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ESPN Pundit Jemele Hill Reprimanded for Calling Trump White Supremacist

I don't think she was reprimanded. Only that she was compelled to put out a statement that she
"regrets" presenting her personal opinion as ESPN's corporate opinion.
 
I'm surprised that media companies haven't come out with a very clear policy regarding the expression of personal political opinion on Twitter, especially with regards to their talent. It's one thing for a company accountant to do political rants, but it's another thing when its an on-air talent.
 
Jemele Hill should have been suspended at least for a week maybe 2 Keith got suspended for less a couple of years ago.
 
https://www.si.com/tech-media/2017/09/17/jemele-hill-tweets-espn-discipline

Update on the Jemele Hill/ Trump Fiasco

Last Thursday morning James Bhandary-Alexander, the staff attorney for New Haven Legal Assistance, sent an email note to this column on ESPN commentator Jemele Hill, and what ESPN might face should it attempt disciplinary action on Hill that involved dismissal. His note came a couple of days after White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said that tweets by Hill calling President Donald Trump a “white supremacist” among other things would be a “fireable offense,” according to Sanders (and thus the White House).

Bhandary-Alexander said that he believed if ESPN attempted to fire Hill it would likely violate Connecticut law. Said Bhandary-Alexander. “We have a statute (Conn. Gen. Stat. 31-51q) that explicitly protects employees—even in the private sector—from retaliation for any First Amendment protected speech. In other words, we enjoy free speech protections vis-à-vis both the government and our private employers. The statute protects our rights as employees to express ourselves on matters of public concern, such as whether the President is a racist. This hasn’t been mentioned but would certainly limit ESPN’s ability to discipline her without violating the law. I use this statute often to protect low-wage workers attempting to assert their rights, but it protects her, too.”

It was an interesting email—The New York Times had a piece on it on Friday—and I reached out to SI’s legal analyst Michael McCann, the founding director of the Sports and Entertainment Law Institute (SELI) at the University of New Hampshire School of Law, where he is also a tenured professor of law, on how he saw things.

SI: Does a Connecticut law protect Hill from being disciplined or even fired over her comments about Trump?

MM: The short answer is we don’t know and can’t know unless we reviewed Hill’s employment contract with ESPN.

Allow me to explain.

We know that Connecticut has enacted a statute titled, “Liability of employer for discipline or discharge of employee on account of employee’s exercise of certain constitutional rights.” This statute expresses that employers can’t discipline or fire employees on account of those employees exercising their First Amendment right to free speech. The statute is clearly on-point: the First Amendment protected Hill’s tweets and other critical remarks about Trump from sanction by the government.

This same Connecticut statue, however, contains a sizable exception: it only protects the employee if “such activity [by employee] does not substantially or materially interfere with the employee's bona fide job performance or the working relationship between the employee and the employer.”

So does the exception apply here? To answer that we need to ascertain how Hill’s “job performance” and “working relationship” are measured by ESPN.
 
The thing I want to know is if it will affect ESPN's ratings.

Politics aside -- who wants to watch a sports network and get bombarded by yet more politics, as if the internet, NPR, talk radio, newspapers, and all-pervasive social media isn't already loaded with it? Is this affecting ESPN's ratings any?
 
http://www.espn.com/blog/ombudsman/post/_/id/871/espn-awash-in-rising-political-tide-2

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/don-lemon-donald-trump-espn-apology_us_59bf493de4b0edff971d2e39

Update ESPN has done an editorial on how the Jemele Hill/ Trump rant lead to a political fiasco. At this point I sometimes wonder if Disney ever thought about creating a venue either cable or app on demand only where pundits like Jemele Hill could do the same rant and at least get away with it due to being on a political talk venue.
 
At this point I sometimes wonder if Disney ever thought about creating a venue either cable or app on demand only where pundits like Jemele Hill could do the same rant and at least get away with it due to being on a political talk venue.

It is the complete opposite of everything Disney stands for. They'd rather her put on a fairy princess costume.
 
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/ne...mp-uproar-network-has-no-good-options-1041109

Another factor in this article is that ESPN was once Disney's biggest revenue generator prior to the loss of subscribers. Also culture had and race like in the other articles came into play too. Also its how Disney runs its operations have now come under scrutiny as a result of recent ESPN issues from the Robert Lee issue to the Jemele Hill vs Trump rants. Note the article also mentions that ABC World News disney's produced national newscast does not do the stories you would see on other news networks though. I think this will raise the issue of whether or not Disney should have converted one of their ESPN channels the lesser known channels as a Political Pundit channel like Fox News, CNN, and MSNBC or on demand venue given how ESPN and Politics are ending up in the same point though.

But the article mentions about the "Safe Harbor" that Disney has made systemwide to protect their brands though and make them advertising friendly.
 
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I think this will raise the issue of whether or not Disney should have converted one of their ESPN channels the lesser known channels as a Political Pundit channel like Fox News, CNN, and MSNBC or on demand venue given how ESPN and Politics are ending up in the same point though.

You keep saying this, yet the issue is only about one person who made one tweet. There is no trend or series of things. Just one tweet.

The story keeps being repeated by people with their own agenda, but the company has spoken, and their direction is clear: The staff will keep their politics to themselves. Period. Case closed. They will not be starting a politics channel.
 
You keep saying this, yet the issue is only about one person who made one tweet. There is no trend or series of things. Just one tweet.

The story keeps being repeated by people with their own agenda, but the company has spoken, and their direction is clear: The staff will keep their politics to themselves. Period. Case closed. They will not be starting a politics channel.

Thats true . Its just I got too caught up with the narratives these writers keep putting out to Non ESPN talk show fans.
 
http://thehill.com/homenews/media/3...white-supremacist-nascar-bans-anthem-protests

An update now Jemele Hill is in a feud with Nascar over a flag. Well this is in the mist of Basketball and Football players being targeted by President Trump and in feuds with them. It will be interesting to see where Jemele Hill goes next though. Does she stay at ESPN, or move to Cable News/talk channels like CNN and MSNBC or Youtube only. This politics and sports colliding together is not going to stop for some time though.
 
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