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First Amendment Wilbon? Bryant Gumbel Has Rights, Rush Limbaugh Does Not
NewsBusters ^ | August 26, 2006 | Tim Graham

Posted on 08/26/2006 6:33:04 AM PDT by RatherBiased.com

As Tom Johnson noted, Washington Post columnist Michael Wilbon wrote a column for Thursday's paper, headlined "Gumbel Has the Right To Say What He Feels." After Gumbel insulted union leader Gene Upshaw about needing a "leash" because he was the NFL Commissioner's "pet," Wilbon said he disagreed with the argument that Upshaw made bad deals for football players, but suggested the idea of the NFL Network removing Bryant Gumbel from broadcasting their football games later this fall "not only won't fly but will look like the silliest Nixonian attempt at censorship." But don't give him a First Amendment Award. That's not the way Wilbon felt about Rush Limbaugh broadcasting football games. In May of 2000, when ABC was considering Limbaugh as the third man in the broadcast booth for "Monday Night Football," he declared Rush was a racist, and has no right to broadcast:

"I have attended or watched all but about 5 or 6 MNF games in 30 years. If Rush Limbaugh is put in that booth, I will NOT listen to the broadcast. His views on people like me [blacks] are well documented, and I would find it insulting and hypocritical to watch him do the broadcast. And I’m sure, absolutely certain, there are tens of thousands, probably hundreds of thousands who feel the same way I do."

Wilbon provided no examples of Limbaugh's supposed hatred of blacks. (Rush certainly never metaphorically put Gene Upshaw on a "leash.") So who's the "Nixonian" censor? No one has the "right" to announce NFL football games. That's not a "free speech" issue. But Wilbon's column made it very clear the issue isn't free speech. It's that Gumbel is one of his heroes and role models, and a personal friend. He begins by noting as he grew up in Chicago, he was already enamored of the Gumbel brothers, before they were TV stars:

As I went through high school, it became clear I wasn't going to be a professional ballplayer. Increasingly, I wanted to be like Greg and Bryant Gumbel. So this column includes a certain bias as well as a certain annoyance that Bryant Gumbel's recent harsh remarks about NFL union chief Gene Upshaw might make him unworthy of calling games on the NFL Network, as outgoing commissioner Paul Tagliabue hinted at this week...

While I disagree with Bryant Gumbel's characterization of Upshaw, I defend Gumbel's right to make the observation. If Gumbel were arguing the point with me, he'd make it persuasively, probably brilliantly, because that 's what he's done for a living for 30-plus years. He's one of the best things to come along in the modern history of sports journalism.

Put aside the decades of arrogant liberal bias that Gumbel's produced. While Wilbon notes Gumbel was "harsh," he never says this harshness countered his reputation for being persuasive and brilliant; that this particular commentary was not persuasive, but damaging to Gumbel's career, not a stellar moment. Instead, the gooey Gumbel valentine continued:

When the NFL Network announced that Gumbel and Cris Collinsworth were going to call games this season, it was a boon for the league. The fledgling network needs Gumbel a lot more than he needs it. He's already got the best sports show on television in "Real Sports" and it's just another component of one of the great careers in the history of television journalism. How many people calling NFL games have interviewed Kremlin officials live in Moscow? How many play-by-play guys have interviewed Fidel Castro in Cuba and come to your living room live from Saigon?

Toward the end of Gumbel's run at NBC's "Today" in the mid-1990s it became popular to take shots at him for being arrogant and dismissive. And Willard Scott was on the wrong end of a very critical internal memo at one point. But whether he was editing and contributing to "Black Sports" magazine in the early 1970s or doing sports at KNBC-TV in Los Angeles or anchoring pregame shows on NBC Sports, the four-time Emmy winner has been credible. He has been almost everything we praised Howard Cosell for being and then some, which is to say literate, tough, insightful, outspoken and critical. When he reports from anywhere, I'm listening.

Bryant Gumbel is not going to be anybody's Bobo, not even the NFL's.

Wilbon failed to consider the concept that maybe Gumbel was criticized for being arrogant and dismissive....because he came across as arrogant and dismissive, and not just in internal memos, but on the air. (The kind of guy who'd crack off camera that a conservative guest as an "f---ing idiot," just for starters.) But it's quite clear that Wilbon actually enjoys Gumbel being arrogant and dismissive. He cites Gumbel's other HBO meltdown, not as another sign of Gumbel failing to make a point "persuasively, probably brilliantly," but as a sign of gritty independent thinking:

And Tagliabue, a brilliant man himself, had to know exactly what the league was getting when the network approached Gumbel. There's a 30-year body of work out there to view. Did Tags and the NFL not see him take a shot at the lily-whiteness of the Winter Olympics and the GOP convention? Did Tagliabue think the league was getting some shrinking violet?

Perhaps the league figures that if it could successfully pressure ESPN to take [the sleazy fictionalized pro football drama] "Playmakers" off the air, it could also bully Bryant Gumbel into softening his positions and playing nice.

