Jemele Hill jokes on ESPN shooting in ‘Around the horn’ return


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“Around the Horn” of ESPN is bringing some of his old faces before his final show.

ESPN announced the cancellation of the program in March, and its last show will be May 23. Then, in Thursday’s episode, they brought back to Jamele Hill, who anchored SportsCenter for a while before being canned in 2018.

Hill was fired from the network due to social media publications about President Donald Trump and his supporters during his first presidency.

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Jamele Hill poses for a photo on the red carpet at the ESPN The Party event in the Houston Arts district in Houston on February 3, 2017. (Kirby Lee-USA Today Sports)

During the episode, the host Tony Reali and the other panelists had a segment in which they reacted to Old Take of her, and Hill could not help laughing at herself.

“I got a little nervous when I saw that you were raising our tweets. Friend, I just returned, man!” She said.

The episode also presented the return of Kate Fagan, who left the network in 2018. Fagan made a plea for “trans children” in sports.

“I know it’s my last time in [the show]And I want to say something worthy of that platform, and that is that trans children deserve sports “, She said. “Think about what you remember from your time practicing sports. Ninety -nine percent are finding that shirt for the first time, your favorite number, community, joy, those fifteen.

ESPN announced that “Around the Horn” will have its last show on May 23. (Reuters/Mike Segar)

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“It is that moment when you have a great play with a teammate. It is the feeling of belonging. And they do not know the genre. Trans children deserve the same as everyone else … Sport is joy. Sport is humanity. And the more people have that, the better.”

There is no law or order that prohibits transgender children to participate in sports. Trump signed an executive order in February that prohibits biological men who identify as girls or women to compete against biological women.

Shortly after it was announced, the program was finishing, former panelist Jay MariottiThat he was a regular in the program until an arrest for domestic violence in 2010, he said in an interview that the program is canceled because it was “awakened.”

Disney was associated with Penn Entertainment to create ESPN brand betting houses. (Mike Windle/Getty images for ESPN)

Now there are only 11 episodes of the program, which is over 20 years old.



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