Colin Kaepernick refuses “to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses Black people”...

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  • D. Morgan
    D. Morgan Members Posts: 11,662 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    kid fukked up on this one.

    ? musta needed money

    That chump probably didn't even get paid for that ?
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    https://www.si.com/nfl/2017/09/06/nfl-tv-broadcasters-anthem-protests-colin-kaepernick?utm_campaign=themmqb&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_medium=social
    How NFL TV Broadcasters Plan to Cover the Anthem Protests

    Tim Corrigan knew what it meant as soon as it happened. The longtime ESPN producer was sitting in a production truck on the ground floor of FirstEnergy Stadium when he witnessed through a bank of television monitors that a group of close to a dozen Cleveland Browns players had chosen to take a knee during the national anthem before the Browns-Giants preseason game on Aug 21. At the time, Corrigan was serving as the rehearsal-game producer for Beth Mowins and Rex Ryan, who were calling the game as practice for a later assignment as Sean McDonough and Jon Gruden described the action for a nationally televised audience a few broadcast booths down in the press box. As soon as he saw it, Corrigan let Mowins and Ryan know what it meant. “Guys, “Corrigan said, “this is going to be a huge story on opening week.”

    This Sunday the NFL’s broadcast networks will be faced with significant editorial choices before kickoff. It has become clear that a number of players across the NFL plan to either kneel or make some kind of statement when the national anthem plays. The MMQB spoke with executives at CBS, ESPN, Fox and NBC for insight and perspective on how they planned to cover any protest. Uniformly, they agreed that it was a news story to cover. How much each network covers the protest will vary.

    “We will document what is on the field just as we did last year,” said CBS Sports Chairman Sean McManus. “We don’t show the national anthem for most of our games, but we have instructed our producers and directors to scan the sidelines, and if something is going on that we think deserves coverage, they are free to show it. Week 1, I think it will be a story. If it is still being done Week 4, 5 or 6, I’m not sure it still is a story. We will make that decision as the season goes on.”

    “It is an interesting and divisive topic,” said Richie Zyontz, the lead producer for Fox Sports on Joe Buck and Troy Aikman’s NFL broadcast. “I discussed privately with colleagues at our Fox NFL meetings, and opinions are split: Some feel it has no place in the broadcast; others feel it’s part of the game story. Our boss Eric Shanks, similar to last season, has asked us to acknowledge what our cameras see without dwelling on it, and I totally agree. I think we should document what transpires during the national anthem on both sidelines. I don’t think it would be right to show a single player without the context of his teammates and the other sideline. Every game account and every radio call-in show will be rife with description and discussion on Monday regarding the anthem so to ignore it would be negligent.”

    Said Fred Gaudelli, the executive producer of NBC’s Sunday Night Football, “We would definitely show any player who is protesting, no question about that. If it happens on Sunday night, we would probably come out of the pre-kick break and document that so-and-so decided to protest. I don’t want to get into—and I don’t think Al [Michaels] and Cris [Collinsworth] want to get into—any long elaboration, because it can become an endless discussion. But as it relates to being at a football game, you have to show it and document it, and from there you move on to football. People are protesting, and some of these guys are star players.”

    “I think we all expect something to happen,” said ESPN’s Corrigan, who will produce the late game, Chargers at Broncos, for the opening week Monday Night Football doubleheader. “You have to be careful, though. You don’t want to lead people in a path of conversation that is not the right conversation. You have to be reactive to what you see. What I mean by that is if nobody does anything in Denver, then I don’t know why we would engage. Part of it is what happens in front of us. We are reporting on news in front of us if something happens. Then we would discuss with Rex [Ryan, who will call the game with Mowins] if he has an opinion on it and how he dealt with it on his teams.”

    The announcers—and particularly the sideline reporters who will have a first-hand account of what is being done—will be key in terms of how long the coverage goes and the depth of the coverage.

    “Last year I had [produced] the [opening week] Niners-Rams game, and we got there in time for the anthem because the early game had finished,” Corrigan said. “We had Lindsay Czarniak positioned down on the field so she could observe things that you can’t see from the booth or the television, which includes reaction from fans or players. As a producer I am thinking, What aren’t we seeing? What aren’t we hearing? Are there little moments going on that we can report on?”

