Bomani Jones is on a hot streak. His podcast, The Right Time, took off during the pandemic. His new HBO sports talk show Game Theory, just got renewed for a second season. And hes thrilled, telling Fortune its a great time to be in this business. But it didnt all just happen overnightthe 42-year old Jones, who got a masters in economics before starting to work in sports media, has been preparing for this moment for decades, and it took plenty of failure to get here. 

Jones is now at the helm of a prestige cable show, but his skill set was honed over years in local and satellite radio stations, often on the brink of cancellation. And he goes out of his way to talk about his career lows, and how they help him keep his work in perspective. I am, you know, a fairly cocksure individual, but there is a humility thats present, Jones told Fortune

Getting knocked down sometimes isnt because theres something wrong with you. I think that thats an important thing that a lot of people need to hear, Jones added. He said hes learned to think of the stops in his career in the context of what they were, not the context of how they ended.

Jones shares a story from when he worked in local radio in North Carolina. After a successful season, he says he found out that his audience was up 200% and was preparing to ask for a raise. The next day, not only did the news break that the radio station was being sold, but also that his time slot had been given to someone else.

Years later, he scored the splashy star-vehicle ESPN show High Noon, a vehicle starring him and his friend Pablo Torre, only for it to be canceled after a two-year run because of low ratings. He told Fortune that he concluded ESPN was changing its programming choices, not that he need to change his approach. I could have the greatest version of High Noon that was possible [but] theres not a place in [ESPNs] line-up for that right now. Thats just not what they do, and that has zero to do with me.

He likens the canceled shows in his past to a formative experience: flunking out of his graduate schools economics Ph.D. program. Its not hard for me to talk about that, because Im legitimately not ashamed of it, he says. What I learned from when I flunked out of graduate school really was: Even if the problem was that these shows were terrible, thats not the worst thing in the world, either. What do I mean by that? I mean that if I did a bad show, then I did a bad show.

Despite the cancellation of High Noon, Jones continued working with ESPN, and has been with the network in some capacity for the past 20 years (Its kind of crazy to look back at it, he says). He had a long-running TV job on ESPN as the co-host of Highly Questionable and was a frequent guest on Around The Horn, created by High Noon producer Erik Rydholm. When his podcast started taking off in 2020, and Jones grew his audience by nearly 90%, it caught the attention of Warner Bros. Discovery. That led to a call from HBO in March 2021, and Game Theory premiered in March 2022 with a mix of analytical monologues, sketches, man-on-the-street segments, and interviews with guests from the sports world, such as ESPNs Stephen A. Smith.

Jones said he really wanted the HBO opportunity and also wanted to continue his podcasting success with ESPN. I thought that I was going to have to quit my job, he says, but hes glad he can still keep doing what he does in both networks. This was never the plan. I just wound up here. 

Bomanis perspective on sports comes from a great base of knowledge, unexpected insights, and a sharp sense of humor. He shows us a different side of the conversation, why its important and why we should care, Nina Rosenstein, EVP of HBO Programming, told Deadline of the season two renewal of Game Theory in May 2022. The six-episode order for the first season was also expanded upon renewal.

It remains to be seen what will happen to Game Theory, which has struggled with ratings while winning critical acclaim. The show has managed a dose of virality on YouTube with Jones incisive takedown of the historical whiteness of Duke Universitys basketball program in season one, or his confrontation with YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul in season two. 

He says his HBO show is the closest hes ever been to taking his vision and expressing it as clearly as possible, with the greatest resources ever made available to him. But all of his previous experiences have taught him that success will mean nothing if he has to compromise his voice.   

You want to do your work in the place where it gets the most visibility so long as you can stay true to what it is that youre doing, he says. Because once people can sniff that you not being true to yourself and what youre doing, then they dont care about anything else. It doesnt matter. Your credibility is gone once they dont believe that youre being true to you.


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