Fair or Foul: ESPN investigates golf club inventor, exposes her as transgender. she commits dat

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Matt-
Matt- Members Posts: 21,585 ✭✭✭✭✭
original story

http://grantland.com/features/a-mysterious-physicist-golf-club-dr-v/


summary
A story published by Grantland last week has captured the attention of the online journalism and LGBT communities, and it has sparked debate about the roles of writers, reporters and editors, and the media’s treatment of transgender people.

Last week, Grantland, a subsidiary website of ESPN founded and overseen by Bill Simmons, published a long feature about the story of a special golf putter. The feature told the story of the putter and the person behind it, and it exposed the inventor as a liar who made many false claims about her background. The story also outed the founder of the putter as a transgender. The woman who invented the putter committed suicide in October, likely at least in part because of the writer digging into her personal background against her wishes, and outing her to one of her top investors.

Dr. Essay Anne Vanderbilt — known in the article as “Dr. V” — created a putter called the Oracle GX1 (seen at the top). The putter seemed to produce great results for those who used it. It was used by professional golfer Aaron Baddeley, and golf commentator Gary McCord was a huge fan of it and gave it tons of publicity. The writer of the story came across the putter while watching videos online and decided to look into it.

As writer Caleb Hannan began investigating the story of the putter, one of the first things the inventor — Dr. V — made clear to him was that he could only write about the putter and not the person who invented it — if he chose to write a story. What we soon come to find out is that Dr. V is somewhat of a mad scientist who crafts weird emails using lots of big words. Hannan begins investigating her background and finds many holes in her story, most notably that she did not attend MIT or Penn’s business school as she said she did.

That’s when the big ethical debate comes into play.

Hannan shares that the biggest hole in Dr. V’s story, or the reason why there are few records of her, is because she is a transgender.


Hannan apparently let Dr. V know that he had found out about her past — something she obviously wanted to keep a secret — and she responded by telling him he was about to commit a hate crime. She also wanted him to sign non-disclosure agreements about her past, which he did not.

Hannan then writes that he learned Dr. V committed suicide after receiving a phone call from one of her relatives whom he had contacted in his quest to learn about her past life.

The story was published last Wednesday and initially praised for being an interesting read, but then I started to see a lot of buzz surroundin it on Saturday. People were questioning Grantland’s actions and sensationalizing by saying that Grantland had caused a transgender person to commit suicide.

ESPN issued the following statement about the article to Sports Illustrated’s Richard Deitsch, who published their statement on Sunday night:

“We understand and appreciate the wide range of thoughtful reaction this story has generated and to the family and friends of Essay Anne Vanderbilt, we express our deepest condolences. We will use the constructive feedback to continue our ongoing dialogue on these important and sensitive topics. Ours is a company that values the LGBT community internally and in our storytelling, and we will all learn from this.”

Grantland founder and editor-in-chief Bill Simmons published a letter on Monday to apologize for the article. He says that he believes their biggest mistake was not consulting with a transgender person to gain that perspective. Having a transgender person read it would have helped give them ways to improve the piece or suggest that they not run it, Simmons believes. He also believes one of the biggest criticisms is the way the piece seemingly glosses over Dr. V’s suicide at the end without reflecting on it.

Christina Kahrl, who covers baseball for ESPN and is also a transgender, also published an opinion piece explaining where she thinks Grantland went wrong. Kahrl offers the transgender perspective and lambastes Grantland for outing Dr. V against her wishes. She emphasizes that it’s up to the transgender person to decide who does and who doesn’t know about their past.

On a similar note, Cyd Zeigler at OutSports explains how he believes ESPN and Grantland failed the transgender community.

There are so many layers to this debate it’s hard to say what is right and what is wrong. But here’s how I feel.

I felt that the story was really interesting and a good overall read. I was captured by the way it was written and wanted to find out more about the mysterious person. I found myself pondering a question posed by the writer and wondering if that had really become what the story was about: was the magic of the putter in its construction or the story the inventor sold? How much of it is a mental placebo effect? I thought that had become the real question to emerge from the story.