    Clearly, every NFL rights-holder is reticent to go too deep on protest discussions during a game broadcast, though TV executives swear up and down that their coverage of the issue is not dictated by the NFL. Last week McManus became the first sports television network president to say publicly that he believed national anthem protests last season were a factor in the decline of NFL ratings. He was emphatic, however, that it was merely a factor and not the cause.

    “We don’t tell our announcers what to say,” McManus said. “We encourage our announcers to express their opinion. If they have an opinion or thought on this, they are free to express it. But I have said we are basically there to broadcast a football game and not get involved in political or social issues. I don’t think you will see a lot of commentary on the part of our commentary teams.”

    McManus linking the anthem to any kind of ratings decrease runs counter to public declarations from Fox Sports executives and other execs that the protests had any impact. When I asked whether the anthem protests had an impact on declining NFL ratings last year, Gaudelli said, “If you had a list of items that affected the ratings last year, I’m not sure it cracks the top 90 percent.”

    Every executive The MMQB spoke with believed the story would recede as the season moved along. “There will be a lot of curiosity early in the season as to what types of protest statements we might see,” Zyontz said. “I suspect the topic and the way television reacts will cool off as season progresses.”

    Perhaps so, but keep in mind how far the protest has come from Colin Kaepernick simply taking a knee. In Week 3 of the preseason, there were at least six games at which a player displayed a sign of protest of some kind during the anthem. Nobody knows where this is ultimately going, including the football-airing networks.
  • marc123
    marc123 Members Posts: 16,999 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Has kid from kid n play spoken up yet?
  • Trillfate
    Trillfate Members Posts: 24,008 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Racist twitter lead by this bigot is killing Michael Bennett..

  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Trillfate wrote: »
    Racist twitter lead by this bigot is killing Michael Bennett..


    Hopefully for the Culture a real cashville ? pulls up on that racist clown...
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0bODxVInFQ

    https://www.mediaite.com/online/national-football-league-commissioner-roger-goodell-im-not-a-football-expert/
    National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell: ‘I’m Not a Football Expert’

    Roger Goodell — who runs a multi-billion dollar football league — says he is not a football expert.

    The NFL commissioner made the admission Thursday morning on the new Fox Sports 1 morning show First Things First while discussing Colin Kaepernick. Goodell was asked if he believes Kaepernick is talented enough as a football player to make an NFL roster.

    “One thing I do as a commissioner is, I don’t make those decisions,” Goodell said. “I’m not a football expert.”

    Not a football expert. The Commissioner of the NFL.

    We get what he’s saying — or, what he’s trying to say: He’s not as much of a personnel expert as the general manager of a team. He is not the best equipped to make a decision between two nose tackles who are close in skill level, or two strong safeties.

    Yet anyone who watches football with any level of frequency ought to be able to watch a quarterback run an offense and judge whether they have the requisite skills to play in the league.

    But rather than weigh in the football skills of the most talked about player in his league, Roger Goodell punted.

    Watch above, via Fox Sports 1. The relevant portion begins at approximately the 2:30 mark.

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  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/las-vegas-police-union-disputes-nfl-player-s-claim-racial-n799621
    Las Vegas Police Union Disputes NFL Player’s Claim of Racial Profiling

    The president of a Las Vegas police union is disputing claims by a Seattle Seahawks football player that he was racially profiled and threatened when he was handcuffed and detained following an active shooter report last month.

    "Our officers did not detain Bennett because he was 'a black man in the wrong place at the wrong time,'" Las Vegas Police Protective Association President Steve Grammas said in a letter to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.


    Michael Bennett, a defensive end and a two-time Pro Bowler, said on Twitter Wednesday that an officer "warned me that if I moved he would 'blow my f---ing head off" and that he was racially profiled when he was handcuffed and detained following a report of an active shooter at the Cromwell Hotel and Casino late last month.

    The union called for Goodell to investigate the "obvious false allegations."

    There were no shots fired, and the report of an active shooter turned out to be unfounded, police said. The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department has said an internal investigation is underway.

    Police department Undersheriff Kevin McMahill played body camera video at a news conference Wednesday he said showed the chaotic scene as officers responded to the shooter report early Aug, 27, which occurred around three hours after the Mayweather-McGregor boxing match.
    Bennett said that he wondered if he'd be killed, and in the statement posted to Twitter Wednesday mentioned the controversial police shootings of other black men and children by police, including Michael Brown and Tamir Rice. He said he was subjected to "abusive conduct" by the arresting officers.

