PDA

View Full Version : Journalist Fires Back at Selena Roberts AROD Book!!!



suave1477
05-06-2009, 12:43 PM
Bio hazard: A-Rod author has credibility issues

http://msn.foxsports.com/id/7826490_6_12.jpg (http://msn.foxsports.com/writer/Jason-Whitlock?authorId=310) by Jason Whitlock (http://msn.foxsports.com/writer/Jason-Whitlock?authorId=310)

Jason Whitlock brings his edgy and thought-provoking style to FOXSports.com. Columnist for the Kansas City Star, he has won the National Journalism Award for Commentary for "his ability to seamlessly integrate sports and social commentary and to challenge widely held assumptions along the racial divide."



addthis_pub = 'foxSports'; function BlogThisStoryTools() { var headline = "Bio hazard: A-Rod author has credibility issues"; var url = document.location.href; var destination = "http://blogs.foxsports.com/BlogThis.aspx?r_title=" + escape(headline) + "&r_url=" + url; window.location.href = destination; } add this (http://www.addthis.com/bookmark.php) RSS (http://msn.foxsports.com/other/story/2005035) blog (javascript:BlogThisStoryTools();void(0)) email (http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/9542614/Bio-hazard:-A-Rod-author-has-credibility-issues#) print (http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/9542614/Bio-hazard:-A-Rod-author-has-credibility-issues#)
Updated: May 6, 2009, 11:35 AM EST


//document.getElementById('number_of_comments').inne rHTML = commentCount+" Comments"; if(fanid.length > 0 && typeof(nflDefaultLeague)!= "undefined") { leagueId = nflDefaultLeague; //find teamId of default league (if exists) for(var i=0; i < teamsInfo.length; i++){ if(teamsInfo[4] == leagueId){ defaultTeamId = teamsInfo[i][0]; } } var fantasyLeaguePlayerJsPath = 'http://msn.foxsports.com' + '/nugget/200002_' + leagueId + '|||' + fanid; } A-Rod biographer/hunter Selena Roberts is beginning to remind me of Rev. Al Sharpton.

Sharpton separated the crime from the culture, too. When he gallivanted around New York in the '80s seeking justice for alleged victim Tawana Brawley, his target was the culture of racism more than the six white men falsely accused of rape.
http://msn.foxsports.com/id/9542100_36_1.jpg(Photo Illustraton / FOXSports.com)
Tuesday, as I listened to Roberts defend her [I]New York Times columns that painted the Duke lacrosse players as rapists, cowards and liars during an interview on Jim Rome's nationally syndicated radio show, I couldn't help but notice she went with the Sharp-tongue defense.
"I wrote about the culture at Duke, and there's no doubt about that. I stand by that today," Roberts said. "I separated the criminal investigation from the culture."
Maybe it's a New York, freedom-fighter thing, this amazing ability to ignore the innocence of the criminally accused while making your justifiable point that America suffers from and with racism and sexism.
Roberts' writings/rantings on Duke lacrosse have become relevant again because she's asked us to trust her anonymous investigative reporting and speculation about Alex Rodriguez, the confessed steroid cheat and home run hitter.
According to Roberts' new book and her interview blitzkrieg, Rodriguez used steroids in high school, tipped pitches to opposing batters, tipped Hooters waitresses a paltry 15 percent, was nicknamed "Bitch Tits" in the locker room and is caught up in being perfect because his father abandoned him as a child.
Her sourcing for the most damaging allegations, by her own admission, is either anonymous or non-existent. She wants us to trust her, and her New York Times- and Sports Illustrated-highlighted résumé.
Unlike Bob Costas, the producers at ESPN and the steroids-obsessed baseball journalists, I don't trust Roberts or her book, and I expressed some of my reasons in a Kansas City Star column (http://www.kansascity.com/159/story/1175681.html) that ran on Sunday.
Latest from Whitlock

http://msn.foxsports.com/id/9542090_52.jpg That's bull (http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/9519682/I'll-be-the-judge-on-racial-apologies): After she went all Al Sharpton on Duke lacrosse, can we really trust Selena Roberts and her A-Rod book? http://msn.foxsports.com/id/9520100_52.jpg Judge Jason (http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/9519682/I'll-be-the-judge-on-racial-apologies): After seeing an analyst backpedal after getting roasted for a race-based comment, it's time to be the judge. http://msn.foxsports.com/id/9488820_52.jpg NFL draft (http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/9490270/What-the-NFL-draft-really-offers----hope): Why are we so hooked on the NFL? It all starts with the draft and the one thing it offers that no other sport can. Complete Jason Whitlock archive (http://msn.foxsports.com/writer/Jason-Whitlock?authorId=310)



