'Control' Issues Sink Barry Bonds Reality Series
ESPN has officially canceled its Barry Bonds reality series.
"Bonds on Bonds" premiered in March to middling ratings and criticism that ESPN had compromised its editorial independence by working with Bonds at the same time it was covering his attempt to break Babe Ruth’s career home run mark.
The show last aired on May 30, and the next episode was scheduled to offer a behind-the-scenes look at Bonds as he struggled to hit his 715th home run.
ESPN issued a brief statement on Friday saying "Bonds representatives wanted creative control for the final episode, which Tollin/Robbins Prods. and ESPN have been unwilling to give throughout the project."
A spokesperson for ESPN also stated the show would not air in reruns, and would not return, even if Bonds broke Hank Aaron's career home run record.
The 41-year-old Bonds, who has seven homers this year, is now 40 shy of Hank Aaron for the all-time lead.
A seven-time National League MVP and 13-time All-Star, Bonds rewrote the record books in 2001 by hitting 73 home runs, but much of the recent focus has been on the slugger's potential link to performance-enhancing drugs.
According to a published report by the San Francisco Chronicle in December of 2004, Bonds had told a federal grand jury he admitted to using a clear substance and cream provided to him from his trainer, but said he didn't know they were steroids. Bonds testified before the grand jury in December 2003, and according to the report, said that the substances were provided by his personal strength trainer, Greg Anderson.
The recent book "Game of Shadows" alleges that Anderson supplied Bonds with steroids on multiple occasions.
Victor Conte, the founder of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative, who had a role in providing several athletes, including Bonds, with undetectable banned drugs, was sentenced last October to four months in prison and four months' home confinement in a plea deal.
Anderson was given a three-month jail term and another three months in home confinement, and has reportedly been subpoenaed to testify before the federal grand jury investigating whether Bonds committed perjury.
"Bonds on Bonds" premiered in March to middling ratings and criticism that ESPN had compromised its editorial independence by working with Bonds at the same time it was covering his attempt to break Babe Ruth’s career home run mark.
The show last aired on May 30, and the next episode was scheduled to offer a behind-the-scenes look at Bonds as he struggled to hit his 715th home run.
ESPN issued a brief statement on Friday saying "Bonds representatives wanted creative control for the final episode, which Tollin/Robbins Prods. and ESPN have been unwilling to give throughout the project."
A spokesperson for ESPN also stated the show would not air in reruns, and would not return, even if Bonds broke Hank Aaron's career home run record.
The 41-year-old Bonds, who has seven homers this year, is now 40 shy of Hank Aaron for the all-time lead.
A seven-time National League MVP and 13-time All-Star, Bonds rewrote the record books in 2001 by hitting 73 home runs, but much of the recent focus has been on the slugger's potential link to performance-enhancing drugs.
According to a published report by the San Francisco Chronicle in December of 2004, Bonds had told a federal grand jury he admitted to using a clear substance and cream provided to him from his trainer, but said he didn't know they were steroids. Bonds testified before the grand jury in December 2003, and according to the report, said that the substances were provided by his personal strength trainer, Greg Anderson.
The recent book "Game of Shadows" alleges that Anderson supplied Bonds with steroids on multiple occasions.
Victor Conte, the founder of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative, who had a role in providing several athletes, including Bonds, with undetectable banned drugs, was sentenced last October to four months in prison and four months' home confinement in a plea deal.
Anderson was given a three-month jail term and another three months in home confinement, and has reportedly been subpoenaed to testify before the federal grand jury investigating whether Bonds committed perjury.
