ESPN KEEPS SUSPENDING ON AIR PERSONALITIES

Was ESPN correct in suspending Max Kellerman for talking about hitting his girlfriend in the past?

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Hopefully Meth doesn't suspend me when I hit my ex w/ this Stone Cold Stunner next time I see her ***.

Might even follow it up w/ a Swanton Bomb for the lulz.
 
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I'm not crediting him w/ stones just yet, because I'm more of the thinking that it was just impulsively stupid, honestly. :lol:  
In terms of human nature, that's a topic I'd likely believe is consciously repressed or hidden. It had to have been actively on his mind, the thought of confessing or revealing his personal business.
 
I hope all of you (NTers & others on social media) who said ESPN didn't suspend Beadle because she's white or those who said ESPN did what they did to SAS because he's black shut your mouths.

Everyone quick to play the race card ESPECIALLY here on NT.

Many of you should be eating crow with this story coming out.

While a case can certainly be made for SAS being suspended for what he said, all Kellerman did was tell a story of his past which correlated with the incident and "hot" topic of the moment. If he was in fact told, along with other personalities, to not touch the subject in any manner and did so anyway than I can see ESPN having merit.

Might not be racist but it's definitely sexist.
 
Yet they have Chris Brown on the ESPY's calling himself "America's sweetheart" :lol:
 
ESPN been doing some shady **** lately.  They wanted no part in showing those pictures of Jerry Jones that leaked. 
 
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ain't mad at Jerry 
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Its hypocritical. They want opinions and fabricate these forums of open and free exchange of ideas but when someone speaks about their experience that may be ugly, they shut them down. ESPN is trash journalism anyway. Free Max Kellerman
 
So let's see here. Just this last month ESPN has:

Suspended Max Kellerman
Suspended Dan Le Batard
Suspended Stephen Smith
Been sued by a former employee for sexual harassment and discrimination
Had a baseball reporter get caught stealing (fake) news on Twitter


Yup business as usual.
 
Neither of those three individuals should have been suspended.  Took alot of guts for Max to say what he said. 
 
Pretty sure the blonde chick with Jerry in those pics is PornStar Alexis Texas. Can't be mad at an old dude pulling porn chicks.
 
Touchy subject but Dan's suspension was the most absurd.

His entire show is one big troll job. His "Give it to me again" rant after the Heat's 2 championships was hysterical 
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He even baits guests on his show. ESPN lets him do this every single weekday but mess with the untouchable and their goldmine Lebron............SUSPENDED!! 
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ESPN Insider: Suspensions Creating "Minefield" For Shout Show Hosts

 
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Education reformers often cite reducing suspensions in our nation's schools as a top priority. Lots of recent studies show that this form of punishment does more harm than good.

They might do well to read some of those studies over at ESPN's Bristol campus, where the lords of discipline are now handing out suspensions at a rate that would make even an old school junior high principal wobble. Pundits tasked with discussing controversial topics on cue—and, above all, inspiring a reaction—are now worried not just about doing their jobs, but about not saying the wrong thing, even if no one knows what exactly that is. According to one ESPN insider, on-air talent at the network are highly aware that they're now navigating a "minefield" whenever they open their mouths.

A recap of the spate of heavy-handedness:

On Friday, word got out that Max Kellerman had been suspended from hosting duties on SportsNation and ESPNLA radio. He'd gone on another Los Angeles radio show and used the Ray Rice drama as an excuse to confess to a sin that was by now decades old: During a night of drinking in college, the story goes, he'd smacked his girlfriend. The punchline, so to speak, came with Kellerman's disclosure that she later became his wife, to whom he remains married to this day. Happy ending notwithstanding, Kellerman's confession earned him an unrequested one-week vacation.
 
The Miami-based Le Batard had bought billboard space in Akron, Ohio, to needle homeward bound LeBron James: The Le Batard-commissioned outdoor ads, which ran on six billboards, had the phrase "You're Welcome LeBron. Love, Miami" alongside an illustration of the two NBA championship rings James won with the Miami Heat. ESPN gave Le Batard a day off for each bauble. (The Cleveland Plain Dealer boasted that it had rejected an earlier full-page ad-buy request from Le Batard's show.)

