News ESPN Employee Acknowledges It's Team is Discouraged from Writing about Dana (Allegedly)

Well, most employees would not want to talk openly bad about their boss or businesses working with their employer. This is not surprising.

Pretty much. Billion dollar industry/company. You don't throw figureheads who are prominent under the bus when you work for/with them. You don't trash companies you work for. It's bad for business.
 
Pretty much. Billion dollar industry/company. You don't throw figureheads who are prominent under the bus when you work for/with them. You don't trash companies you work for. It's bad for business.

Most businesses even have sections in their contracts in regards to the use of social media even personal when it comes to the business, I know mine does.
 
Many current facts started out as conspiracies, plus does it seem that out of this world that ESPN would be trying to protect their content provider after already refusing to say anything about the matter.

It does look like a company wouldn't want its writers to start throwing its other employees under the bus without their approval. There are ripple effects, I'm sure. Just like ESPN told Bill Simmons to not disparage Roger Goodell without consulting them first since they had a billion dollar partnership with the NFL, and to talk it out with management. They were open about it. He didn't. They suspended him. I'm pretty sure this is regular ESPN policy. As in, not a conspiracy or anything underhanded.
 
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