Over the last five years, my sports media consumption diet has changed vastly from what it used to be. Before I used to get my sports content through ESPN and Fox Sports. ESPN does its SportsCenter show with highlights and trades that happen in the world of sports. Once I got rid of cable in 2017 it was harder to stay updated with roster moves via ESPN since I couldn’t get their channel anymore. I decided to go on YouTube and Twitter to find out if there was anything convenient I could use to update myself on my sports teams and around the leagues. That’s when I found people like Adam Schefter and Adrian Wojnarowski tweeting the news as it happened and I never looked back. With SportsCenter, I used to have to wait till the morning to find out what trades, releases, and coaching moves were made. Now as it happens in real-time, I get a notification of that move with an article usually linked with more information. In the next five years, I could see more people transition from watching TV for sports content to using social media. Shows like SportsCenter could go under or be adapted within ESPN to be more real-time like Twitter. One change I would make to the sports communication landscape would be for reporters like Adam Schefter to limit how much information they post on draft nights. In sports like the NFL and NBA drafts, I have to turn off my Twitter notifications and avoid the app because guys like Adam Schefter spoil each pick a minute before it happens. This kills the overall hype of the draft because it removes the build-up of not knowing who Roger Goodell is going to announce for your team as he reads the envelope. Same thing when Tom Brady’s retirement was announced by Adam Schefter and not by the man himself. I think limiting how much they can report would benefit sports and keep the mystery of who your team is going to draft and not ruin the build-up of important moments in sports.