Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Worldwide Leader In Racism, Part Two: Stephen A Smith needs to be fired, but it's clear ESPN won't.

And, once again, Stephen A. Smith has to open his fat trap and show everyone what ESPN really stands for these days, as it struggles to remain solvent in the face of overpaid contracts and rapidly shrinking audiences:



He has "apologized".

Stephen A. Smith should be CANCELLED.

Fired.

Blackballed.

And, frankly, ESPN is getting to the point they need to go with.

I understand the general recalcitrance to "flipping the table", etc.

But it's no coincidence, to me, that we have now have at least two MAJOR racist incidents exposed at ESPN in the last ten days or so.

And Smith's bleating basically exposes a lot of why:

ESPN has vastly overpaid for it's contracts, across the board.

They are bleeding viewers hardcore.

The fact is that ESPN is falling off that tightrope -- White America is sick of foreigners dominating sports, and is turning off the tube in massive numbers.  It is no secret that ESPN, for YEARS, has been teetering on the edge of extinction.

It is already known that NBC Sports Network is done after the Olympics, shutting down for good at the end of 2021.  That is almost certainly the end of the #2 sports network, behind ESPN, in the United States.

Why?  White America doesn't want to watch sports anymore in the face of obvious advantages that foreign and non-Caucasian players have.  Is it any secret that Ohtani is as good as he is because he was NOT raised in a White American culture of entitlement and all that stuff?

Yeah, I'll go there -- fucking sue and cancel me.  One of the big reasons White America is turning away from sports in droves is that it does not like the reality that foreign/"other" players routinely kick Caucasian ass all over the sporting fields.

It's going to be a major story about the US Olympic Team and it's TV ratings in Tokyo for whatever will pass for whatever Games are able to complete this year, for one.

It's going to be a major story as to whether ESPN can survive, in anything close to present form -- it's one factor of several, but it may be the final nail in the coffin.

But, for now, someone needs to remove that blowhard from television.

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