Tyson v Paul This is the apex event of content masquerading as sport, and I hate it
The Guardian|November 11, 2024
Mark Borkowski is the public relations maestro who has worked with everyone from Mikhail Gorbachev to Diego Maradona to Jim Rose, an American exhibitionist who used to hang weights from his penis.
Sean Ingle
Tyson v Paul This is the apex event of content masquerading as sport, and I hate it

Borkowski also helped Ian Botham recreate Hannibal's walk across the Alps with elephants, and, for his sins, was the mastermind behind Cliff Richard's Saviour's Day reaching Christmas No 1, despite minimal radio play. So who better to talk about the biggest sporting stunt of the year, Mike Tyson's fight against Jake Paul, which will be streamed into 300m homes via Netflix this weekend? Instinctively, as I told Borkowski, I hate the idea. Most boxing fans do. It sells a myth that wasn't even close to being a reality in 2004, let alone 2024: namely that Tyson is one of the most ferocious warriors alive, not a 58-year-old who lost 26lb in May after an ulcer flare-up that left him throwing up blood and defecating tar. It risks Tyson's boxing reputation and his health. And, Netflix's lavish promotion aside, it feels more like a sham or a circus than a genuine sporting event. But I may be wrong. Certainly Borkowski thinks so. He believes the fight is straight out of the playbook of PT Barnum, the greatest showman of all and a curator of the absurd and extraordinary, who instinctively knew what the public wanted long before they did. And that it will cut through to the masses. "Barnum understood how to engage the crowd - the great herd, the great unwashed," he says. "This fight is about opportunism. It's about creative thinking. And it is already generating the oxygen of publicity, which is always an indication that something is going to be very successful."

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