In the end, I’d like to think that Grantland could have exposed Dr. V as a fraud who lied about her credentials and left out the part about her being transgender. But had we known that Dr. V eventually committed suicide, and that there were many things about her past that did not add up, I feel like we would have been left feeling incomplete and with many questions about “why?”


http://larrybrownsports.com/media/grantland-bill-simmons-apologizes-dr-vs-magical-putter-story-transgender-inventor/217343

Grantland's rationale for publishing the story

http://grantland.com/features/the-dr-v-story-a-letter-from-the-editor/
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Comments

  • twatgetta
    twatgetta Members Posts: 6,705 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Sydney Starr is somewhere cryin' his eyes out.
  • Bussy_Getta
    Bussy_Getta Members Posts: 37,679 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    So is he gonna go to jail?
    I'm interested since his actions led up to her death.
  • KingFreeman
    KingFreeman Members Posts: 13,731 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Hope his or her or whatever fam sues the ? out of them tho. They didn't have to expose that person they wanted to. Bill Simmons been a ? ? so I'm not surprised someone working under him would do some sour ? like that.
  • Matt-
    Matt- Members Posts: 21,585 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    s.free wrote: »
    Hope his or her or whatever fam sues the ? out of them tho. They didn't have to expose that person they wanted to. Bill Simmons been a ? ? so I'm not surprised someone working under him would do some sour ? like that.

    if part of the story is about the inventor, and that inventor had discrapancies and lies in "her" story, then certainly its fair game to include the part about the person hiding their gender orientation whatever that means
  • KingFreeman
    KingFreeman Members Posts: 13,731 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    The credentials? OK. Why would you want to destroy somebody tho?
  • Recaptimus_Prime360
    Recaptimus_Prime360 Members Posts: 64,801 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    s.free wrote: »
    The credentials? OK. Why would you want to destroy somebody tho?


    Why hide what you became? What was the point of "switching" if all you gonna do is lie about it?
  • mryounggun
    mryounggun Members Posts: 13,451 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    s.free wrote: »
    Hope his or her or whatever fam sues the ? out of them tho. They didn't have to expose that person they wanted to. Bill Simmons been a ? ? so I'm not surprised someone working under him would do some sour ? like that.

    Dunno give a ? about golf and don't really know much about this story. But I can say that the bolded is undeniable fact. He seems like the epitome of a ? ? .
  • KingFreeman
    KingFreeman Members Posts: 13,731 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    darkone360 wrote: »
    s.free wrote: »
    The credentials? OK. Why would you want to destroy somebody tho?

    Why hide what you became? What was the point of "switching" if all you gonna do is lie about it?

    Why is that any of YOUR business or MINE? Cause he created a putter?
  • Matt-
    Matt- Members Posts: 21,585 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    s.free wrote: »
    The credentials? OK. Why would you want to destroy somebody tho?

    why would identifying someone as transgender destroy that person? if there are financial consequences to people finding out (as their was in this case b/c the author outed her to one of her financial investors) then so be it, but you should still be confident enough in who you are to not ? yourself if people find out.
  • ItzGravitation
    ItzGravitation Members Posts: 7,205
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    s.free wrote: »
    ? that gotta do with a putter tho?

  • jono
    jono Members Posts: 30,280 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Ironically, the inventor committing suicide made this a bigger story than it would have been otherwise...nobody cares about golf or the putter.
  • Sour-Cream
    Sour-Cream Members Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    All the ? in the world can ? themselves and not a ? will be given.
  • Recaptimus_Prime360
    Recaptimus_Prime360 Members Posts: 64,801 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    s.free wrote: »
    darkone360 wrote: »
    s.free wrote: »
    The credentials? OK. Why would you want to destroy somebody tho?

    Why hide what you became? What was the point of "switching" if all you gonna do is lie about it?

    Why is that any of YOUR business or MINE? Cause he created a putter?



    Well if he/she lied about the other stuff, you seriously think that part wouldn't be discovered?
  • konceptjones
    konceptjones Guests, Members, Writer, Content Producer Posts: 13,139 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Matt- wrote: »
    s.free wrote: »
    Hope his or her or whatever fam sues the ? out of them tho. They didn't have to expose that person they wanted to. Bill Simmons been a ? ? so I'm not surprised someone working under him would do some sour ? like that.

    if part of the story is about the inventor, and that inventor had discrapancies and lies in "her" story, then certainly its fair game to include the part about the person hiding their gender orientation whatever that means

    ^^^ this.

    Journalists are supposed to be unbiased and publish the facts.

    Fact: This person was born a man.
    Fact: This person lied about his credentials.

    Fact: The journalist did nothing wrong.

    To NOT report on it would have shown bias.

    The story was about a putter, not its sexuality, or sex at birth. What does either one of those things have to do with golf?

    This is part of investigative journalism. The person's true sex was just one of many lies the journalist uncovered during the course of investigation for this story.
  • 7figz
    7figz Members Posts: 15,294 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited January 2014
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    Fair.

