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The Daily

A Small Town’s Fight Over America’s Biggest Sport

The Daily

The New York Times

Daily News, News

4.4102.8K Ratings

🗓️ 27 January 2020

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Across the United States, parents and school districts have been wrestling with the question of whether the country’s most popular and profitable sport is too dangerous for children. Today, we explore how that dispute is playing out in one Texas town. Guests: Ken Belson, who covers the N.F.L. for The New York Times, spoke with Jim Harris and Spencer Taylor in Marshall, Texas. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: Repeated blows to the head while playing football have been linked to a degenerative brain disease called C.T.E.Football is a powerful, cultural force in Marshall, a city of about 24,000 people in East Texas. But residents, coaches and educators have questioned the safety of a sport they cannot imagine living without.

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:25.6

From New York Times, I'm Michael Babaro.

0:32.6

This is The Daily.

0:39.6

Today, across the US, parents and school districts are wrestling with whether the country's

0:46.8

most popular and profitable sport is too dangerous for kids.

0:53.6

10-Belsen, on how that debate is playing out in one Texas town.

1:00.6

It's Monday, January 27th.

1:05.6

We're in the extreme eastern part of the state.

1:11.6

It's kind of central east Texas.

1:14.4

It's 50 inches of rain a year.

1:17.6

Pine trees used to be cattle everywhere.

1:20.4

Now mostly people like me have pine trees and the cows are gone.

1:24.4

It was a nice well-life.

1:25.4

I like cows.

1:26.4

They're cheaper than a psychiatrist.

1:31.1

Do you want me to introduce myself?

...

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