• Loading stock data...
Thursday, October 2, 2025

MLB’s Jomboy Deal Shows Full 180

Baseball had long fought creators or kept them at arm’s length.

Aaron Boone
Brad Penner-Imagn Images

On Tuesday, MLB and Jimmy “Jomboy” O’Brien announced that the league would buy an undisclosed minority stake in his eponymous media company. It was a major win for Jomboy Media, which the league had previously held at arm’s length—or further.

O’Brien first became a household name to baseball fans in July 2019, when he used a combination of lip-reading skills and MLB’s ambient field microphones to get inside a spectacular ejection. Yankees manager Aaron Boone, caught on audio expertly picked up by Jomboy, berated fill-in umpire Brennan Miller.

“My guys are fucking savages in that fucking box!” Boone screamed at Miller. “And you’re having a piece of shit start to this game—I feel bad for you, but fucking get better!”

The video launched Jomboy into viral fame, gave Yankees fans a slogan and bootleg merch for a solid year, and was a rare glimpse of a personality for the normally staid Boone. 

Naturally, MLB and its most famous team were unhappy that O’Brien had such a knack for isolating its feed audio.

“It wasn’t supposed to be that clear,” Joe Torre, then MLB’s chief baseball officer, said at the time. “It shouldn’t happen… When it starts getting personal, that’s dangerous.”

Yankees spokesman Jason Zillo admitted to ESPN at the time that the videos were “growing the game,” but he worried that “that’s some really treacherous, dangerous ground that could be really personally damaging to a player, and also for the team—and for the league, for that matter.”

Six years later, Jomboy—now a full-fledged media company—has won something like a total victory with the MLB deal. He already struck deals with the Yankees in 2022 and 2023 that led to weekly segments with Boone.

MLB kept fighting arguably its most famous YouTube personality right up until taking ownership in his company. 

On a stream Tuesday morning, O’Brien said he had a deal lined up with ESPN last year to do regular Baseball Tonight segments, plus Home Run Derby and All-Star Game alt-casts, before MLB stepped in. 

“MLB had to protect their partners, and we weren’t [a partner],” and so “a door got gently shut,” he said. That led him to begin considering selling a stake in earnest. (He also said Tuesday that MLB was not injecting new capital into the company, just buying out existing investors.)

Even as his videos grew in popularity and a vibrant YouTube ecosystem continued to grow around baseball, MLB had yet to fully embrace it. In a May 2024 video, O’Brien detailed how the league would annually send out mass notices of copyright violations to him and other creators. “They’re a little egregious with the sweeps,” he said at the time. 

A source familiar with Tuesday’s deal said it would completely clear Jomboy’s channel to use MLB footage.


If Jomboy wins financially, and the league wins culturally, that leaves two groups who might still not love Tuesday’s deal. 

The first is MLB umpires, whose viral foibles helped make O’Brien famous in the first place, and whose errors he continues to document regularly

Dan Bellino, a longtime MLB ump and the president of the umpires’ union, said that while the union was not given a heads up about the deal, he was a Jomboy fan.

“As umpires, we welcome this partnership and the opportunity it brings to showcase the game’s complexity, including the vital role of officiating, through a new and dynamic lens,” he told Front Office Sports in an email. “I’ve always found Jomboy’s approach to be unique and entertaining.” Bellino added that the deal showed MLB’s “recognition of how today’s fans enjoy the sport.”

The second is Jomboy fans, who might understandably worry about a league-owned outlet neutering the content. O’Brien played a major role in documenting the Astros cheating scandal, for example, and is often critical of managers and teams on social media. 

The MLB deal explicitly says the league has “no editorial control or oversight,” and O’Brien spent much of Tuesday morning insisting on the point.

“What does this mean for the content? Nothing,” he said. “MLB wants us to continue exactly what we’re doing; they don’t have any creative control—more of a basic understanding that we carry the sentiment to not piss people off.

“They trust our tone,” he continued. “They don’t want it to change, and they don’t want it to feel like it’s changed. It actually says in writing, in the contract, that we will be maintaining and doing everything we have been doing.”

At the same time, it sounds like baseball has been given some assurance that it has a line into the Jomboy Media office to complain. 

