I realize that few GetReligion readers seem to care much about sports. But what about a mixture of race, religion and sports?
With that in mind, let me ask a serious journalism question linked to those three topics.
Would it be a news story — a hard-news story — if an ESPN personality (or the social-media team working with his show) asked if it was funny if an athlete who backs #BlackLivesMatters suffered a horrible, painful injury soon after making a high-profile statement about how his convictions were rooted in his faith?
Wait. We know an ESPN host and/or the show’s social-media team would never do such a thing.
But what if a conservative media star — Tucker Carlson, let’s say — asked that same question?
It’s safe to say that this would explode into mainstream news coverage.
That brings us to this headline in the New York Post (a conservative paper, of course): “ESPN’s Dan Le Batard posts poll wondering if Jonathan Isaac’s torn ACL is funny.”
Dan Le Batard issued an apology for his ill-advised poll Monday afternoon.
The ESPN radio host’s show, “The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz,” ran a poll on Twitter poking fun at Magic forward Jonathan Isaac, who tore his ACL Sunday night.
Isaac was the first player in the NBA bubble not to kneel during the national anthem, and also did not wear the “Black Lives Matter” warm-up donned by the rest of his teammates.
“Is it funny the guy who refused to kneel immediately blew out his knee?” the poll asked.
Oh, right. I turned that question around, didn’t I?
Isaac is a black Christian — he is ordained, in fact — who made headlines by linking his faith to his decision not to take part in the official NBA pre-game rites. He wasn’t protesting the protests, exactly. He had a larger point that he wanted to make, one rooted in his work as a minister.