ESPN is apparently a wild place to work. When I heard last month that SVP Keith Clinkscale was leaving the company to become an independent producer and his 25-person content development department was being eliminated, I knew something was strange. These are the people who created the popular 30 for 30 documentaries, Sports Nation and other sports/entertainment fusion programing for the network.
Now, Deadpin has the goods on what allegedly caused him to leave. ESPN reps are saying that this way is a more efficient business model, and perhaps that’s true. But, with accusations of threatening coworkers, inappropriate sexual behavior on an airplane in front of ESPN reporter, Erin Andrews AND a lawsuit about this Deadspin article that was filed BEFORE the article was published… I’d say the ugliness is just beginning to make it’s way to the surface.
There is SO much going on with this. On one hand, if you catch wind that someone is making these sort of serious accusations about you and your character, you HAVE to counter. But the fact that he knew exactly where the information came from and filed within four hours before even seeing what Deadspin wrote definitely is cause for the side eye. Le sigh being a woman and working in sports can be hard. Erin Andrews will be scrutinized for not going to HR, “Connie” will be looked at as a snitch for giving information to Deadspin and more than likely, no one will really care if it’s true that Clinkscales did all those things and will still manage to get business and create more projects.
Men in sports are rarely ostracized when it comes to these type of situations.