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Former ESPN Host Accuses Megan Rapinoe of Narcissism Following Anti-Religion Remarks

. . .Days after Rapinoe claimed a potential Achilles injury in the final match of her professional career was “proof that there isn’t” a God, the former “SportsCenter” host tore into the controversial U.S. Women’s National Team star on X.

“Narcissism at its finest,” Steele posted Monday.

Rapinoe and Steele have long been vocal about their beliefs — often on opposite sides of the debate — and it appears the 38-year-old athlete’s comments hit a sore spot with the ex-ESPN personality.

Steele’s X profile says she’s a “Believer” with a cross emoji, indicating that religion is an important part of her life.

Rapinoe’s now-viral remark came Saturday after Gotham FC defeated her OL Reign in the National Women’s Soccer League Championship, 2-1. (Read more from “Former ESPN Host Accuses Megan Rapinoe of Narcissism Following Anti-Religion Remarks” HERE)

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WATCH: ESPN Host Claims ‘Extreme Right-Wing Agitators’ Carrying Out Violence ‘to Make Protests Look Bad’

ESPN host Max Kellerman claimed Tuesday that “a big percentage” of the violence that has occurred during the ongoing protests in the U.S. for the past several months has been carried out by “extremist right-wing agitators,” who are trying “to make the protests look bad.”

According to The Hill, Kellerman, who co-hosts “First Take” with Stephen A. Smith, told the show’s audience that “93% of the protests are peaceful,” arguing that “the 7 percent [that] are not, there is a very broad definition of what’s not quote-unquote peaceful. For example, if you block traffic or something like that. Or if you respond to police provocation.

“And even then,” Kellerman continued, “a big percentage of that that wasn’t peaceful is actually outside agitators, extremist right-wing agitators posing as protesters to make the protests look bad.”

Politicos on both sides of the aisle reacted to Kellerman’s comments on social media, with conservative Ian Miles Cheong tweeting, “There is no evidence to support this claim, and it dismisses the unrest Antifa itself is proud of.” . . .

The sports pundit was reacting to UFC star Colby Covington, a fan of President Donald Trump, saying in a post-victory speech over the weekend, “I’m sick of these woke athletes and these spineless cowards like LeBron James.” (Read more from “ESPN Host Claims ‘Extreme Right-Wing Agitators’ Carrying Out Violence ‘to Make Protests Look Bad'” HERE)

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ESPN Suspends Anti-Trump Host

ESPN suspended pundit Jemele Hill for two weeks Monday after she suggested fans should boycott the sponsors of the Dallas Cowboys and the NFL.

The sports network released the following statement:

Jemele Hill has been suspended for two weeks for a second violation of our social media guidelines. She previously acknowledged letting her colleagues and company down with an impulsive tweet. In the aftermath, all employees were reminded of how individual tweets may reflect negatively on ESPN and that such actions would have consequences. Hence this decision.

(Read more from “ESPN Suspends Anti-Trump Host” HERE)

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ESPN Pulls Announcer for Having Same Name as Confederate General

ESPN pulled an announcer from covering an upcoming college football game at the University of Virginia because he shares the same name as Confederate General Robert E. Lee – even though the announcer is Asian-American.

ESPN removed college football announcer Robert Lee from covering the William & Mary at University of Virginia football game on September 2, 2017, because they were concerned it would be offensive to viewers, OutKick The Coverage reported Tuesday night . . .

ESPN, which has become increasingly left-leaning in recent years as it continues dabbling into political issues, received a significant amount of backlash from social media following the announcement:

(Read more from “ESPN Pulls Announcer for Having Same Name as Confederate General” HERE)

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Add This to the List of Reasons Conservatives Think ESPN Is Biased

There is a whole host of reasons conservatives have come to believe that ESPN has a left-leaning bias.

First, there was the network’s decision in 2015 to give the Arthur Ashe Courage Award to former Olympian-turned-reality TV star Bruce—now Caitlyn—Jenner.

Apparently, Jenner’s decision to publicly share his transgender journey, many years after his sports career was over, was more courageous than that of 19-year-old college basketball player Lauren Hill, who publicly lived out her battle against brain cancer on the court from 2013 to 2015, raising awareness and over $1.5 million for research before succumbing to the disease in April of that year.

Then there was the decision by the network to pull a golf tournament from one of then-candidate Donald Trump’s golf courses because it didn’t like some of his comments, but apparently had no problem allowing its ESPNW network to give voice and coverage to the Women’s March on Washington where one speaker, Madonna, said she wanted to blow up the White House. And naturally, the same network was nowhere to be found covering the March for Life.

And more double standards were on display when no action was taken by the network against ESPN sportscaster Tony Kornheiser when he compared the tea party to ISIS.

Yet the network did take action when former major leaguer-turned-ESPN analyst Curt Schilling posted comments on Facebook objecting to the push to open up bathrooms to the opposite sex. Schilling was promptly fired.

Like I said, there are plenty of examples showing ESPN’s lurch to the political and cultural left.

And now, in a public relations attempt to prove it doesn’t have a liberal bias—or at least that its viewers don’t think it has a liberal bias—it again shows just how real its liberal bias is.

In a survey of viewers (only select parts were released) conducted for the network in early May, of respondents who said they detect bias in ESPN’s coverage, 63 percent said it was a liberal bias.

But that isn’t how the network spun it.

It left that number out of its official statement and instead only referenced the 30 percent who said they thought the network expressed a conservative viewpoint.

