H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

From conscience to platforming Trump: inside the slow death of ‘woke’ ESPN

about 3 hours ago
A picture


“What happened to the Redskins, by the way?” Donald Trump asked in an interview on the Pat McAfee Show that notably did not stick to sports.His call-in appearance on Tuesday’s program to mark Veterans Day was meant to be a major coup for ESPN, the first time Trump had been interviewed on the network as a sitting president.But viewers could have just as easily been mistaken into believing they were watching Fox News.Trump took his usual shots at Joe Biden, claimed credit for the Department for Veteran Affairs’ high approval ratings and declared victory over the Democrats in a government shut down that dragged on for a depressing 43 days.Rather than push back against the political self-promotion, McAfee cheered Trump on before opening the floor to his lackeys to ask him which NFL coach would make a great president.

It was all delivered live from South Carolina’s Parris Island, the US’s oldest Marine depot, which gave McAfee further excuse to goad the commander-in-chief into barking “oorah” – a Marine battle cry that the recruits present were duty bound to respond to in kind.The only thing missing from the jingoistic scene was a monument to ESPN’s fallen integrity.There was a time when right-wing critics who saw ESPN as liberal leaning had a point.Jemele Hill and Michael Smith, both unapologetically progressive, anchored SportsCenter on weekday evenings.Hill and Smith opening the show with a homage to the Black TV touchstone A Different World was perhaps “woke” ESPN’s apex.

But as Trump’s first administration wore on – and the president and his allies fired potshots at the sports world – ESPN slowly adopted a blinkered focus on sports as partisan politics bled over the white lines.Under network president Jimmy Pitaro and Bob Iger, the two-term CEO of ESPN parent company Disney, the self-styled “worldwide leader” in sports broadcasting discouraged employees from tiptoeing into areas where sports and politics intersect – Hill was moved off SportsCenter after attacking Trump on social media and eventually left the company.But after the Fox and Friends-like indulgence of Trump this week, ESPN effectively killed its “woke” era once and for all.The dramatic tone shift comes amid Trump’s deeper encroachments into the world of sports: this year he has turned up at the Super Bowl, the Daytona 500, the US Open men’s final and the Ryder Cup to mixed reactions.Trump has also announced plans for a live UFC event at the White House on his birthday after months of fantasizing about hosting a card on the South Lawn to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.

And Trump reappeared at the Washington Commanders’ NFL game last Sunday in the wake of a report that he wants the team to name their new stadium after him,In fact Trump brought this up, unprompted, during a Fox Sports interview at half-time of Sunday’s game,“That’s what I’m involved in,” he said of the stadium naming plan,“We’re getting all the approvals and everything else,You have a wonderful owner, Josh [Harris] and his group.

You’re gonna see some very good things.”You can’t really blame Fox Sports for submitting to Trump given how prominent he was on Fox’s family of networks even before he first became president.It wasn’t a surprise when announcers Kenny Albert and Jonathan Vilma did not ask Trump about the chorus of boos that greeted him when he appeared on the stadium’s video screens.But ESPN? There are valid arguments around whether a sports network should have political leanings one way or another.But a serious network should interrogate stories, whether the protagonists are liberal or conservatives.

ESPN reporters broke the story about Trump’s potential stadium dedication and couldn’t even get him to address the report on their own network when he appeared with McAfee, who defended his decision to have Trump on the show by saying he had extended an invitation to Barack Obama too (who he no doubt would have voted for three times).So it goes when they have McAfee, a loutish former NFL punter who doesn’t shy from slamming the network that made him one of its most prominent faces, doing a job that once was reserved for the likes of Bob Ley, Keith Olbermann and other pillars who once made ESPN a sports journalism paragon.They certainly would have challenged Trump’s opening reference to the Washington football team’s racist former nickname.“I’m only joining you because I hear you say very nice things about me from your very large audience,” Trump told McAfee.“I don’t know how much you know about me,” McAfee said, reaching for empathy.

