitter allows me to view sports media in a super condensed and concise way. Most posts are no longer than a couple sentences and can be a good way to see current news in and around professional sports leagues. Youtube provides full game highlights, press conferences, pre-game interviews, post-game interviews and pretty much anything I want to view. Five years ago my sport media consumption diet primarily came from tv. I would wake up and try to get ready as quickly as possible in order to go downstairs and flip the channels between NBA TV and the NFL network as many times as I could before my mom was ready to take me to school.  The only other way I would consume sports media was the radio. Different radio stations would have a segment where they would talk briefly about either the local team or a popular game or sometimes both. If I was not consuming sport media on tv or on the radio I was not consuming it.  My prediction for what sport media is going to become in five years is that most of the viewing and interacting with sports will be housed on streaming services and social media. We are already getting a taste of that today as most streaming services are offering a sports package.  I could wave a magic wand and make one change to the sports communication landscape. It would be to cut out negative and distasteful comments and  posts of that nature.  Social media is plagued with terrible people and even worse remarks. If those comments and negative interactions were removedI believe social media would be a far better experience.