BREAKING NEWS
Ex ESPN President, Skipper Speaks On Cocaine Addiction, Former Staff Files A Lawsuit
For the first time since resigning
as president of ESPN on December 18 to seek treatment for what he called a
'substance addiction,' John Skipper admitted that he was being extorted after
he purchased cocaine.
'They threatened me, and I
understood immediately that threat put me and my family at risk, and this
exposure would put my professional life at risk as well,' the 62-year-old
married father of two sons told The Hollywood Reporter.
'I foreclosed that possibility by
disclosing the details to my family, and then when I discussed it with [Disney
CEO Bob Iger], he and I agreed that I had placed the company in an untenable
position and as a result, I should resign,' continued Skipper, who described
himself as an infrequent user of cocaine.
Now-former ESPN president John
Skipper said he resigned because he was being extorted after purchasing
cocaine. He cited 'substance addiction' when he resigned in December
He did not elaborate about who
extorted him or if he took any legal action against that person or
persons.
The North Carolina explained that he
did 'get some therapy' and 'go through treatment.'
'Therapy isn’t easy, particularly
for a Southerner tightly wound with traditional values,' he said. 'I have not
necessarily been comfortable reflecting and being self-reflective.'
Skipper insisted that he does not have a problem with alcohol, never used
heroin, and said his cocaine use 'never' affected his work. In fact, he claims
he never used cocaine at work or with anyone he did business with .
Still, he admits that his cocaine
use did come at a significant cost: 'I hurt my family, particularly my
wife, and I forfeited a great job.'
Although he admitted there was an
extortion attempt, Skipper didn't elaborate.
Skipper, who became president of
ESPN in 2012, also described his final day on the job.
'That's the day, of course, that
there is no turning back; it's done, it's gone, it's public,' said Skipper, who
claimed he had not eaten over the previous 48 hours or so. 'It was miserable. I
spent it mostly by myself in New York City. I cry sentimentally at movies, but
I never cry personally. That's the only day that I cried. And I cried because I
realized the profundity of what I'd done to myself, to my family, and that I'd
given up the best job in sports on the planet.'
ESPN has faced obstacles recently,
including several rounds of layoffs, negative publicity related to the
network's suspension of on-air personality Jemele Hill, internal battles with
the NFL, and Wall Street backlash after network bought the rights to the NBA,
along with Turner Sports, for nine years at an exorbitant cost of $24 billion.
During his tenure as president,
John Skipper (near right) helped ESPN secure a series of long-term,
multi-platform agreements with major rights holders, including the
National Basketball Association and the Major League Baseball
Skipper and his wife Jessica
have been married since 1984 and have two adult sons, Nicholas and Clay.
(In the photo above, the family is joined by Nicholas's wife)
Skipper was replaced by Jimmy Pitaro,
who previously worked as Disney's chairman of consumer products and interactive
media.
'Yeah, of course it has a certain
pang to it,' Skipper said of his reaction to Pitaro's hiring. 'Because it has a
sort of definitive finality, that OK, somebody new is going to be in charge.
The good news is that Jimmy Pitaro is a good guy; I like Jimmy very much. He’s
a good, smart executive. His style will work at ESPN. I wish him well, and
(laughs) I hope he does better than the last guy!'
Skipper's departure came less than a
week after Disney struck a deal to buy film, television and international
businesses from Rupert Murdoch's Twenty-First Century Fox Inc for $52.4
billion.
Skipper was replaced by Jimmy
Pitaro (pictured), who previously worked as Disney's chairman of
consumer products and interactive media
During his tenure as president
Skipper helped ESPN secure a series of long-term, multi-platform agreements
with major rights holders, including the National Basketball Association and
the Major League Baseball.
In that time the number of
subscribers plummeted but the network still managed to turn a profit year after
year.
'I join John Skipper's many friends
and colleagues across the company in wishing him well during this challenging
time,' Iger said in a statement after the news was announced in December.
Iger and Disney had just signed
Skipper to a three year contract extension back in November that would have
kept him at the network until 2021.
That contract was signed despite the
several rounds of layoffs which hit the company and its employees in 2017.
Former ESPN host Adrienne
Lawrence (pictured) has filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against the
network, saying the company ignored her complaints dating back to 2015
Recently former ESPN host Adrienne
Lawrence filed a sexual harassment lawsuit claiming the network is rife with
misogyny.
Lawrence, who worked as an anchor
and a legal analyst, claims the company did not address complaints for
incidents dating back to 2015.
She specifically named
'SportsCenter' host John Bucigross, alleging that he called her 'dollface',
'#dreamgirl', and '#longlegs' in text messages sent in 2016 along with
unsolicited shirtless photos, reported the Boston Globe in December.
The lawsuit details texts
SportsCenter host John Bucigross sent her in 2016 in which he called her
'dollface', #dreamgirl', and '#longlegs' and in which he sent
unsolicited shirtless photos
'ESPN is, and always has been, a
company rife with misogyny,' the first line of the complaint reads, according
to the Connecticut Law Tribune.
The suit alleged that male executives
and talent at ESPN 'keep scoreboards naming female colleagues they are
targeting for sex'.
It also alleges that men openly
watch porn on their computers and have made comments in Lawrence's presence
like wondering what Rihanna must 'taste like'.
The Boston Globe expose claimed
women at the Connecticut-based operation said they were afraid to get pregnant
and when they did would try their best to take a brief maternity leave.
One woman even went on the air to
anchor while she was having a miscarriage just to show how dedicated she was to
the job according to other employees.
Several of the woman interviewed
'said they were given less desirable positions or laid off before, during, or
after maternity leave.'
Skipper responded to some of the
allegations made in that story by stating: 'I can tell you categorically, we do
not have a frat-boy culture.'
In November, ESPN announced that it
was laying off 100 employees, including some on-air talent, after the
Thanksgiving holiday.
ESPN was reported to be firing
around 40 to 60 employees back in October, according to Sporting News, but that figure ultimately hit triple
figures.
It was the latest in an ongoing
trend at ESPN, which laid off around 5 percent of its workforce in 2015, or
about 300 employees.
Then in April, ESPN cut around 100
journalists and on-air personalities.
Despite the recent struggles,
Skipper told THR that he thought the network was on the verge of a resurgence.
Under Skipper, ESPN launched a
new website aimed at women. However, the network has been criticized for
its treatment of its female employees
'I believed very strongly that a
year later, two years later, the narrative was going to be very different,' he
said. 'It was going to be that ESPN had maintained its preeminence in sports
media and navigated into having what was still the strongest portion of a video
bundle, along with having a strong subscription product and robust ad sales.
And that we would be in a much better place. And I wanted to have that be the
cap to my tenure. Not to leave in what I regarded as the middle of what was going
to be a successful transition.'
Skipper also made news in October
when he suspended reporter/anchor Jemele Hill, who accused President Donald
Trump of being a racist in a Tweet.
Trump celebrated the suspension of
Hill, who has since returned to the network.
Skipper suspended Jemele Hill (pictured) after she accused President Donald Trump of being a racist in a tweet
'With Jemele Hill at the mike [sic],
it is no wonder ESPN ratings have "tanked," in fact, tanked so badly
it is the talk of the industry!' Trump tweeted.
Like other networks, ESPN has been
affected by the changing habits of cable consumers – most notably cord cutters.
After being seen in 100.13 million households in 2011, ESPN reaches only 87.5
million today.
The other issue for the network is
the rising cost of league rights.
In 2014, the NBA announced a new
nine-year, $24 billion television rights deal with ESPN and Turner that took
effect this season.
Source DailyMail
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