The Times and SI can kiss my ass. Jayson Blair worked at The Times. Mike Price won a lawsuit against SI for the lies the magazine published about him. And years ago, an SI writer wrote a profile about me for the Columbia Journalism Review and, among other journalistic crimes, lifted a quote from an old column and passed it off as something I said to him.
Never trust a publication. Hell, the more prestigious the publication, the more pressure there is for the writers to cut corners in pursuit of a good story.
Place your trust in the writer. And Roberts' reaction to the exoneration of the Duke lacrosse players calls into question her credibility. By refusing to acknowledge her mistakes in the Duke case, she creates the impression that her agenda trumps the truth.
She looks like a feminist version of Al Sharpton.
Jim Rome asked Roberts about the questionable sourcing for the allegations she levels against A-Rod.
"You give people a litmus test, Jim," she said. "You say to them, you go back to them over and over again and you say, 'Is it consistent what they're saying to me? Have they changed at all? Do they have a credibility issue? Is there anything in their past that might make me wary of this person?' "
You see, Selena Roberts thinks like me. Is there anything in her past that would make me wary of her allegations against A-Rod?
Rome asked her specifically about my column contending that the Duke lacrosse case should make us suspicious of her reporting about Rodriguez.
"First of all (Jason) needs to go back and read the columns that I wrote about Duke lacrosse," she said. "It doesn't exactly jibe with what he's saying now. I have always separated what the crime was ... and what the culture was. It didn't have to rise to the level of a crime to rise to the level of a column. And I wrote about the culture at Duke, and there's no doubt about that. I stand by that today."
Chat with Jason

http://msn.foxsports.com/id/9518028_51_1.jpg Talk to Whitlock: Column got you fired up? Want to debate it with Jason Whitlock? He'll be doing a live chat at 1 p.m. ET on Thursday.



She later added: "What I did about Duke is I separated the criminal investigation from a culture. Now we know what is irrefutable about that night. These women had pornographic pictures taken of them and distributed on the Internet. These women had racial slurs yelled at them. That is indisputable. There were broomsticks waved at them. That is indisputable. The issues that happened that night, separate from the crime, were in my opinion — and people can disagree with this — were worth writing about."
Here's what's also indisputable: At no time in her original Duke lacrosse-bashing column did she mention anything about pornographic pictures, racial slurs or broomsticks waved at strippers. She wrote about rape, robbery, strangulation and a hate crime. You can read the column for yourself here (http://select.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/sports/31roberts.html?scp=6&sq=).
You can read a detailed analysis of Roberts' many Duke lacrosse errors at this blog (http://durhamwonderland.blogspot.com/).
It is embarrassingly disingenuous for Roberts to suggest that her columns about Duke lacrosse weren't founded on the belief that the players sexually assaulted the false accuser. Her refusal to admit this mistake and apologize makes me wonder what other truths she's willing to fudge.
During her interview with Jim Rome, she claimed she went into her investigation of Rodriguez believing he had never used steroids. She said that A-Rod's interview on 60 Minutes convinced her of his innocence.

