Chattanooga Times Free Press

Latest issue magnifies ESPN’s double standard

- JAY GREESON Contact Jay Greeson at jgreeson@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6343.

Jemele Hill co-hosts the 6 p.m. SportsCent­er on ESPN with Michael Smith.

Personally, I think Hill is smart and very good at her job. She and Smith have great chemistry.

Still, Hill, who was an award-winning sports columnist at the Orlando Sentinel when that paper had one of the country’s great sports sections, made national news with a social media rant against President Donald Trump earlier this week.

Hill’s tweets were harsh and over the top — she called Trump a white supremacis­t and a bigot and said he was ignorant, among other things. ESPN’s official statement made it sound like she used the wrong salad fork. ESPN’s statement on Jemele Hill:

“The comments on Twitter from Jemele Hill regarding the President do not represent the position of ESPN. We have addressed this with Jemele and she recognizes her actions were inappropri­ate.”

And that was all that was announced. An ESPN spokesman did tell Yahoo. com it was “not discussing discipline publicly in this instance.”

I couched my views of Hill’s skills and job performanc­e on the front end of this. And now I’ll say this: She is dang lucky to still have a job. And ESPN is dang foolish not to issue some tangible, serious punishment to Hill, especially since it plays into the universall­y viewed liberal narrative of ESPN, which is viewed as the worldwide leader of sports coverage.

As I have said for a long time, a liberal bias in major media outlets is real, but way overblown. But what is undeniable is ESPN has a growing perception of a doublestan­dard about how employees are treated when saying controvers­ial things that could be classified as liberal or conservati­ve. Consider the following:

A tennis announcer was fired for saying “guerrilla tennis” about one of the Williams sisters, and the thought — and public blowback — that he meant “gorilla tennis” led to his terminatio­n.

SportsCent­er anchor Linda Cohn was reportedly suspended for saying that ESPN talks too much politics.

Of course ESPN also fired well-known conservati­ve Curt Schilling, but that dude seemed to have a few loose screws. The final straw for Schilling was posting some sentiments against radical Islam — which we can draw a fair comparison to the nut-bar white supremacis­ts that Hill said the leader of the free world is a member of. Of course, Schilling also got suspended for putting up something on social media saying that transgende­r people should use the restroom that matches their sex. Hill got suspended in 2008 for making a joking reference to Adolf Hitler and Boston Celtics fans.

Bob Ley, easily the most respected on-air person at ESPN, said last year to ESPN public editor Jim Brady that the organizati­on has “miles to go” in “diversity of thought.”

In fact, when getting informatio­n for that column by Brady, which was posted Dec. 1, 2016, ESPN president John Skipper was asked whether he worries conservati­ves feel left out or shunned. Skipper’s answer: “I do not. Vigorous debate and opinion are important to us, and no one should be concerned about expressing an opinion as long as it is not personal nor intolerant. [Recently] Randy Moss and Trent Dilfer offered very different points of view relative to Colin Kaepernick’s actions [protesting during the national anthem], and I believe both were comfortabl­e doing so.”

It’s important to note that Dilfer, one of the best NFL analysts ESPN had, was part of the layoffs last spring — no fewer than six months after that lively debate.

There are other reports from unnamed sources from ESPN — and they are unnamed because they claim to be fearful of retributio­n — that caused one employee to tell Brady for his column that “If you’re a Republican or conservati­ve, you feel the need to talk in whispers. There’s even a fear of putting Fox News on a TV [in the office].”

Brady wrote that almost every executive he spoke with for his ombudsman-type column late last year said there was no double standard. Of course, ESPN denies that with its words, but its actions in matters like this tell a different story.

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