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October 02, 2003
Limbaugh Out
ESPN is reporting that Rush Limbaugh has resigned from Sunday NFL Countdown. Details to follow. UPDATE: Here's the statement from Limbaugh and ESPN that was issued a few minutes ago: In the wake of his controversial statements regarding Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb, Rush Limbaugh has resigned from his position on ESPN's NFL pregame show. ESPN has accepted the resignation. More to come. ANOTHER UPDATE: Drudge is reporting that tomorrow is going to be the roughest day in Limbaugh's life, as the NY Daily News is prepared to front a piece on Limbaugh and prescription drug abuse. Odd timing to say the least. EARLY MORNING UPDATE: Here's the NY Daily News piece Drudge mentioned. It's the only one on that topic I'll link to, but I will leave you with this one thought: had the McNabb comment been the only item rattling around in the media echo chamber, there's little doubt Limbaugh would be back Sunday on NFL Countdown. But with this added story, ESPN executives figured they had to cut bait. Here's a new wrinkle that wasn't reported in the initial ESPN statement: ESPN, in a statement released earlier today, said: "Although Mr. Limbaugh today stated that his comments had 'no racist intent whatsoever,' we have communicated to Mr. Limbaugh that his comments were insensitive and inappropriate. Throughout his career, he has been consistent in his criticism of the media's coverage of a myriad of issues." Here are some links to other pieces referring to the end of Limbaugh's ESPN gig. The Rush Limbaugh era is over at ESPN. It was exactly what any thinking person knew it would be: nasty, brutish and short. It goosed ratings for "Sunday NFL Countdown" by 10 percent while offending legions of viewers, not just with Limbaugh's right-wing politics but with his ignorance about the game and its players. Steven Smith, Philadelphia Inquirer: If there was any truth to Limbaugh's idiotic assertion that the present-day media are pushing for a black quarterback to be successful, coach Bill Cowher would not have been able to push Kordell Stewart out of Pittsburgh. Aaron Brooks would be a star in New Orleans, Jeff Blake would be something other than an NFL vagabond, and there would be no need to mention Randy Moss every time Daunte Culpepper takes a deep breath. THEY GIVE YOU SportsCenter. They inflict on you Dennis Miller. They give you ESPN Classic. They inflict on you Rush Limbaugh. It makes you wonder if the people who dream up programming up there in the wilds of Connecticut took marketing seminars from the creators of New Coke or the geniuses who dreamed up all those McDonald’s sandwiches that even starving raccoons wouldn’t eat. Phil Sheridan, Philadelphia Inquirer: The sick thing is, this is exactly what ESPN had in mind when the all-sports network hired veteran provocateur Rush Limbaugh for its Sunday NFL pregame show. You can imagine the meeting. The ESPN bigwigs must have needed drool cups to handle the runoff when they discussed the controversy Limbaugh would generate. Here's the one quote I didn't link to yesterday that should have made it clear it was over from Limbaugh, from Joe Browne, NFL executive in charge of broadcasting and communications: "ESPN knew what they were getting when they hired Rush Limbaugh. ESPN selects its on-air talent, not the NFL." More later, if I have time. Trackback PingsTrackBack URL for this entry: Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Limbaugh Out:
» The great Limbaugh implosion from Off the Kuff Tracked on October 2, 2003 03:19 PM CommentsThis opinion has caused discomfort to the crew, which I regret. I think maybe some of the members of the crew did stand up for Donovan after all. Good for them. Good for football, too. Tom Posted by: at October 2, 2003 12:28 AM Limbaugh crossed over the tracks into the a different world...the sports world...and every sportswriter was just waiting for him to slip up. It was like blood in the water and he was chum. ESPN knew what they were getting into and they love it. The ratings are up 10% and Rush is just one of their little experiments to get some hype. How about their version of "A Season on the Brink"?Does the name Jay Mohr ring a bell? How about the return of Jim Rome? How about the show everyone in the NFL loves: Playmakers. Limbaugh takes the fall and ESPN moves on for the next ringer to keep the ratings up. Posted by: at October 2, 2003 09:39 AM Post a commentThanks for signing in, . (If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.) |