var gameSelected = false;function verifyForum(f) { for (var i=0; i < f.elements.length; i++) { if (f.elements.value == "") { alert("Please fill in the " + f.elements[i].name + " field."); return false; } } var name = f.elements.name.value; if (name.indexOf(" ") == -1) { alert("Please provide a first and last name. Thank you!"); return false; } var email = f.elements.email.value; if ((email.indexOf("\@") == -1) || (email.indexOf("\.") == -1)) { alert("Please provide a valid email address. Thank you!"); return false; } f.submit();} #emailForum {width:244px; float:right; text-align:left;} #emailForumHdr {width:244px; height:35px; background:#fff url(/fe/img/Story/in_box_top.jpg) no-repeat top left;} #emailForumHdr h3 {width:230px; text-transform:uppercase; font-size:12px; font-weight:bold; margin:0px 0px 0px 10px; line-height:22px;} #emailForumTitle {width:244px; height:auto; background:#fff url(/fe/img/Story/in_box_mid.gif) repeat-y top left;} #emailForumTitle h4 {width:230px; height:auto; font-size:11px; font-weight:bold; margin:0px 0px 0px 10px; background:url(/fe/img/Story/dots.jpg) repeat-x bottom left;} #emailForumBdy {width:244px; height:298px; background:#fff url(/fe/img/Story/in_box_mid_email.jpg) no-repeat top left;} #emailForumBdy div {width:230px; font-size:11px; font-weight:bold; margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;} #forum textarea, #forum input {border:1px solid #7f9db9; overflow:auto; width:223px; font-weight:normal;} #forum textarea {height:100px; _height:82px;} #forum input.name {width:183px; _width:178px;} #forum input.email {width:185px; _width:180px;} #forum input.city {width:153px; _width:148px;} #forum input.submit {width:76px; border:0px solid #ffffff; margin:0px 0px 0px 75px;} #emailForumFtr {width:244px; height:6px; background:#fff url(/fe/img/Story/in_box_btm.jpg) no-repeat top left;}http://msn.foxsports.com/fe/img/Misc/Icons/mail.gif


Jason Whitlock wants to know what you think about the important issues in sports today. Contact him here.




Subject:

Comment/Question:

Name: if (typeof(user.USER_FIRST_NAME) == 'undefined') user.USER_FIRST_NAME = ''; if (typeof(user.USER_LAST_NAME) == 'undefined') user.USER_LAST_NAME = ''; document.write("");
Email: if (typeof(user.USER_EMAIL) == 'undefined') user.USER_EMAIL = ''; document.write("");
Hometown: if (typeof(user.USER_CITY) == 'undefined') user.USER_CITY = ''; document.write("");






"I didn't think he was dirty," Roberts said. "I thought he was clean."
This is nearly impossible for me to believe. Roberts is a cynic, at least she is in her column writing. When she worked for [I]The New York Times, she wrote numerous columns about A-Rod with the same theme: Rodriguez is a phony. Read this (http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/05/sports/baseball/05roberts.html?_r=1), this (http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/17/sports/baseball/17roberts.html) and this (http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/14/sports/baseball/14roberts.html) and then read this blog (http://theyankeesrepublic.blogspot.com/2009/04/selena-roberts.html) for examples of her A-Rod cynicism.
In those columns, does she come off like someone who would take Rodriguez at his word? She comes off like someone who doesn't believe a word that comes out of A-Rod's mouth.
What I'm about to write is pure speculation.
Selena Roberts believes America is a safe haven for sexism (I happen to agree, but that's beside the point). She wanted the Duke lacrosse players to be shining examples of how deep-rooted and protected our sexism is, and she was more than willing to ignore their innocence to make her point (this repulses me).
Selena Roberts believes professional sports — the money, fame and power they primarily give young men — are corrosive of good values and a haven for sexism (I happen to agree, but that's beside the point). She wants Alex Rodriguez to stand as a shining example of what's wrong with American sports, and she just might be willing to ignore flattering truths about A-Rod and publish hearsay and gossip to make her point (and this is unfair).
She's written a celebrity-gossip book, "A-Rod: Game of Innuendo." Maybe you despise Rodriguez so much that you don't care about her methods and whether the rest of the alleged mainstream media characterize her work properly.
I bet the Duke lacrosse players and Tawana Brawley's victims could explain to you why you should care. You or someone you love could be the next criminally innocent, shining example of a New York freedom fighter's social agenda.

cjclong
05-06-2009, 01:58 PM
Thanks for posting this. Of course I don't know if what she has written is true, but there are somethings about it that don't smell right. At the least it appears she accepted what she was told that was negative about ARod without much effort to see if it was true or present another side. The fact that she was one of those who led the lynch mob for the Duke Lacrosse players who were framed would fit into this.

joelsabi
05-06-2009, 02:05 PM
interesting read.


