She will take Acosta’s place as White House correspondent after ESPN hires him to do a sports/politics show.She will probably get her a job at the Communist News Network. AKA CNN. She would be a perfect fit there.
She started it. I’m going to laugh when somebody interviews her and she says that.Oh look, race card played on this board. Injecting politics and race in a basketball forum.
Cannot say I am sad to see her go, she spent more time on politics than sports anyway. Plus she was not that good at sports when she actually did sports.
She will probably get her a job at the Communist News Network. AKA CNN. She would be a perfect fit there.
I don't like mixing sports and politics. Sports used to be pure entertainment. I am glad that ESPN finally recognized that she ruined their product by injecting her race based politics into the mix. The woman didn't even try to use correct grammar which made her come off as ignorant.
She should start her political career on this board since you guys love injecting politics too. Match made in heaven.
Correct grammar matters
Reload and aim better next time. [winking][laughing]I'll miss her.
This is interesting. Deep Root Analytics is a TV audience ratings service that issued a report about audience partisanship. It's conclusion: across 43 markets, and even including the big U.S. liberal cities, the ESPN audience became five percent less Republican in 2016 over 2015, but the most dramatic change was felt on ESPN News, “whose audience became 36% less Republican and more Democratic.”
Summary:
“Certainly ESPN’s problems are not purely a result of Republican viewers turning off the network. But with this larger analysis, we do see a clear national trend that ESPN is losing Republican viewers, including in major markets…Given ESPN’s own admission that it has become more political — and on-the-record comments from ESPN talent saying that the network’s liberal nature is likely driving away viewers — this problem appears to be largely self-inflicted at a time when the network cannot afford to lose any more of its audience.”
For so long, many on the left rejected this premise. ESPN's financial issues are all about cord-cutting, and politics has little to do with it, they said. Head in sand.....