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Marly Rivera, ESPN baseball reporter, fired after on-field incident

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Last week at Yankee Stadium, Ivon Gaete, a freelance TV reporter, was standing near the batting cage waiting for Yankees star Aaron Judge to finish signing autographs for a group of kids when Marly Rivera, a baseball reporter for ESPN, began screaming at her in Spanish.

Gaete asked Rivera if she was okay. Rivera responded sarcastically, “Oh, I’m sorry I didn’t know you speak English now.” Rivera then said, within earshot of both Judge and the kids, “What a f---ing c---.”

The exchange was caught on video by Gaete’s cameraman and described to The Washington Post by three people who were either on the field or saw the video. It would lead to the end of Rivera’s ESPN employment. An ESPN spokesman said Wednesday that Rivera no longer works at the company.

In an interview with The Post, Rivera said she was being “singled out” by Major League Baseball.


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Rivera covered the Yankees and national baseball for ESPN. She appeared on its Home Run Derby broadcast and on Sunday Night baseball radio coverage. A native of Puerto Rico, she specialized in coverage of Hispanic players and was among the most high-profile Hispanic women covering the sport.
But the video of the exchange with Gaete touched off an investigation that became a referendum on how Rivera did her job and interacted with colleagues. The video was shared with Major League Baseball, which set about determining what happened. The incident involved a national reporter, Rivera, who was credentialed by the league and occurred at a league stadium.

Rivera told the New York Post that the altercation with Gaete stemmed from a miscommunication over trying to conduct an interview with Judge. She said she attempted to apologize to Gaete but believed she was being targeted because she had a history of disputes with Gaete’s husband, John Blundell, a vice president of communications for Major League Baseball.


Gaete declined to comment, as did Major League Baseball.
In the course of MLB’s fact-finding, the league’s Office of Investigations made calls and received information both about the incident at Yankee Stadium and other reports about Rivera’s behavior, according to people who spoke to the league. The information that MLB collected was then shared with ESPN, according to a person with knowledge of the events. A member of ESPN’s human resources department then conducted a full investigation into the incident at Yankee Stadium. He spoke to several media members, and the company decided to part ways with Rivera. By Thursday, Rivera had disabled her Twitter account.

Multiple reporters described to The Post incidents involving Rivera that they said crossed the line from typical scrapping in America’s largest media market to creating a toxic work environment. Last year, she flipped off another reporter and called her a “white b----” after the reporter attempted to take a photo of a group of Hispanic players that Rivera was taking a picture of, according to two people who witnessed the incident. In another instance, she called a Latino reporter a “fake Hispanic,” according to multiple people who witnessed it.
“There were extenuating circumstances, but that is not an excuse,” Rivera said in an interview with The Post about those incidents. “I believe these are mischaracterizations of who I am. Disagreements between media members are part of the nature of our business and happen on a regular basis, yet I am being singled out.”

 
One thing that I've learned from my years in corporate culture is that if you treat people poorly, you better make sure your sh*t never stinks. If people like you, you can get some rope if you make a mistake. But if you climbed the corporate ladder by treating people poorly, the knives are going to come out as soon as you make a mistake.

That's not even really limited to corporate life. I remember Jerry Rice saying once that he got to play an extra 2-3 years in the league because he was such a good teammate and locker room influence.
 
And let's be honest, she's not *quite* hot enough to get away with that shit.

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Just more wokeness at the Disney family of companies.

Sources are saying DeSantis will have a bill on his desk by morning banning Disney from firing women who call other women the c word. If you are trans though and use the c word at work it will be punishable by jail. The determination on the length of prison sentence is still being negotiated by the Florida legislature.
 
I don't know about her demeanor when the microphone is off, but as a frequent consumer of baseball on radio, I enjoyed Rivera's work.
Sure, she is a 50 year-old woman who came up in a time where it must have been incredibly hard to be not only a woman but a Hispanic woman. Sure, she’s good at her job. But she said something nasty and vulgar to a rival at Yankee Stadium.
 
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Sure, she is a 50 year-old woman who came up in a time where it must have been incredibly hard to be not only a woman but a Hispanic woman. Sure, she’s good at her job. But she said something nasty and vulgar to a rival at Yankee Stadium.
Well, it sounds like the c*** was horning in on her prearranged time with Judge. She apologized, and the other woman is being a drama queen. And, ever read any books about the rough and tumble NY/big city journalism scene.
Pretty big meh.
 
Well, it sounds like the c*** was horning in on her prearranged time with Judge. She apologized, and the other woman is being a drama queen. And, ever read any books about the rough and tumble NY/big city journalism scene.
Pretty big meh.
The idea that they would fire a baseball writer for calling someone a bad name is hilarious. The fact that you’d start with one of the most established minority women is not.

Chris Berman’s been a wild asshole to everyone forever. They instead chose to fire the most polite reporter in the business.
 
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