News of Le Batard's sit-down, meanwhile, came just a day after Stephen A. Smith returned from his unrequested seven-day staycation, the byproduct of his on-screen victim-shaming of Ray Rice's wife on First Take and, perhaps more importantly, his several subsequent bungled apologies.

Getting anybody at Bristol to talk about the network's banishment binge is a chore. ESPN spokesman Josh Krulewitz politely refused via email to answer questions dealing with the impact of so many suspensions and all the attention they're getting of late.

Le Batard likewise graciously declined to be interviewed by Deadspin for this story, citing "bad timing." But he did address the matter directly in a Monday post. Le Batard wrote that he's OK with the sentence he received because he "hadn't checked with [his] supervisors" before launching the stunt, and "was insubordinate" after the bosses found out and tried to get him to call it all off.

Even before Le Batard's overly guilt-ridden post was published, an ESPN insider who was willing to talk—though only anonymously, out of a reasonable concern that anybody who talks openly about the suspensions will garner one—told me staffers understand that particular suspension.

"On the face of it, there's no reason for punishment," said the insider. "The language on the billboard wasn't offensive, it was funny. It didn't offend the NBA, and nobody got hurt. But, getting punished for it anyway? That was a protocol thing: ESPN as a corporation does not like to be surprised."

Kellerman's punishment, though, isn't being taken so wel by his colleagues. Along with the delayed penalty call on Smith, it's seen as evidence that when it comes to disciplinary matters, the post-gaffe chatter carries more weight with higher-ups than the gaffe itself.

"It's not the offense that gets you suspended, it's the reaction," said the insider. "The length of time that it takes to suspend gives you an indication if that's what happened. Here, Kellerman says what he said last Monday? And then you sit him down [on Friday]? You can bet that means they started to hear brushback."

According to the insider, there was no company-wide directive prohibiting on-air discussion of Ray Rice in the wake of Smith's suspension. A primer on domestic violence in the U.S., including crime stats and acceptable terms to use when the subject comes up on air, was recently distributed to staffers. Nothing Kellerman said, we're told, obviously went against that memo.

So inside the building, Kellerman is considered collateral damage from the Smith brouhaha.

"The Kellerman thing was like, 'Oh, we did Stephen A.! Guess we gotta do this one too!'" said the insider. "And I'm sure somebody made some sort of racial angle to it:' You suspend Stephen A., but you don't suspend a white guy who actually said he hit his wife?'"

The sanctioning spree has "put the on-air talent in a bad position."

"They want you to toe the line as far as saying something controversial, but you can't go too far, and because it's based on reaction, you don't know what is too far," said the insider. "You want a reaction, but it's the reaction that will get you in trouble. So you have to know your public, and it seems like the line is always moving as far as what will get you [suspended]. I think 'minefield' is the appropriate word."

Unless things change, a day with no new suspensions will soon be as newsworthy as one with.

"This is a sensitive time around here," said the insider. "Looking back now, I'm amazed that we got through Michael Sam without anybody getting in trouble."
 
Stephen A just spoke that real **** on first take regarding Colin kaep and black people image in general.

He says some **** off the wall alot but he GETS it
 
Image.

All about maintaining that image.

Corporations are more concerned w/ the image created by their employees, and less concerned w/ their actual employees.

They don't really care what you think or who you are, as long as you have something positive to offer in terms of their image.

And that's not just ESPN, gents: it's the company you work for, too.

All of you, pay attention. The more quiet you are and the greater your ability to hide your 'bad', and the more you're able to accomplish whatever it is your company does, the farther you'll get.

Aint this the truth!

If I could give you all my reps, I would.
 
And with social media and the internet mob it is getting worse instead of better moving forward. The medium which allows the freest form of expression also suppresses it like never before




Whoa, I like that quote, may save that one :lol:
 
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