    "I didn't ask for this moment, it just happened to be me. I'm just lucky to be here to be able to speak about it," Bennett said at a media availability Wednesday.

    "At any moment I could have made the wrong decision, whether moved or felt like I was resisting or doing something wrong, and you guys would be wearing, the Seahawks would be wearing the patch with number 72 on it," he said

    The president of the Las Vegas Police Protective Association said in the letter to Goodell that any claims of racism are false. It said both the officers involved in Bennett’s detention are minorities. McMahill said both officers involved are of Hispanic origin. He did not name the officers Wednesday.


    "Our officers responded to one of the most dangerous calls a law enforcement officer can be assigned — an active shooter firing rounds in a crowded casino," Grammas wrote in the letter. He said that Bennett’s actions, specifically running from the casino and jumping over a barrier wall, caused officers to focus on him as a potential suspect.

    Police video shown by McMahill Wednesday showed several people running from the casino as police arrived, and officers telling people to move.

    In video of the Bennett’s arrest posted online by TMZ Sports Wednesday, Bennett is heard saying he didn’t do anything wrong. "I was here with my friends. They told us to get out — everybody ran," he said. Both officers involved in the arrest had their handguns drawn, McMahill said.

    McMahill said that there are at least least 126 videos associated with body and other cameras police have to review, and urged the public to turn in any video they may have recorded. He said if any policies or training were violated the officers would be held accountable.

    Investigators will look at why the arresting officer did not have a body camera activated, McMahill said.

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  • blackrain
    blackrain Members, Moderators Posts: 27,269 Regulator
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    5th Letter wrote: »
    dnyce215 wrote: »
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    They just want us to handle injustice like Jackie Robinson did, just take the abuse and don't say nothing.

    ? Jackie Robinson said a lot. Go look at how angry he was when he retired. He himself said he couldn't stand for the anthem and wouldn't for how he was treated.
  • Recaptimus_Prime360
    Recaptimus_Prime360 Members Posts: 64,801 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    AggieLean. wrote: »
    The Ravens organization and Ray Lewis look weak and like cowards in all of this. Ray looking like a shuffling fool. That picture Nessa posted was spot on. I honestly think Harbaugh wanted him too

    As a Raven fan...i gotta agree

    Very disappointed in the coward way they've handled this. Cowards...straight cowards.
  • Already Home_17
    Already Home_17 Members Posts: 14,572 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Matike85 wrote: »
    Charlamagne Da ? Ether Kid from Hip Hop duo Kid & Play about Colin Kaepernick
    https://youtu.be/2fpMVHJP2a8

    lol at house ? party
  • grYmes
    grYmes Members Posts: 2,350 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    marc123 wrote: »
    Has kid from kid n play spoken up yet?

    Always knew on the low Kid was on some ? ? like that. Anything to be noticed. SMH
  • White_Owl_Willie
    White_Owl_Willie Members Posts: 220 ✭✭
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    The anger white folks feel over this is mind boggling. Angrily typing away on their devices. ? is hilarious but sad because these are adults maneuvering in our society.
  • #1hiphopjunki3
    #1hiphopjunki3 Guests, Members, Writer, Content Producer Posts: 3,557 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    I guess some people will say this is a fake letter sent to Texas A&M's coach. SMH
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    http://deadspin.com/fs1-wont-be-airing-jason-whitlocks-latest-colin-kaepern-1802024290
    FS1 Won't Be Airing Jason Whitlock's Latest Colin Kaepernick Skit

    On Tuesday, All Takes Matter co-host Jason Whitlock started an internet firestorm with this tweet

    The blowback—and there was a lot of it—was immediate toward what appeared to be the latest instance of Whitlock mocking Colin Kaepernick’s activism and race consciousness. (As TMZ later revealed in a post about the sketch—All Takes Matter often features sketches that nobody but Whitlock would find funny—the person playing Kaepernick was Christopher Reid, also known as Kid from Kid ‘n Play.)