Surely, Tagliabue knows that any attempt to squeeze Gumbel in some little box as if he were a player wearing the wrong color socks on Sunday not only won't fly but will look like the silliest Nixonian attempt at censorship.

This is where it becomes clear that Wilbon's not making a serious attempt to ponder the issue of Gumbel's remarks, but merely making excuses for them. As Brent Bozell politely noted in 2003, when ESPN pressed Rush Limbaugh to quit his brief football-pundit gig after saying Donovan McNabb was hyped by sportswriters rooting for black quarterbacks, Wilbon could be seen at times as Gumbel's Mini-Me in print:

Washington Post columnist Michael Wilbon is a great read on his sports page, great entertainment on TV, and also regularly liberal politically in his sports reports. In 1995, Wilbon cheered NFL star Kellen Winslow when he entered the Hall of Fame with a political speech attacking Justice Clarence Thomas for opposing racial quotas and "barring the government from doing the right thing." Wrote Wilbon: "Winslow can be my Gipper any day. My hands are still raw from the applause." Wilbon even cheered the arrival of black sports stars at Louis Farrakhan’s "Million Man March," and said of this spewing preacher and racist, anti-Semitic and America-hating bilge: "So much of Farrakhan’s message was necessary and correct." None of this stopped ESPN from hiring Wilbon for its daily show, "Pardon the Interruption."



TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: feeeeeeeeeeeeeelings; gumbel; rushlimbaugh; wilbon
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If you read sports blogs, please send them this article. Wilbon is a left-wing hypocrite who needs to be exposed.
1 posted on 08/26/2006 6:33:05 AM PDT by RatherBiased.com
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To: RatherBiased.com

Bryant Gumbel is a total racist, as is his brother.


2 posted on 08/26/2006 6:49:50 AM PDT by BIGZ
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To: BIGZ

...... and Nagin, Jackson, Sharpton, etc.


3 posted on 08/26/2006 6:52:09 AM PDT by proudofthesouth (Mao said that power comes at the point of a rifle; I say FREEDOM does.)
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To: RatherBiased.com
"not only won't fly but will look like the silliest Nixonian attempt at censorship."

Both Mike Wilbon and Tony Kornheiser (fellow WA Post journalist and his sidekick on ESPN's Pardon the Interruption) pine for the Watergate era like nobody's business. ...completely obsessed. Just last week they must've mentioned at least twice (while discussing sports) that Woodward and Bernstein are their heroes.

And typically, they both ignore racism on the left (especially black racists like Gumbel) while attempting to paint any outspoken conservative as "yet another David Duke."

4 posted on 08/26/2006 6:53:23 AM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: BIGZ

Racists? Both are married to white women.


5 posted on 08/26/2006 6:58:15 AM PDT by Jake The Goose
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To: RatherBiased.com

If it were not for this commentary, few would even know Bryant Gumbel was even still on TV.


6 posted on 08/26/2006 7:00:43 AM PDT by edpc (Violence is ALWAYS a solution. Maybe not the right one....but a solution nonetheless)
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To: edpc

His 15 minutes were up a long time ago.


7 posted on 08/26/2006 7:10:21 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (BTUs are my Beat.)
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To: RatherBiased.com
Bryant Gumbel's view on paying child support
8 posted on 08/26/2006 7:15:29 AM PDT by Hoodat ( ETERNITY - Smoking, or Non-smoking?)
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To: RatherBiased.com
(sung to tune of "We are the World")

We Are the World
Let’s Help the Gumbels
Bryant’s the One Who Dissed His Mom in the Projects
Where She Was Living

Hey, Bryant Gumbel
Help Out Your Family
You Are the One Who Makes a Lot of Pay
So Let’s Start Giving

There’s a Choice You’re Making
You Want a Hot Blonde Wife
That’s Cool but Buy Your Mom Some Teeth
And Feed Your Children

You Are a Turd
A Cheap Chubby A-Hole
Just What You Spent on Jeri Curl Alone
Could Feed a Nation

We Are the World
Let’s Help the Gumbels
This Crew Will Make the Bastard Pay Some Day
Just You and Me

9 posted on 08/26/2006 7:29:12 AM PDT by Hoodat ( ETERNITY - Smoking, or Non-smoking?)
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To: RatherBiased.com

OK - one more time for the mentally challenged:

Liberals, particularly those of minority status or illegally in the US = full Constitutional protection and rights (and even some made-up rights).

Conservatives, particularly those who are not of a minority, and are law-abiding and patriotic = no rights.

Get use to it.


10 posted on 08/26/2006 7:45:56 AM PDT by TheBattman (Islam (and liberalism)- the cult of a Cancer on Society)
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To: Mr. Mojo
Why are they so obsessed with Nixon?
11 posted on 08/26/2006 8:23:15 AM PDT by ChicagoConservative27
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To: Jake The Goose
Racists? Both are married to white women.

