0:00 / 0:00

ESPN incapable of making the right decisions right now. During this ongoing dispute between ESPN / Disney and YouTube TV… Stephen A Smith drops an ad for a solitaire app that is currently in a $630 million dollar lawsuit for ALLEGEDLY rigging the game 😂

@evhandd
231.6K views9.3K likes1:40ENMar 9, 2026
392 words2135 characters19 sentencesReadability: High School

Transcript

Just when you thought people couldn't hate ESPN anymore, they go out and do this. And I would just love to know who the hell is making decisions at ESPN right now because this is terrible. So we all know what's happening with the ESPN and YouTube TV to speed right now, right? Long story short, Disney wants more money for their content, YouTube TV doesn't want to pay more. And for the past week, ESPN has forced their biggest stars to go on to Twitter, X, and all this social media, and be like, "Hey, if you want to keep ESPN, you need to go to this website and do something about it." Not me, I can't do anything. Ironically, Pat McAfee, who was ESPN's biggest star, was very vocal about how stupid that was. And then after all that dust settled, Stephen A Smith goes and does the stupidest thing he could have possibly done. And by the way, if you want to learn how the biggest brands in the world are built, but also broken like ESPN, make sure you follow me. So for a little context here, last year during the NBA final, Stephen A Smith was caught playing solitaire during the game and went super viral. And a few days ago, during this ESPN YouTube dispute, Stephen A Smith fully leaned into this solitaire thing and started promoting a solitaire app, which, first of all, the description here was obviously written by AI. This is ChatGPT, like, to a tee. And everyone's feed starts to get bombarded by all these ESPN personalities saying to go download this shitty solitaire app, like Kendrick Perkins, being a kind who replied to Stephen A Smith and actually deleted it, and Orlovsky and a couple other personalities on ESPN. But it's a pretty big problem with this app, because this app is currently in the middle of a $637 million lawsuit for allegedly rigging the game. Allegedly. Allegedly, allegedly, allegedly. So just as all this YouTube TV stuff is happening with ESPN and Disney, they go and drop this onto all the fans and the customers of ESPN. And everybody is pissed, rightfully so. And I think it's safe to say that ESPN is one of the most tone deaf companies in the world right now, because what are you doing?