Exactly, on all counts.Brando70 wrote:The guy that was fired was 28, and honestly, I believe it was a mistake. It's an old ethnic slur and I could see someone not knowing it. I can't see someone knowingly doing this unless they are trying to get fired.JRod wrote:I wonder how so many people missed this or thought this was okay. Or did some a-hole who hated Lin get to do the graphic. Mind-boggling in the age of over sensitivity that stuff like this gets missed.
Paul, you know the inside of sports organizations and media better than anyone, how does this get through in this age?
It should have been caught, but I really don't think it was intentional. On top of that, copy editing is fast becoming a lost art in the age of insta-journalism.
We’re reaching a cultural intersection in the United States at which there are two distinct groups: Those raised with political correctness and those raised without it. It’s possible that a kid 30 or younger didn’t even know the derogatory meaning of the word “chink” because he or she never heard it. Those are the politically correct times in which we live. But the paymasters and bosses at ESPN grew up in my era, when words like that were used all the time. And they’re the ones facing pressure from advertisers to fix this blight.
I was sad to see ESPN suspend announcer Max Bretos for 30 days for using the “chink in the armor” phrase on ESPNEWS when conducting an interview with an NBA analyst about Lin. Max is a good announcer – I LOVED him on Fox Soccer Channel throughout the 2000s. Plus his wife is Asian, for Christ’s sake! There’s no way he was using “chink” as a slur. It was a mental slip.
That mistake warranted punishment. But 30 days? That’s ridiculous. Overkill.
Sadly, we live in a world in which mistakes immediately are judged as veiled or direct slurs. Plus, how the hell is society supposed to eliminate racism when it can't even discuss race -- or make a mistake with a racial term -- without being accused of overt racism?
Norman Lear, where are you when we need you?