    Since when was it legally required to keep somebody else's secrets - ? ? / not ?
  • Matt-
    Matt- Members Posts: 21,585 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    the story was about the invention and the inventor...as the author began gathering information about the creator, there were some discrapancies and lies that were discovered. After digging deeper, it was realized the creator was hiding their gender identity. if part of the story is to cover the inventor, then its pretty easy to understand how it all ties in together and how it's relevant to the story
  • KingFreeman
    KingFreeman Members Posts: 13,731 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Matt- wrote: »
    s.free wrote: »
    The credentials? OK. Why would you want to destroy somebody tho?

    why would identifying someone as transgender destroy that person? if there are financial consequences to people finding out (as their was in this case b/c the author outed her to one of her financial investors) then so be it, but you should still be confident enough in who you are to not ? yourself if people find out.

    I agree with you. That isn't for us or the writer to decide tho. The writer was only given permission to write the article about the putter and not the person this was an agreement that has been made clear. It was unethical from jump.
  • jono
    jono Members Posts: 30,280 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    And the "lies" of the creator are irrelevant to the story it seems. He started out writing a very boring story about a golf took and decided to spice it up and turn it into an exposé on the inventor.

    How does these lies sell the product? That is the question I ask, to me it looks like people would be offended about somebody lying about their educational background or even their gender if they supported the product based on that...but this isn't a product based on particular gender or educational backgrounds it's based on the tool's performance or "feel" it gives the player.

    Does this person lying or the lies make the tool less efficient or inferior in some way?
  • KingFreeman
    KingFreeman Members Posts: 13,731 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Matt- wrote: »
    the story was about the invention and the inventor...as the author began gathering information about the creator, there were some discrapancies and lies that were discovered. After digging deeper, it was realized the creator was hiding their gender identity. if part of the story is to cover the inventor, then its pretty easy to understand how it all ties in together and how it's relevant to the story

    It says clearly in your first post the story was only supposed to be about the invention and NOT the inventor. That was the agreement made for the inventor to talk about the invention.
  • dc's teflondon
    dc's teflondon Members Posts: 5,895 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    As writer Caleb Hannan began investigating the story of the putter, one of the first things the inventor — Dr. V — made clear to him was that he could only write about the putter and not the person who invented it — if he chose to write a story. What we soon come to find out is that Dr. V is somewhat of a mad scientist who crafts weird emails using lots of big words. Hannan begins investigating her background and finds many holes in her story, most notably that she did not attend MIT or Penn’s business school as she said she did.
  • Matt-
    Matt- Members Posts: 21,585 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    s.free wrote: »
    Matt- wrote: »
    s.free wrote: »
    The credentials? OK. Why would you want to destroy somebody tho?

    why would identifying someone as transgender destroy that person? if there are financial consequences to people finding out (as their was in this case b/c the author outed her to one of her financial investors) then so be it, but you should still be confident enough in who you are to not ? yourself if people find out.

    I agree with you. That isn't for us or the writer to decide tho. The writer was only given permission to write the article about the putter and not the person this was an agreement that has been made clear. It was unethical from jump.

    no the bosses greenlighted the project, knowing from the jump it was about both the invention and inventor. In fact, the story wasn't even ready for publication until the bosses had more info about the inventor

    On Wednesday morning, we posted a well-written feature by Caleb Hannan about an inventor named Essay Anne Vanderbilt, a.k.a. “Dr. V.” Caleb reported the piece for seven solid months. Back in April, he had become enamored of an infomercial for a magical putter, wanted to learn more about it, started digging and pitched the piece. Could there really be a “magical” putter? And what was up with the mysterious lady who invented it?



    I remember Rafe forwarding me one of Caleb’s early email exchanges with Dr. V — it might have even been the first one — and being spellbound by her eccentric language. I had never read anything like it. She was the perfect character for a quirky feature about a quirky piece of sports equipment. We first reached the “Is it worth it?” point with Caleb’s piece in September, after Caleb turned in a rollicking draft that included a number of twists and turns. The story had no ending because Dr. V wouldn’t talk to him anymore. We never seriously considered running his piece, at least in that version’s form.

    Our decision: Sorry, Caleb, you need to keep reporting this one. It’s not there.

    You know what happened next: One last correspondence between Caleb and Dr. V in September, the one that included her threat and the “hate crime” accusation (both covered in the piece that eventually ran). To be clear, Caleb only interacted with her a handful of times. He never, at any time, threatened to out her on Grantland. He was reporting a story and verifying discrepancy issues with her background. That’s it. Just finding out facts and asking questions. This is what reporters do. She had been selling a “magical” putter by touting credentials that didn’t exist. Just about everything she had told Caleb, at every point of his reporting process, turned out not to be true. There was no hounding. There was no badgering. It just didn’t happen that way.