The awfulness of Joe Morgan in his later years spawned a website (firejoemorgan.com) by a prominent tv sitcom writer/show runner that was basically the precursor to Awful Announcing. While they did not necessarily aim to get Joe Morgan fired, they would humorously deconstruct comments by sports announcers and writers and was a great read among the monotony of debits, credit, and internal control narratives.
Morgan was great when he and Jon Miller first started out on Sunday Night Baseball, but he absolutely morphed completely into Captain Obvious by the mid-aughts. His more aggravating characteristic was his complete lack of understanding of sabermetrics and total rejection of analytics as a whole. He even rejected Moneyball, which he thought was written by Billy Beane, without reading a word of it. The irony being that the SABR, at one point, put Joe Morgan at the top of the list of greatest second basemen of all time.
Then he would host Q&As on ESPN dot com (back when it was worth reading) and get salty with the question submitters.
Lack of introspection is not a positive trait and as someone who thinks he knows a fair amount about history of the game and baseball strategy, Joe Morgan and Tim McCarver were among my least favorite announcers.