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The entertainment industry publication on Friday said it had obtained a memo from ESPN executive vice president Norby Williamson to staff reminding them of the company’s policies concerning talking “pure politics” on air.
“It’s not about the message,” the memo said, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
“It’s about the use of (the) ESPN platform.”
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“This felt un-American,” said Le Batard, the son of Cuban immigrants. “Basically, a chant, ‘send her back.’ It’s not the America that my parents came to get for us …
There’s a racial division in this country that’s being instigated by the president.
“We here at ESPN haven’t had the stomach for that fight,” he added, referencing Jemele Hill, a former host of ESPN television’s flagship show “SportsCenter” who was suspended and later left the network.
On social media, Hill had called Trump a white supremacist and proposed a boycott of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys after owner Jerry Jones warned players who didn’t stand for the national anthem would be benched.
“Here all of a sudden nobody (at ESPN) talks politics on anything unless we can use one of these sports figures as a meat-shield in the most cowardly way possible to discuss these subjects,” Le Batard said.
“We only talk about it around here when (NBA coaches) Steve Kerr or (Gregg) Popovich says something. We don’t talk about what is happening unless there’s some sort of weak, cowardly sports angle that we can run it through. When sports has been a place where this stuff changes.”
ESPN did not announce any discipline of Le Batard — who was absent from the first hour of his show on Friday but was then heard on the air.