The Selena Roberts question
By Benjamin Kabak .

Selena Roberts, former New York Times columnist and current Sports Illustrated writer, has a lot riding on her Alex Rodriguez story. Seemingly without seeing the list of players who failed the 2003 drug tests but corroborating her information with four sources, she has accused one of baseball’s biggest starts and its highest paid player of juicing.

She’s also two and a half months away from publishing an exposé on A-Rod called Hit & Run: The Many Lives of Alex Rodriguez. Baseball & The Boogie Down believes that this upcoming book raising some interesting questions:

From what I’ve gathered through several web searches, the book is described as “an expose of A-Rod’s controversial path to self-destruction.” Something tells me the purpose of this book is not intended to paint A-Rod in a positive light.

I’m sure Alex is aware of the book and I’m sure Alex knows who Selena Roberts is. Why would he give her the time of day and answer any questions she asks him? She should have known that he’d blow her off when she asked him about testing positive. His failure to say anything to her shouldn’t be read as an admission of guilt, which is kind of how it came across in her interview with Bob Costas. I may not have the quote 100% correct, but she basically said, “He could have said I don’t know who your sources are but their dead wrong.” Hence, she believes her sources even more.

Could this be just a ploy to sell a few extra books? If Alex comes out and says she’s wrong and that he never tested positive, then what? Then it turns into he said, she said and then how do we know who to really believe. What if someone trots out 4 anonymous and “reliable” sources that say he didn’t test positive and the SI article is a fabrication. It’s not out of the realm of possibility, especially when people say they have anonymous sources. There’s really no way for anyone, other than the person citing the sources, to verify it’s authenticity, right?

It’s certainly an interesting scenario, but the more time that passes without a statement from A-Rod, the less likely it is. If A-Rod wants to shed some doubt on this list, he first has to know for sure that he isn’t on it. At some point in the future during the Bonds perjury trial, the entire list will be made public, and if A-Rod has any doubt about his name’s appearing on it, he can’t do this.

RAB commenter Artist formerly known as “The” Steve summed it all up in an e-mail to me this morning:

For the sake of his legacy, denial is his only hope. I’ve heard HOF voters (Ken Davidoff) already say they won’t vote for him if this is true. But he can’t do that credibly if the Feds have the original list and samples and that eventually becomes public. According to the Bonds court case, they do. So everything will come out eventually.

I think he’s boxed into a corner. He HAS to fess up, and live with the consequences.

A 100 percent complete admission will be the first step in rehabbing an image, and as the silence continues from the A-Rod camp, the next few days will be quite telling.

joelsabi
05-06-2009, 02:27 PM
[B]
What I'm about to write is pure speculation.
Selena Roberts believes America is a safe haven for sexism (I happen to agree, but that's beside the point). She wanted the Duke lacrosse players to be shining examples of how deep-rooted and protected our sexism is, and she was more than willing to ignore their innocence to make her point (this repulses me).
Selena Roberts believes professional sports — the money, fame and power they primarily give young men — are corrosive of good values and a haven for sexism (I happen to agree, but that's beside the point). She wants Alex Rodriguez to stand as a shining example of what's wrong with American sports, and she just might be willing to ignore flattering truths about A-Rod and publish hearsay and gossip to make her point (and this is unfair).
She's written a celebrity-gossip book, "A-Rod: Game of Innuendo." Maybe you despise Rodriguez so much that you don't care about her methods and whether the rest of the alleged mainstream media characterize her work properly.
I bet the Duke lacrosse players and Tawana Brawley's victims could explain to you why you should care. You or someone you love could be the next criminally innocent, shining example of a New York freedom fighter's social agenda.


Why I have a feeling this wont be the last expose on a professional athlete by Selena Roberts.

Who will be the next athlete will she accuse and ask the tough question while holding an empty hand?

joelsabi
05-06-2009, 02:36 PM
By Dan Guttenplan

"Here comes a fastball!"
Of course, Roberts is being criticized for using anonymous sources for many of her accusations. What’s wrong with that? People want to read dirt on A-Rod. Who cares if the sources don’t have names?