“I feel very similar about how I treat people and operate people, Mr President,”The past 15 years has seen ESPN abandon fan-focused roots – venerating great achievements, contextualizing standout figures, interrogating sport’s larger role in society – to become just another talking shop,No personality brings on the tinnitus quite like Stephen A Smith, who equates himself with the biggest names in the sports he covers unironically,Smith also serves up reheated takes on respectability politics, most recently tut-tutting congresswoman Jasmine Crockett for demeaning her station by using “street verbiage”, the kind of dog whistling you’d expect from a rightwing shock jock,Sign up to Sport in FocusSign up to Sport in Focusafter newsletter promotionSmith and McAfee represent a significant portion of ESPN’s salary cap; to make space for their multimillion-dollar contracts (Smith just signed a $105m deal in March), ESPN did not hesitate to part ways with a number of broadcasters who upheld the company’s once high standards of scrutiny.

Not least are critical thinkers Bomani Jones and Pablo Torre, who has gone on to break several significant stories on his own podcast since leaving ESPN.The network isn’t alone in getting less political, athletes themselves – apart from Maga stalwarts like Harrison Butker and Nick Bosa – seem reluctant to speak up about social issues, a stark contrast to Trump’s first term when stars such as LeBron James and Stephen Curry seemed to advocate on a weekly basis.All of this comes as ESPN finds itself struggling to retain its media primacy at a time when it no longer has a monopoly on sports eyeballs, and only has itself to blame for undermining 46 years of trust and goodwill among viewers predisposed to thinking of ESPN personalities as family.The past few weeks alone have seen the network fumble coverage of federal gambling investigations in the NBA and MLB while flogging its online sports book, and draw out a dispute with YouTubeTV that has kept the channel off the platform in the middle of the NFL and college football seasons.That last blunder is reportedly costing ESPN $5m a day in addition to the substantial ratings losses that affect its advertising revenue and subscriber engagement.

Digital savvy TV viewers who had adapted to juggling various streaming apps to watch their favorite sporting events aren’t much inclined to go along with ESPN this time, much less sign on to its ridiculous petition entreating fans to help “end the blackout” as the FCC’s mafia-coded commissioner Brandon Carr applies pressure on both parties,(“People should have the right to watch the programming they paid for – “including football,” he tweeted in response to YouTube TV offering a $20 credit to inconvenienced subscribers,) Instead of signing up for Disney+ or the ESPN app, many ESPN viewers have gone back to watching pirated broadcasts – the very crime against fair play that streaming was supposed to disincentivize,Besides, it’s not like ESPN viewers don’t have other options,They can always get highlights on social media, or listen to podcasts from former ESPN standouts like Jones and Torre.

Before The Office was a universal reference point in US culture, ESPN was the one sending up workplace culture with its This Is SportsCenter ad campaign depicting star athletes and scampish team mascots as genuine contributors to a company that dearly loved the panoply of sports it covered.But as long as it serves as a platform for Trump’s vengeful politics, downplays the conflicts that inevitably come about when sports and politics intersect, and betrays the loyal viewers who made it an American institution, ESPN isn’t SportsCenter.It’s state TV.
societySee all
A picture

Steve Reed convenes Tower Hamlets envoys as concerns over council persist

The communities secretary, Steve Reed, has called a meeting with officials overseeing the running of Tower Hamlets council as concerns about the governance of the east London authority continue.Envoys were sent to Tower Hamlets after a team of government-commissioned inspectors published a report last November that uncovered a “toxic” and secretive culture dominated by the inner circle of the local mayor, Lutfur Rahman.It is understood Reed plans to meet the envoys to discuss their work so far, and to find out whether they think there has been sufficient change in the council and what else could be done.Rahman, a former Labour leader of the council, first became mayor in 2010 as an independent. He was removed from office in 2015 and banned for five years from standing for mayor after an election commissioner found him guilty of electoral fraud

about 19 hours ago
A picture

‘Are you building communities or just houses?’: human cost of Birmingham council’s plans for Druids Heath estate

Xylia Legonas was just a few years off fully repaying her mortgage and had just finished refurbishing her house after a fire when someone knocked on her door in 2023 and asked if she was aware of the Druids Heath regeneration project.“The first thing I thought: ‘Don’t tell me you’re going to knock my house down’,” she recalled. “He basically said yes and I thought: ‘What am I going to do? Where am I going to go?’”After years of discussions, councillors have now approved planning permission to knock down most of Druids Heath, a postwar housing estate on the southern edge of Birmingham, to create higher density housing.In total, 1,800 homes will be demolished to make way for 3,500 new ones, 400 (11%) of which will be designated as affordable, according to the planning documents – 800 fewer than there are now.This was the main point of contention at the planning committee meeting in which dozens of Druids Heath residents crammed into the room and adjoining corridor to voice their anger – shouts of “these are our homes” and “it’s not enough” could be heard throughout

about 22 hours ago
A picture

Ultra-processed foods may help explain rising bowel cancer in under-50s, study suggests