Huh? What does being married [to whomever] have to do with racism?

12 posted on 08/26/2006 8:28:41 AM PDT by PISANO
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To: RatherBiased.com

If Wilbon says that Limbaugh offended 'people like me' then I suppose he will understand when I say that Gumball offends 'people like me' and I not only don't watch him but also slam the NFL network for allowing this racist elitist to front their program. If the NFL can afford to lose all of their white audience, more power to them. I'm guessing that isn't likely though.


13 posted on 08/26/2006 8:28:57 AM PDT by bpjam (Hezbollah, Hamas, Al Qaida - The Religion of Peace)
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To: ChicagoConservative27
Liberals who came of age in the late 60s/early 70s are obsessed with repeating Nixon -- precisely, bringing down a Republican President. It was the highlight of their lives.
14 posted on 08/26/2006 8:29:40 AM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: edpc

I see Viagra commercials coming soon.Or schlepping land like what's his name from CHIPS.


15 posted on 08/26/2006 8:29:51 AM PDT by xarmydog
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To: Mr. Mojo

Let's hope that is the only highlight they get.


16 posted on 08/26/2006 8:34:43 AM PDT by ChicagoConservative27
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To: RatherBiased.com

http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2000/cyb20000202.asp#7

-- Friday morning, to mock Gumbel’s situation, New York City radio host Don Imus sent his producer, Bernard McGuirk, and some staffers over to the sidewalk outside The Early Show studios. They held up signs urging people to contribute to what Imus dubbed "GumbelAid 2000."

Just before 8am, MRC analyst Mark Drake observed, the group sang a take-off on "We Are the World" with lyrics geared to Gumbel’s situation. The lyrics:

We Are the World
Let’s Help the Gumbels
Bryant’s the One Who Dissed His Mom in the Projects
Where She Was Living

Hey, Bryant Gumbel
Help Out Your Family
You Are the One Who Makes a Lot of Pay
So Let’s Start Giving

There’s a Choice You’re Making
You Want a Hot Blonde Wife
That’s Cool but Buy Your Mom Some Teeth
And Feed Your Children

You Are a Turd
A Cheap Chubby A-Hole
Just What You Spent on Jeri Curl Alone
Could Feed a Nation

We Are the World
Let’s Help the Gumbels
This Crew Will Make the Bastard Pay Some Day
Just You and Me

Okay, not the most high-minded comedy, but you couldn’t have a better target than Gumbel and it is pretty funny to see this going on just in front of a big picture of Gumbel above an Early Show window. So, Wednesday morning MRC Webmaster Andy Szul will post a RealPlayer video clip of the Imus gang singing this song parody.

Gumbel’s CBS colleagues didn’t take kindly to the stunt, as Don Kaplan reported in a January 29 New York Post story caught by Mark Drake:

Pranksters from the Don Imus radio show were threatened with arrest outside CBS's Early Show yesterday after they tried to collect money to help support co-host Bryant Gumbel's estranged wife and kids....

"Bryant Gumbel is a hideously unlikable person so [we'll do] anything [we] could do to [mess] with him," Imus told The Post yesterday. "We saw a need, and we thought we'd try to address it."....

They waved white plastic buckets with Gumbel's picture on them at passersby, asking for donations of canned food and money to help the $5 million-a-year TV host pay child support for his 16-year-old daughter and 21-year-old son....

Gumbel had taken the day off and did not see the episode.

About 10 police officers showed up around 8:30 a.m. after Early Show Executive Producer Steve Friedman called 911. The pranksters were ordered to leave because Imus in the Morning did not have a permit to park its broadcasting truck on the street, Friedman said....

In her lawsuit, June Gumbel calls Gumbel a "serial adulterer."

June Gumbel's lawyer, Barry Slotnick, told a reporter that a therapist has been helping the family cope with the Early Show host's relationship with Hilary Quinlan, a blond bombshell with whom he now lives.


17 posted on 08/26/2006 8:35:33 AM PDT by bahblahbah
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To: Jake The Goose

that is part of their racism.


18 posted on 08/26/2006 8:41:31 AM PDT by Michael.SF.
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To: RatherBiased.com

You say this as if anything Gumble or Wilbon says is revalent. No one person speaks for the black community... every indiviual is their own spokesperson.


19 posted on 08/26/2006 8:42:51 AM PDT by Minus_The_Bear
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To: RatherBiased.com
Wilbon is a left-wing hypocrite whose columns are unreadable and who has never, in twenty years of writing, managed to put an original thought down!

To top that off, no ne has said that Gumbel can't say this-or-that. The dumbass once again misses the point: Gumbel can say whatever he wants, but when he criticizes his employer publicly, that employer certainly has the right to consider his suitability for continuing employment.

20 posted on 08/26/2006 8:49:09 AM PDT by Rummyfan
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