The Boxers Uprising: How Roland S. Martin And CNN Both Got It Wrong

A call to CNN Wednesday seeking content was not returned. Until then, it’s unclear why the network would suspend him and issue a somber press release mentioning “values and culture” while dismissing fellow contributor Dana Loesch’s telling a radio audience she would “drop trou” and urinate on enemy combatants less than a month ago. When Loesch’s remarks became public, all the network saw fit to tell Mediaite was, “CNN contributors are commentators who express a wide range of viewpoints — on and off of CNN — that often provoke strong agreement or disagreement. Their viewpoints are their own.”

Or maybe the difference is clear; Think Progress’ Alyssa Rosenberg rightly points out that Martin’s remarks were caught by an organized group with a history of tracking and responding to such instances. But the result of such selective policing is ultimately detrimental to CNN:

Taken together, the way CNN handled Martin’s and Loesch’s comments makes it look like CNN has no consistent internal values, and no internal standard for how to respond when it commenters express sentiments that are an anathema to those values. I’m glad to know, per CNN’s statement, that “Language that demeans is inconsistent with the values and culture of our organization, and is not tolerated.” But why should it take several days of consideration for CNN to arrive at that conclusion? If the network’s truly committed to the proposition that violence against gay people is no joking matter, that’s something it should know in advance, and CNN should have a personnel policy in place to determine what the appropriate penalty is when someone violates their standards.

Without an explanation of such a policy, it also becomes harder to reconcile CNN’s relatively quick action against Martin with not only Loesch’s comments, but the wide berth given to Lou Dobbs’ “birther” notions and anti-immigrant rhetoric before he finally resigned in 2009. Even then, network president Jonathan Klein practically sent him off with a serenade, saying a man who referred to critics as “limp-minded, lily-livered lefty lemmings” was carrying “the banner of advocacy journalism.”

Martin has publicly apologized and stated his willingness to talk to members of the community he offended. Hopefully that dialogue will lead to something truly constructive. In the meantime, maybe it’s now time for CNN to better explain why it hasn’t been as vigilant when it comes to some of his co-workers.

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  • Kate

    CNN fired Rick Sanchez for less. Roland Martin has been subtly anti-gay for a while now, and has gotten away with it until recently. I mean, when Tracey Morgan made his ridiculous, hateful comments … Roland backed him up, of course.

    I’m not even sure why Roland Martin *has* a column, frankly.

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  • http://twitter.com/MotownMusicLvr MotownMusicLvr

    I think they suspended Roland because GLAAD and the LGBT community has complained about him several times over the years.

  • ChrisChambers

    I don’t entirely agree re: Loesch and people like Erin Erickson. Their brand of right wing news product is reality of cheap cable devices designed to generate ratings and spur crossover into net and social media. This is what I said on TV last night on the implications of that for Roland: http://m.youtube.com/#/watch?desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DPpxuJrpz_Ak%26feature%3Dyoutu.be&feature=youtu.be&v=PpxuJrpz_Ak&gl=US

  • Anonymous

    First off, I’d like to know which “bruhs” are real and which are fake. And who anointed Roland Martin the arbiter of real bruhness? Second, it’s obvious that CNN doesn’t have a consistent disciplinary policy for on-air hosts. Nor do they seem to get what constitutes “violations against public trust” (the old term for the ish Martin tweeted—I don’t know what the FCC calls it now). Newsflash: both homophobia and immigrant-bashing violate public trust, because queer folk and undocumented immigrants are part of the viewing public. Basic broadcasting stuff.