    Fortunately for those who were offended by Whitlock’s tweet, the skit in question will never see the light of day. A source familiar with the situation tells us that the producers of Whitlock’s show made a collective decision to spike the segment because it didn’t meet their standards. The source added that Whitlock and Reid had only finished filming part of the skit, and that it had never been officially greenlit in the first place.

    Whitlock, who spent a good chunk of yesterday morning playing dumb with people who were angry at him on Twitter, hasn’t tweeted almost 24 hours.
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    I guess some people will say this is a fake letter sent to Texas A&M's coach. SMH

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  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/20624648/nfl-rejects-police-union-request-investigate-michael-bennett
    NFL: No Bennett probe despite cops union's call

    The NFL said Thursday that it has no plans to investigate Seattle Seahawks defensive end Michael Bennett's behavior during an incident in which he was detained and handcuffed by police in Las Vegas two weeks ago.

    The league was responding to a letter to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell from the president of the Las Vegas Police Protective Association, the union that represents the police in that city. In the letter, the union alleged that Bennett made false accusations against Las Vegas police and asked the league to "conduct an investigation, and take appropriate action."

    NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy wrote in response, "There is no allegation of a violation of the league's personal conduct policy and therefore there is no basis for an NFL investigation."

    Earlier, NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith voiced a similar response, saying, "There are no grounds for the NFL to investigate our union rep, and I look forward to Roger confirming the same."

    Steve Grammas, president of the Las Vegas Police Protective Association, wrote the letter to Goodell on Thursday and made it available to media. He said, in part, "While the NFL may condone Bennett's disrespect for our American Flag, and everything it symbolizes, we hope the League will not ignore Bennett's false accusations against our police officers."

    Bennett sat on the bench during the national anthem for a Seahawks preseason game on Aug. 13 and said at the time, "I can't stand right now. I'm not going to be standing until I see the equality and freedom."

    John Burris, an Oakland attorney who is representing Bennett in the Las Vegas incident, said that the union's questioning of Bennett's integrity is "outrageous," especially given the department has just begun its investigation of the incident. "To suggest he is lying without having conducted an investigation is ridiculous," Burris told the Seattle Times.

    On Wednesday, Bennett accused Las Vegas police officers of racial profiling, saying they pointed guns at him and used excessive force during the incident.

    "It sucks that in the country that we live in now, sometimes you get profiled for the color of your skin," Bennett said Wednesday. "It's a tough situation for me. Do I think every police officer is bad? No, I don't believe that. Do I believe there's some people out there that judge people on the color of their skin? I do believe that."


    The incident occurred in the early morning hours on Aug. 27, after the Floyd Mayweather-Conor McGregor fight in Las Vegas, when police apprehended Bennett after hearing what sounded like gunshots in a crowded area. Bennett wrote on Twitter that officers pointed guns at him "for doing nothing more than simply being a black man in the wrong place at the wrong time" and ordered him to lie down on the ground.

    Bennett wrote that one officer, with his gun drawn, warned him that he would "blow my f---ing head off" if he moved. Another officer jammed his knee into Bennett's back and handcuffed him, according to Bennett.

    "The Officers' excessive use of force was unbearable," Bennett wrote. "I felt helpless as I lay there on the ground handcuffed facing the real-life threat of being killed. All I could think of was 'I'm going to die for no other reason than I am black and my skin color is somehow a threat.'"

    Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said Wednesday that his department has launched an internal investigation into the events of that night.

    McMahill said he had found "no evidence that race played any role in this incident."

    McMahill said that officers were investigating what they thought was an active shooter in a nightclub. As people ran from a club, an officer spotted Bennett crouched by some machines. McMahill said that when the officer spotted Bennett, Bennett took off running out of the club, and officers pursued him before taking him down and putting him in cuffs.

    Later, when asked why Bennett had been singled out, McMahill said he did not know but that he hoped the investigation would clarify that.

    Wednesday night, Goodell issued a statement in support of Bennett, saying he "represents the best of the NFL -- a leader on his team and in his community."

    "Our foremost concern is the welfare of Michael and his family," Goodell said in his statement. "While we understand the Las Vegas police department will address this later this evening, the issues Michael has been raising deserve serious attention from all of our leaders in every community. We will support Michael and all NFL players in promoting mutual respect between law enforcement and the communities they loyally serve and fair and equal treatment under the law."