When asked by the Washington Examiner why they didn’t include the 63 percent figure, a spokesman for ESPN said it was “implied.” When Sporting News asked the same question, the reply was that they were trying to keep the press release “short.”

Yeah, OK.

When it comes to bias, it’s not always what a media outlet says—it’s what it doesn’t say. It’s not always what facts it includes, it’s the ones it leaves out.

Earlier this year, ESPN’s public editor, Jim Brody, stated in a column about the controversy of ESPN wading into the cultural and political arena, “ESPN has made it clear: It’s not sticking to sports.”

But if another study of ESPN’s audiences—this one not conducted by the network itself—is accurate, voters of a certain political persuasion are making it clear they aren’t sticking with ESPN.

The study of 43 television markets nationally showed that ESPN’s audience, across its multiple channels (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, etc.), is becoming more liberal and that fewer Republicans are watching.

Considering the “Worldwide Leader in Sports” has lost more than 10 million subscribers in recent years, ESPN might want to change its motto—and revisit its game plan. (For more from the author of “Add This to the List of Reasons Conservatives Think ESPN Is Biased” please click HERE)

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AP Sports Writer, ESPN Affiliate Team up to Broadcast ‘Faith on the Field’ Show Featuring Christian Athletes

An Associated Press sports writer and an ESPN affiliate have joined forces to broadcast a radio show focused on faith in sports — including interviews with athletes who say faith has changed their lives.

Rob Maaddi, AP sports writer and author of Football Faith and Baseball Faith, will host the hour-long show. Called Faith on the Field, it will debut in April on ESPN’s Philadelphia radio affiliate, AM 610.

Maaddi told The Christian Post that, although he has many jobs, his “main job in the world is to be a messenger for Christ.”

“I want to increase the Kingdom, spread the Word, encourage Christians to share their faith and inspire nonbelievers to turn to the Lord,” said Maaddi. “So this show will be a forum for athletes to talk about the work God has done in their lives and hopefully we give all of our listeners an entertaining, engaging sports-talk experience that impacts them much greater than scores, stats, opinions and analysis.”

Maaddi got the idea for the show after he attended a Bible study with friend Doug Horton and Pastor Phil Moser from Fellowship Bible Church in Sewell, New Jersey. Horton and Moser will co-host the radio show.

Over the years, Maaddi’s work in sports and contact with athletes have given him the opportunity to minister to people, particularly inmates through Deacons Prison Ministry, a ministry that uses softball “as a tool to enter into prisons to minister the good news of Jesus.” “The work God does through us is amazing. Seeing so many men come to Christ and then start Bible studies and chapel service in their cells is such a rewarding experience,” Maaddi said. “But it only gave me a thirst to do more. I want to keep working to increase the Kingdom, to take my story and the Lord’s message to a bigger audience.”

ESPN’s Philadelphia affiliate, AM 610, will broadcast “Faith on the Field” on Thursday nights from 7 to 8 p.m. ET. The program will debut on April 6. (For more from the author of “AP Sports Writer, ESPN Affiliate Team up to Broadcast ‘Faith on the Field’ Show Featuring Christian Athletes” please click HERE)

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Curt Schilling, ESPN Analyst, Is Fired Over ‘Offensive’ Social Media Post

Curt_Schilling_PitchCurt Schilling, a former All-Star pitcher and one of the highest-profile baseball analysts on ESPN, was fired from the network Wednesday, a day after he drew intense criticism for promoting ‘offensive’ commentary on social media.

Schilling, who had worked for the network since 2010 and most recently offered analysis on “Monday Night Baseball,” was dismissed after sharing a Facebook post this week that appeared to respond to the North Carolina law that bars transgender people from using bathrooms and locker rooms that do not correspond with their birth genders.

The post showed an overweight man wearing a wig and women’s clothing with parts of the T-shirt cut out to expose his breasts. It says: “LET HIM IN! to the restroom with your daughter or else you’re a narrow-minded, judgmental, unloving racist bigot who needs to die.”

To that, Schilling added: “A man is a man no matter what they call themselves. I don’t care what they are, who they sleep with, men’s room was designed for the penis, women’s not so much. Now you need laws telling us differently? Pathetic.” (Read more from “Curt Schilling, ESPN Analyst, Is Fired Over ‘Offensive’ Social Media Post” HERE)

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ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith: Every Black Person Should Vote Republican for One Election

ESPN commentator Stephen A. Smith has offered an opinion that’s sure to cause some controversy . . .

While giving a speech at the Impact Symposium at Vanderbilt University in Nashville Tennessee, Smith said:

“What I dream is that for one election, just one, every black person in America vote Republican,” he said. “Because from what I’ve read, and I’m open to correction, but from what I’ve read, Barry Goldwater is going against Lyndon B. Johnson. He’s your Republican candidate. He is completely against the Civil Rights Movement. Lyndon B. Johnson was in favor of it. What happens is, he wins office, Barry Goldwater loses office, but there was a senate, a Republican senate, that pushed the votes to the president’s desk. It was the Democrats who were against Civil Rights legislation. So because President Lyndon B. Johnson was a Democrat, black America assumed the Democrats were for it” . . .

He went on to say that if blacks did vote for the GOP would force both parties to make black concerns seriously.

“Black folks in America are telling one party, ‘We don’t give a damn about you.’ They’re telling the other party ‘You’ve got our vote.’ Therefore, you have labeled yourself ‘disenfranchised’ because one party knows they’ve got you under their thumb. The other party knows they’ll never get you and nobody comes to address your interest.” (Read more from “ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith: Every Black Person Should Vote Republican for One Election” HERE)

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