Sleep To Baseball Podcast
Warning: This isn’t a game I’d usually recommend for sleep. The broadcast itself is fairly relaxed, especially with Harry Caray on the call. But what unfolds afterward is unforgettable. For me, as someone who loves all sorts of music, it’s genuinely fascinating and is often something that comes up around the dinner table. Truly amazing to see there is live footage of these events. Here is what went down - On July 12, 1979, the Detroit Tigers visited the Chicago White Sox at Comiskey Park for a scheduled doubleheader. The first game itself was fairly routine on the field — a standard late-70s American League matchup without major historical weight in terms of standings or star performances. The broadcast on WSNS-TV carries that classic local-TV feel: slightly loose production, ambient crowd noise, and a summer evening atmosphere. But the game was really just the setup. 💥 Disco Demolition Night Between games, the White Sox ran a promotion orchestrated by radio DJ Steve Dahl called Disco Demolition Night. Fans were encouraged to bring disco records to the stadium. The plan: * Collect the records * Blow them up in center field between games What actually happened: * Tens of thousands showed up (far beyond expectations) * Many fans snuck in extra records * After the explosion, the crowd stormed the field The situation escalated quickly: * Fires were started * Batting cages were destroyed * The outfield was torn up * Security completely lost control 🚨 Aftermath The field was left in an unplayable state. As a result: * The second game of the doubleheader was forfeited by the Chicago White Sox to the Detroit Tigers * The incident became one of the most infamous promotions in sports history * It’s often cited as a symbolic moment in the backlash against disco culture in the late 1970s
83 episodios
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