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ESPN employees describe hostile, sexist work environment

One woman said she did her broadcast while having a miscarriage.

Photo of Tess Cagle

Tess Cagle

Adrienne Lawrence

ESPN was criticized this fall for its brief partnership with Barstool Sports, a men’s blog notorious for sexist takes on pop culture. But research conducted by reporters at the Boston Globe shows that sexism runs much deeper at the sports network than just bad partnerships.  

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In an article published Thursday, the Globe details discriminatory experiences female employees, including former contributor Adrienne Lawrence, have had while working at ESPN. The publication said the partnership with Barstool Sports emboldened women to come forward, although many remained anonymous in fear of retribution.

The employees described some pretty horrific behavior. The article said women felt the environment was so hostile that they felt like they needed to hide pregnancies or take shorter maternity leaves. One woman said she did her scheduled broadcast while having a miscarriage to ensure she kept her job.

https://twitter.com/juliaccarpenter/status/941677337418006528

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Lawrence said when she was a fellow at the company, she felt it was a toxic environment riddled with unwanted romantic and sexual advances. When Lawrence accused John Buccigross, a longtime SportsCenter anchor, of inappropriate behavior, she said ESPN retaliated by reducing her on-air shifts and ultimately denying her a permanent position.

https://twitter.com/AdrienneLaw/status/941679975354138624

People who have read the article, including folks on Twitter, said they aren’t all that surprised about the women’s stories.

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https://twitter.com/Povediitz/status/941737516352327680

ESPN denies that it has fired any women for unfair reasons and said it takes sexual misconduct seriously. But with countless reports flooding in from women in the industry, it looks like the sports network has more work to do.

 
The Daily Dot