Women's basketball is having a moment, thanks to this year's NCAA tournament and stars like Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese and ...
The event inside the Garden Theater in Midtown Detroit was filled with fans and members of the media, and hosted by sports ...
it strangely enough might be Jemele Hill. After all, the former SportsCenter host routinely found herself in hot water during her time at ESPN. That included a dustup she had with Chris Berman ...
Jemele Hill wasn’t a fan of the tone being used around the conversation on WNBA salaries — and she let it be known. The former ESPN journalist and current contributor to The Atlantic took to X ...
Ex-ESPN anchor Jemele Hill called out Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson for "political cowardice" because he won't publicly endorse President Biden ahead of the 2024 election. In an exclusive interview ...
Monday, Jemele Hill criticized Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson ... “I love Dwayne Johnson. During my time at ESPN, if you asked people the No. 1 person when they came through and did the ...
Former ESPN writer and co-host Jemele Hill has questioned the hype around Caitlin in women's college basketball, as she accused media outlets of not covering black players just as much as the Iowa ...
Jemele Hill has a serious issue with Caitlin Clark, but it’s not from something she did or said, but from the media who covers her. Caitlin Clark, the Iowa Hawkeyes superstar, is the biggest ...
Jemele Hill, still a popular figure in the sports media space despite her departure from ESPN, has suggested that networks are more focused on Caitlin Clark than they are on the sport itself.
To contextualize the Caitlin Clark phenomenon within the ever-changing narrative around women’s basketball, I spoke to Emmy Award-winning journalist Jemele Hill (author of Uphill, contributor to ...
In an interview with uproxx.com, Hill emphasized that the surge in women's basketball viewership predates Clark's emergence as a star player. She criticized the media for perpetuating a narrative ...