NSJ wrote:
Question - Is there a double standard at WMVP? You decide.
Mac calls out a woman by name, says she's a "bitch" and recieves a 2+ Week suspension.
Chet Coppock calls out a guy he used to work with by name, says he's a "son of a bitch" and it's not even discussed.
Why the difference? Gender? Bitch vs. Son of a Bitch? Isn't son of a bitch a pretty mean insult to the guy's mom?
If Mac's "history" is the reason, than Chet should have been given some type of minimal suspension as Mac has with his earlier transgressions. But, of course, WMVP/ESPN/Disney will do nothing because the double standard applies.
You bring up another example that shows how much hypocrisy there is in this decision by ESPN.
If she wasn't a woman, no suspension.
If she wasn't well connected, either through Comcast or her husband who is in the Bears organization, no suspension.
If he had just attacked her character, instead of using a word that from all indications is not banned on the air, no suspension.
If the management at ESPN 1000 realized that it is sports talk radio and it was built on radio hosts speaking their minds, no suspension.
If ESPN 1000 had the guts to defend one of their own instead of caving to pressure to not only suspend for the rest of the week, but continue it for a month, no suspension.
I can't wait until the day that Jerry Reinsdorf, John Paxson, Jerry Angelo, or someone else calls up to complain about a comment made by a host. The precedent was set by two people with a small amount of power(allegedly). I guess the score really will become the "voice of the fan" whereas ESPN 1000 will become the "voice of the censored".
I'm not a Mac apologist, as what he did was wrong, but ESPN 1000 is once again handling this pathetically. What is the funniest thing about this is that there was not a large public outcry. 99.9% of the audience could care less about him calling someone a name.