“There’s really just a mutual understanding of, hey, if we do something you don’t like, you tell us,” O’Brien said. “And we’ll take that into consideration moving forward, and do a better job not pissing people off.” 

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Caitlin Clark

Caitlin Clark Backs Napheesa Collier in Fight With WNBA

Clark had her exit interview on Thursday after an injury-riddled season. 

ESPN’s Ben McDonald Stays on Padres-Cubs Call Despite NHL Flap

ESPN sticks with McDonald after his viral hockey “zero chance” jab.

Elimination Day: MLB’s Dramatic Wild-Card Tripleheader Hits ESPN

A day of drama ends with Red Sox–Yankees in prime time.
opinion

How Rory McIlroy Became Golf’s Lightning Rod

Is McIlroy a hypocrite for ripping fans after his own f-bombs?

Featured Today

Kōloa Rum Company Rum Rusher

Panthers Bubbly, Jets Wine, Manning Whiskey: The Sports Booze Boom

A sommelier dives into the sports booze trend—and tries Jets wine.
Nov 17, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Steelers fans wave Terrible Towels against the Baltimore Ravens during the fourth quarter at Acrisure Stadium
September 26, 2025

Steelers’ Irish Roots Are Deeper Than NFL Dublin Game

The Steelers have history and the foundation for a future in Ireland.
FARMINGDALE, NY - SEPTEMBER 23: Rory McIlroy of Team Europe hits out of the rough on the first hole during the 2025 Ryder Cup at Bethpage State Park on Tuesday, September 23, 2025 in Farmingdale, New York.
September 25, 2025

Ryder Cup in New York: Record-Setting Hopes and Fan Concerns

Organizers anticipate record attendance and revenue, but worry remains about fan behavior.
FARMINGDALE, NY - SEPTEMBER 22: Cameron Young of Team USA hits his tee shot on the third hole during the 2025 Ryder Cup Practice Round at Bethpage State Park on Monday, September 22, 2025 in Farmingdale, New York.
September 23, 2025

U.S. Ryder Cup Players Will Be Paid. Not Everyone Is Pleased

Americans are receiving a $200,000 stipend, and not everyone is pleased.
Georgia Bulldogs quarterback Gunner Stockton (14) throws the ball during the first half of a NCAA college football game against Alabama in Athens, Ga., on Saturday, September 27, 2025.

Alabama-Georgia Draws 10.4M Viewers, Drives Record CFB Season Pace

ABC drew 10.4 million viewers for Alabama-Georgia.
Sep 18, 2025; College Park, Georgia, USA; Indiana Fever forward Aliyah Boston (7) reacts as the Fever defeat the Atlanta Dream during game three of round one for the 2025 WNBA Playoffs at Gateway Center Arena at College Park.
September 19, 2025

Fever Upset of Dream Brings Ratings Boost to WNBA Semis

The Indiana Fever will face the Las Vegas Aces in the semifinals.
Green Bay Packers wide receiver Christian Watson (9) pulls down a touchdown reception against Dallas Cowboys cornerback DaRon Bland (26) in the fourth quarter during their football game Sunday, November 13, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis.
September 24, 2025

Packers-Cowboys Game Is Getting Super Bowl–Like NBC Treatment

The network will bring its pregame show to Dallas.
Sponsored

How Soccer Star Jozy Altidore Became a Buffalo Bills Owner

Jozy Altidore discusses building a business legacy off the field.
September 17, 2025

Fever Ratings Fall Without Clark, but Rest of WNBA Game 1s Surge

The Indiana Fever game drew 47% fewer viewers this year.
Sep 14, 2025; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver DeVonta Smith (6) makes a reception defended by Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Trent McDuffie (22) during the fourth quarter of the game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium.
September 16, 2025

Eagles-Chiefs Super Bowl Rematch Sets Early NFL TV Ratings Mark

Several new milestones are established with the big early-season matchup.
exclusive
September 16, 2025

ESPN, Fox One Added 1M Sign-Ups in First 10 Days After Launch

The two high-profile streaming services have strong starts with consumers.
Greg Olsen
September 16, 2025

Greg Olsen on Tom Brady’s Raiders Role: ‘More Power to Him’

This season, the NFL has relaxed the special Brady broadcasting rules.