Deadspin’s John Koblin dropped a long story today on the Steve Phillips mess at ESPN.
In a nice bit of enterprise reporting, Koblin reviewed the open court documents in Brooke Hundley’s lawsuit against ESPN. If you recall, Hundley was the young ESPN employee who had an affair with Phillips, which eventually cost him his pretty terrific job in Bristol.
Koblin writes:
That case was set to go to trial early last month in Stamford, Conn., before an 11th-hour settlement ensured there would be no courtroom airing of ESPN’s messy underthings. As of early April, however, the case file was still open—thousands of pages of material in all, including depositions, heavy-breathing text messages from Steve Phillips, stern notes from the human-resources department, and panicky internal ESPN emails sent the morning the Post broke the story of the romance. (The account above, of the first kiss between Phillips and Hundley, is taken from Hundley’s deposition.)
Koblin delves deeply into all the sordid details between Phillips and Hundley. You might want to clean yourself off after reading it.
A couple of takeaways:
The piece definitely showed why the culture had to change at ESPN. It concludes with this passage:
An ESPN source told me that the company handles intra-office romances more “promptly and seriously” since the Phillips-Hundley affair. The fallout from the scandal, the source added, “taught the company it had to have a no-tolerance approach, which they hadn’t really had before.” (Well, almost no tolerance. Ex-jocks “live in a different space,” the source said. “They are much more likely to be protected and their behavior characterized as ‘boys being boys.'”)
“People are much more careful,” the source said. “People were scared straight because the administration said that employees had to disclose personal relationships with each other, as a result of the Phillips thing.”
The sexless sex scandal came to affect everyone at ESPN, not just the two lovers who were not having sex with each other. “Phillips/Hundley didn’t have a chilling effect on the ESPN culture,” Miller said. “It created an ice age.”
The other takeaway is how an angry New York Post and Deadspin exacted revenge on ESPN. Koblin writes:
When the Post story broke that morning, Daulerio felt he’d been misled by ESPN a few weeks earlier. So, just after noon, he posted the following:
[S]ince the tenuous connection between rumor and fact for accuracy’s sake has been a little eroded here, well, it’s probably about time to just unload the inbox of all the sordid rumors we’ve received over the years about various ESPN employees. Chances are, at this point, there’s some truth to them. We’ll just throw ’em out there and see how many “no comments” or, you know, actual comments or “you would be completely wrongs” there are about these situations. Consider this one giant all-day version of “Deleted Scenes” or something.
Coming up first…ESPN “personality” Erik Kuselias.
So, Bristolites, strap in — it’s gonna be a long day.
Throughout the day, Bristol dealt with two crises that were unfolding simultaneously: 1) The Phillips-Hundley scandal; and 2) Deadspin’s running “ESPN Horndog Dossier.” One particularly freaked-out anchor phoned Daulerio that afternoon, asking if his name had come up at all and offering to trade gossip in exchange for keeping him off the site. He was calling, he told Daulerio, from under his desk. Three posts in all were published that day. In one of them, Daulerio revealed that two executives were having an affair.
Makes you proud to be a journalist, doesn’t it?
Again, if you want to read the whole thing, be prepared to feel a little dirty afterwards.