Women under 50 who have a diet high in ultra-processed foods (UPFs) stand a greater risk of having abnormal growths in their bowel that can lead to cancer, research suggests.Ultra-processed foods are typically defined as industrially produced products that are often ready-to-eat, contain little in the way of whole foods, fibre and vitamins, and are typically high in saturated fat, sugar, salt and food additives.While the concept is not without controversy, not least around whether all UPFs are unhealthy, studies have suggested such foods are associated with a host of health problems, from higher risk of heart disease to early death.Now researchers say women who have a greater intake of UPFs have a greater risk of the early onset of a common type of bowel polyp known as conventional adenomas.Dr Andrew Chan, the lead author of the study based at Massachusetts General hospital in the US, said the study was prompted by an effort to understand what was driving rising rates of bowel cancer in younger people

about 22 hours ago
A picture

Council staff visited wrong address day before Sara Sharif’s murder, review finds

Services in Surrey failed to identify that Sara Sharif was at risk of abuse, did not question unexplained bruising, and staff members visited the wrong address the day before her murder, a safeguarding review has found.Sara, 10, was killed by her father, Urfan Sharif, and her stepmother, Beinash Batool, in August 2023 after years of escalating brutality that left her with bruises, burns, human bite marks and at least 25 fractures.She was found dead in a bunk bed at the family home after her father fled to Pakistan, leaving a handwritten note saying he had “lost it”.A child safeguarding practice review, commissioned after Sara’s murder, revealed that on 7 August, the day before Sara was killed, the council’s home education team attempted to carry out a home visit but went to the family’s old address.The mistake was spotted when staff returned to the office, but a rescheduled visit wasn’t due to take place until September

1 day ago
A picture

The rapid rise of renters in their 60s: ‘I hate the idea of house-sharing – but I have no choice’

It is often assumed that people of retirement age will no longer have housing costs to cover. But for a significant and growing group, this is far from the caseNow that she is retired, Deborah Herring’s days are hers to fill – usually with leisurely walks, museums and trips to the theatre. But she still manages to spare a thought for her ex-colleagues at the private boarding school where she taught religious studies for 14 years. “In their nice, expensive Oxfordshire village, I think they’d be frankly horrified about my situation,” she says with a laugh.Horrified that a few weeks ago she came home to find two strangers asleep on her sofa; horrified that she has to put up with an overflowing litter tray belonging to a cat that isn’t hers; above all, horrified that at the age of 65, she is about to leave a two-bedroom flatshare to move into a four-bedroom one where she will “probably be living with people whose combined age is less than my own”

1 day ago
A picture

Deaths linked to antibiotic-resistant superbugs rose 17% in England in 2024

The number of deaths linked to superbugs that do not respond to frontline antibiotics increased by 17% in England last year, according to official figures that raise concerns about the ongoing increase in antimicrobial resistance.The figures, released by the UK Health Security Agency, also revealed a large rise in private prescriptions for antibiotics, with 22% dispensed through the private sector in 2024.The increase in private prescribing is partly explained by the Pharmacy First scheme, a flagship policy of Rishi Sunak’s government that allows patients to be prescribed antibiotics for common illnesses without seeing a GP, raising questions about whether the shift in prescribing patterns risks contributing to the rise in resistance.“Antibiotic resistance is one of the greatest health threats we face,” said the UKHSA’s chief executive, Prof Susan Hopkins. “More people than ever are acquiring infections that cannot be effectively treated by antibiotics

1 day ago
cultureSee all
A picture

Old is M Night Shyamalan at his best: ambitious, abrasive and surprisingly poignant

3 days ago
A picture

‘Harlem has always been evolving’: inside the Studio Museum’s $160m new home

3 days ago
A picture

‘Most of it was the conga preset on Prince’s drum machine’: how Fine Young Cannibals made She Drives Me Crazy

4 days ago
A picture

Groundbreaking British Museum show set to challenge samurai myths

5 days ago
A picture

Paul Kelly: ‘Imagine by John Lennon is probably one of the worst songs ever written. I can’t stand it’

6 days ago
A picture

The Guide #216: Celebrity Traitors was a watercooler-moment smash-hit – but how long will audiences stay faithful?

6 days ago