Here are some predictions for future accusations Roberts will make about A-Rod.

1. A-Rod sent his cousin over the Mexican border to buy his steroids. In his travels, his cousin recently picked up a dirty needle at a small Mexican farm. A-Rod injected himself, and a few weeks later, our country is battling the swine flu. That’s right. A-Rod started the swine flu. And he hasn’t even issued an apology.

2. A-Rod recently received news that our economy was struggling. So he paid a visit to an unemployment office and made it rain with counterfeit money.

3. A-Rod recently bought his own ticket to Disney World after realizing he’d never earn a free trip for winning the World Series MVP. Instead of enjoying the rides, he was busy knocking over baby carriages.

4. In 2006, A-Rod participated in a Learn To Read initiative for Major League Baseball. He agreed to read to first-graders in a New York elementary school. A-Rod was escorted out of the building after dropping four F-bombs in front of the children.

5. In 2005, A-Rod started smoking a pack of cigarettes a day. He didn’t want ruin the clubhouse carpet, so he put out all of his cigarettes on the clubhouse attendant’s hand.

6. In 2007, A-Rod started to catch Baby Fever. So he kidnapped a 4-year-old in the Bronx and took him back to his Manhattan condo. After getting bored with the child after 20 minutes, he gave the 4-year-old money for a subway pass.

7. A-Rod invested his money with Bernie Madoff, only he cashed out in 2006.

8. In 2006, A-Rod called Johnny Damon “the most loyal teammate I’ve ever known.”

9. Whenever the Yankees play the Tigers in Detroit, A-Rod books a hotel in Canada because he refuses to stimulate Detroit’s local economy.

10. A-Rod once called a towing company when his best friend blocked his car in his own driveway.


"Sir, you left a puddle on the bench."
11. A-Rod routinely cuts long lines at the grocery store, and then pulls out 47 coupons and fumbles around with all of his loose change.

12. When A-Rod’s friends are arguing about who should take the last slice of pizza, A-Rod spits on the piece so no one else can have it.

13. Every time A-Rod uses a uni-sex bathroom, he pees all over the seat and leaves the bathroom with a goofy smirk on his face.

14. Whenever A-Rod goes out to dinner, he conveniently forgets his wallet.

15. There’s nothing A-Rod enjoys more than farting on an airplane that’s filled to capacity.

16. A-Rod once went streaking through a Little League Baseball Tournament.

17. In his Miami gym, A-Rod is known as the guy who sweats on his exercise machine and leaves it for the next person.

18. During a charity co-ed basketball tournament, A-Rod was assessed a Flagrant 2 foul.

19. A-Rod recently called Mike Vick “wise beyond his years.”

20. When asked about his goals for the season, A-Rod recently said, “I’d like to leave an upper-decker at Fenway Park. And I’m not talking about a home run.”

sportscentury
05-06-2009, 02:47 PM
Whitlock's take seems fair. ARod is no angel, and it's darn hard to believe a word he says. Nevertheless, Roberts has developed a reputation for being a sensationalist who is out to make a name for herself, perhaps at any cost. And make a name for herself she has.

both-teams-played-hard
05-06-2009, 03:02 PM
Whitlock's take seems fair. ARod is no angel, and it's darn hard to believe a word he says. Nevertheless, Roberts has developed a reputation for being a sensationalist who is out to make a name for herself, perhaps at any cost. And make a name for herself she has.
'zactly! Whitlock and Roberts just want money. Miss Rod just wants money. I want money. Can I get a 10 dollar donation for my 2 cents?

suave1477
05-06-2009, 04:20 PM
15. There’s nothing A-Rod enjoys more than farting on an airplane that’s filled to capacity.

16. A-Rod once went streaking through a Little League Baseball Tournament.

17. In his Miami gym, A-Rod is known as the guy who sweats on his exercise machine and leaves it for the next person.


WAIT A MINUTE!!!

I do these things you means it's WRONG???

:D lmaooooo

joelsabi
05-06-2009, 04:29 PM
WAIT A MINUTE!!!

I do these things you means it's WRONG???

:D lmaooooo

lol. my last post was for some levity. i qualify for many of these too but such revelation would have no public interest. :D