It’s a day that ends in “Y,” so there must be Twitter news.
First, there’s this piece from The Washington Post’s Drew Harwell: “QAnon, adrift after Trump’s defeat, finds new life in Elon Musk’s Twitter.”
Harwell writes, “The billionaire has spread bogus theories about the violent attack on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband to his 120 million followers, and he called for the criminal prosecution of infectious-disease expert Anthony S. Fauci. He has thrown around baseless accusations about adults sexualizing children, helping stir up an angry online mob against Yoel Roth, a former Twitter safety executive Musk praised in October for his ‘high integrity.’ And on Tuesday, he tweeted a message with an emoji that many people interpreted as saying ‘follow the white rabbit,’ possibly harking back to ‘Alice in Wonderland’ or ‘The Matrix.’ But many QAnon believers saw the rabbit as a wink to one of their foundational icons, a secret indicator shared in one of QAnon’s earliest online prophesies, known as ‘drops.’”
Harwell went on to write, “Musk has never explicitly supported QAnon, and some of his closest allies say they doubt he believes some of the wilder things he says online. One person in Musk’s inner circle, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss Musk’s views, said he uses the claims merely to win the internet’s most prized currency: attention. ‘He wants to muck it up,’ the person said.”
Still, there’s a problem. Harwell wrote, “… in QAnon circles, Musk’s ambiguity and plausible deniability have been seen as a strategic way for him to subtly push their dogma into the mainstream.”
Harwell did ask Musk for his thoughts on Qanon. Musk replied in an email: “lol.”
Meanwhile, more Musk-Twitter news. On Wednesday, Twitter suspended the account @ElonJet, which tracked the movements of Musk’s private jet. This is after he said he wouldn’t suspend the account.
On Nov. 6, Musk tweeted, “My commitment to free speech extends even to not banning the account following my plane, even though that is a direct personal safety risk.”
But on Wednesday, the account, which had about 500,000 followers, was suspended.
Oh, one more note. As of earlier this week, Musk is no longer the richest person in the world. He has dropped behind LVMH CEO Bernard Arnault. CNBC’s Rohan Goswami has more.
Details on Grant Wahl’s death
There’s now more information on the death of sportswriter Grant Wahl, who collapsed and died last week while covering a soccer match at the World Cup. Wahl died from an aortic aneurysm that ruptured.
During an appearance on Wednesday’s “CBS Mornings,” Wahl’s wife, Dr. Celine Gounder, said, “It's just one of these things that had been likely brewing for years, and for whatever reason it happened at this point in time.”
While it makes the death no less tragic, the findings of the autopsy performed by the New York City Medical Examiner’s Office do put an end to various conspiracy theories about Wahl’s death.
Earlier in this World Cup, Wahl was briefly denied entrance to the stadium in Qatar for wearing a rainbow T-shirt in support of LGBTQ rights. That led to suspicions by some that Wahl’s death was due to foul play. There also were theories that his death had something to do with COVID-19.
Gounder told The New York Times’ Apoorva Mandavilli and Andrew Das, “I really do feel some relief in knowing what it was.” She added, “I wanted to make sure the conspiracy theories about his death were put to rest.”
Meanwhile, tributes continue to pour in for Wahl, who spent most of his journalism career at Sports Illustrated.
Gounder told Gayle King of “CBS Mornings,” “To know that he was loved by so many people makes me feel a little less alone. It's like a warm hug when you really need it.”
For two more interesting conversations about Wahl, I highly recommend two podcasts. The Ringer’s “The Press Box” remembers Wahl as host Bryan Curtis interviews writer and podcastser Musa Okwonga.
And on the “Sports Media Podcast,” host Richard Deitsch interviews Wahl’s former Sports Illustrated colleagues Jon Wertheim, Mark Mravic and Jeff Pearlman.
Trainwreck comments
The career of a longtime Buffalo sports columnist could be over because of really dumb comments he made on a podcast.
Jerry Sullivan wrote for The Buffalo News from 1989 through 2018. He now has been fired from his most recent gigs at WIVB-TV (Channel 4), the Niagara Gazette and the Lockport Union Sun & Journal. He lost his jobs because of sexist comments he made while as a guest on a podcast called “Trainwreck Tonight.”
Oh, it was a trainwreck all right.
After a woman made a livestream comment during the taping of the podcast, Sullivan said, “Women, be better than this! Because the worst fans really are the women. They don’t get critical journalism, they all want to be cheerleaders.”
For a brief moment, Sullivan might have sensed he was saying something wrong, but he continued on, “You know what I mean? It’s always – I don’t want to. It’s a dangerous avenue to go down to criticize women in general because they’re better than men generally, but … they don’t get it as fans.”
The next day, Sullivan apologized on Twitter, writing, “I'd like to apologize for comments I made on a podcast last night that were uncalled for and insulting to women. I should be better than that.”
It was too late to save his jobs.
The Niagara Gazette published a statement that said, “In light of comments made by contributing columnist Jerry Sullivan on a podcast Monday, the Niagara Gazette and Lockport Union Sun & Journal have made the decision to part ways with Sullivan. We do not condone misogynistic, insensitive or derogatory comments in any form.”
The Buffalo News’ Alan Pergament reported that a source told him that Channel 4 in Buffalo also had parted ways with Sullivan, but didn’t have plans to announce it. Pergament noted Sullivan was no longer listed on the station’s website.
Sullivan’s name also made the rounds on national sports shows before his sexist remarks on Monday. Following Sunday’s Buffalo Bills game, Sullivan made the Journalism 101 mistake in a press conference of not asking a question of quarterback Josh Allen, but simply making a statement.
In a clip that has gone viral, Sullivan said, “It doesn’t look like an offense that’s good enough to win a Super Bowl right now.”
Allen looked at Sullivan and said, “OK.”
And that was that.
Sad news