Two weeks after deleting his response to the Olympic boxing controversy featuring Algerian boxer Imane Khelif, Dan Orlovsky addressed his social media approach.
As disingenuous takes misidentifying Khelif’s gender spread across social media earlier this month, Orlovsky chimed in with a post that read “protect our daughters.” Orlovsky’s post came shortly after Pat McAfee amplified the controversy surrounding Khelif in a lengthy rant, where he referenced transgender athletes and claimed the women’s boxer was “deemed a male.”
But shortly after Orlovsky posted “protect our daughters” as the social media noise around the Olympic boxing controversy grew louder, the ESPN NFL analyst deleted the message. This week, Orlovsky spoke to Barrett Media’s Derek Futterman and addressed the approach he attempts to maintain toward social media while working for ESPN.
“When you’re an employee of a big company, your social media page doesn’t just get to be your social media page,” Orlovsky said. “That’s a fantasy, so you have to represent yourself and the company that you work for in the proper way.”
Orlovsky appears to be taking the complete opposite approach from his ESPN colleague Kirk Herbstreit on the issue. In the wake of the Olympic boxing controversy, Herbstreit was asked, “Do men belong in women’s sports?” by a social media follower. Despite the question being a false framing of transgender athletes, Herbstreit responded without much nuance saying, “Of course not.” Earlier this week, Herbstreit waded further into the transgender athlete culture war, telling OutKick he doesn’t really “give a sh*t” about backlash or upsetting people.
ESPN implemented a “stick to sports” mandate in 2018 that it attempts to maintain. And 99 percent of the time it does. But for that remaining one percent, it seems to be a case-by-case basis. Stephen A. Smith is granted more leeway than Kirk Herbstreit, who might be granted more leeway than Dan Orlovsky. Former ESPN employee Jemele Hill was suspended for violating the company’s social media guidelines in 2017, so that precedent was set. But Orlovsky aside, it hasn’t stopped ESPN employees from using their personal social media accounts to express personal views.
Update: The original headline has been updated after an ESPN spokesperson clarified Orlovsky was not directly asked about deleting his tweet and was commenting on general social media use.
About Brandon Contes
Brandon Contes is a staff writer for Awful Announcing and The Comeback. He previously helped carve the sports vertical for Mediaite and spent more than three years with Barrett Sports Media. Send tips/comments/complaints to bcontes@thecomeback.com
Recent Posts
Creighton announcer goes nuts over referee’s ‘horsecrap’ call
"Unbelievable bailout call by an incompetent referee!"
Dave Portnoy accepts Stephen A. Smith’s apology: He ‘bent the knee’
"I respect Stephen A. And I’m glad he adhered and bent the knee and gave the apology. So, I am thankful that war is over"
Pablo Torre: Legal gambling could spell end of sports’ ‘cultural supremacy’ as fans root for payouts rather than teams
"They're convincing people to watch these games not because of these teams involved or the quality of the players, but because there are these other things to root for."
Kellen Moore defends Justin Tucker tryout: ‘There’s been some stuff that’s been unfortunate’
"There’s been some stuff that’s been unfortunate. He’s gone through an experience"
Scott Van Pelt: ‘Zero issue’ with Group of 5 inclusion in College Football Playoff
"I have zero issue with the inclusion of the small guy, because the big guys are going to get their a** kicked by the best, too."
Players Era Festival ‘in discussions’ with ESPN, Fox, Netflix, TNT for media rights deal
The tournament is expanding to 32 teams next season.