San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

REPORTER UNDER FIRE FOR COMMENTS

- BY DES BIELER Bieler writes for The Washington Post.

Charissa Thompson of Fox Sports and Amazon Prime’s “Thursday Night Football” garnered criticism Thursday when a clip went viral in which she admitted to inventing quotes from coaches while working as a sideline reporter.

“I’ve said this before, so I haven’t been fired for saying it, but I’ll say it again. I would make up the report sometimes,” Thompson said in a recent interview on “Pardon My Take,” “because, A, the coach wouldn’t come out at halftime, or it was too late and . . . I didn’t want to screw up the report, so I was like, ‘I’m just going to make this up.’ ”

Thompson, 41, added that she assumed that “no coach is going to get mad” if she misled viewers into thinking they had simply voiced some well-worn clichés, such as, “Hey, we need to stop hurting ourselves, we need to be better on third down, we need to stop turning the ball over and do a better job of getting off the field.”

“Like, they’re not going to correct me on that,” she continued. “So I’m like, ‘It’s fine, I’ll just make up the report.’ ”

Among the sports media members responding to Thompson’s comments Thursday was ESPN and ABC’S Molly Mcgrath, a college football sideline reporter who wrote on X, “Young reporters: This is not normal or ethical. Coaches and players trust us with sensitive informatio­n, and if they know that you’re dishonest and don’t take your role seriously, you’ve lost all trust and credibilit­y.”

CBS sideline reporter Tracy Wolfson wrote on X, “This is absolutely not ok, not the norm and upsetting on so many levels. I take my job very seriously, I hold myself accountabl­e for all I say, I build trust with coaches and never make something up. I know my fellow reporters do the same.”

Kevin Z. Smith, a board member of the Society of Profession­al Journalist­s who helped shape that organizati­on’s ethics code, said of Thompson’s admission, “This is just appallingl­y bad journalism to engage in, and to brag about it and defend it as harmless is beyond the pale.”

“SPJ’S ethics code addresses truth, harm, independen­ce and accountabi­lity,” Smith added via email Thursday evening. “She gets the trifecta for destroying three ethical tenets with her lying.”

Thompson previously discussed making up quotes from coaches during a January 2022 episode of a podcast she co-hosts with former sideline reporter Erin Andrews.

Recalling her time covering the 2008 Detroit Lions, who went 0-16, Thompson said of then-head coach Rod Marinelli, “I was like, ‘Oh, coach, what adjustment­s are you going to make at halftime?’ He goes, ‘That’s a great perfume you’re wearing.’ I was like, ‘Oh, (expletive), this isn’t going to work.’ I’m not kidding, I made up a report.”

“I’ve done that, too,” Andrews responded at the time. “For a coach that I didn’t want to throw under the bus because he was telling me all the wrong stuff !”

“You’re not going to say anything that’s going to put them in a bad spot,” Thompson said.

Representa­tives for “Thursday Night Football” did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Thompson and clarificat­ion on whether she would use their platform to address the backlash. (Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

Laura Okmin, Thompson’s colleague at Fox Sports, contribute­d to the argument that Thompson had committed a grave ethical lapse.

“THE privilege of a sideline role is being the 1 person in the entire world who has the opportunit­y to ask coaches what’s happening in that moment,” Okmin, described by Fox Sports as the third-longest tenured sideline reporter in the NFL, wrote Thursday afternoon on X. “I can’t express the amount of time it takes to build that trust. Devastated w/the texts I’m getting asking if this is ok. No. Never.”

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