'Happy Pride Day!' at elementary school in Canada has rainbow-costumed teachers waving rainbow flags as students file in — and, of course, a drag queen show



Videos recorded last week at an elementary school in Canada features teachers dressed in rainbow costumes, waving rainbow flags, and repeatedly declaring "Happy Pride Day!" as students file in — and, of course, a drag queen performance for the kids.

What are the details?

Twitter user Colin Barry, a fifth-grade teacher for the Newfoundland & Labrador English School District, posted clips and photos Friday.

He prefaced a set of two videos and two photos by writing, "PRIDE, LOVE & ACCEPTANCE reigned supreme [at St. Matthew's School] during our #PrideDay celebrations."

St. Matthew's teaches kindergarten through 7th-grade students in St. John's, the capital city of the province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

One video shows students performing what appears to be staged skips under a rainbow prop and into a hallway — followed by teachers decked out in Pride regalia. The second video shows students gathered in a gymnasium for a drag queen performance.

A second post from Barry includes a video of students participating in a "full-on DANCE PARTY to kick off" Pride Month:

\u201cFull on DANCE PARTY to kick off \ud83c\udf08 \ud83e\udea9 #PrideMonth2023 @StMattsTigers @charrumbolt @MmeNorth @MmeRegular @msmeghand @MsYoungsClass3 @MsUpshall @grade1hodder #zerofun\u201d
— Colin Barry (@Colin Barry) 1685757435

Yet another video that's been reposted numerous times on social media appears to show students arriving at the school in the morning as teachers — dressed to the hilt in rainbow colors and waving rainbow flags — greet them every few feet.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @GitNigel

As students make their way through a lobby, more teachers are seen waving flags, along with students in a line doing the same:

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @GitNigel

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @GitNigel

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @GitNigel

It appeared there was nary a spot not devoted to the celebration of all things LBGTQ as the day kicked off:

\u201cSchool - 2023.\u201d
— completely ignerant (@completely ignerant) 1685951040

The school district on Monday afternoon didn't immediately respond to TheBlaze's request for comment about the videos.

\u201chttps://t.co/0RLuNfSoHV\u201d
— completely ignerant (@completely ignerant) 1685951040

How are folks reacting?

A number of commenters did not like what they saw in the videos, including one who poked the elephant in the room: "Pretty sure Saint Matthew wouldn’t be cool with this."

  • "We’re doomed," another commenter wrote.
  • "Grooming convention," another user said.
  • "So sick of this s**t," another commenter declared.
  • "This makes such great sense for all schools, from toddlers to trades, cause reading, writing & arithmetic, are just so awfully RACIST," another user quipped.
  • "Is this an ad for homeschooling?" another commenter wondered.
  • "WTF is this bulls**t," another user wrote.
  • "How many of them do you think you'll manage to turn?" another commenter asked.

And perhaps the most poignant response of them all: "Hi. Gay man here. This isn't for kids. You're doing more harm to gay men and women than good."

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According to Elon Musk, Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company never considered yanking Twitter from the App Store



Elon Musk claimed in a tweet earlier this week that Apple had threatened to yank Twitter from its App Store, but on Wednesday, Musk announced that Apple CEO Tim Cook said such a move was never under consideration.

"Thanks @tim_cook for taking me around Apple’s beautiful HQ," Musk tweeted on Wednesday. "Good conversation. Among other things, we resolved the misunderstanding about Twitter potentially being removed from the App Store. Tim was clear that Apple never considered doing so," he added.

\u201cGood conversation. Among other things, we resolved the misunderstanding about Twitter potentially being removed from the App Store. Tim was clear that Apple never considered doing so.\u201d
— Elon Musk (@Elon Musk) 1669839974

In a tweet on Monday, Musk claimed that Apple had "threatened to withhold Twitter from its App Store, but won't tell us why."

Musk indicated last week that if Google and Apple were to remove Twitter from their app stores, he would develop "an alternative phone."

\u201c@Liz_Wheeler I certainly hope it does not come to that, but, yes, if there is no other choice, I will make an alternative phone\u201d
— Liz Wheeler (@Liz Wheeler) 1669404144

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said on Tuesday that if Apple were to pull Twitter from the App Store, the move would be a "raw exercise of monopolistic power" that would warrant a congressional response.

DeSantis, a Republican who just won reelection during the Sunshine State's 2022 gubernatorial contest, has not announced plans for a presidential bid, but is widely viewed as someone who could potentially be a presidential contender. Musk indicated last week that he would support DeSantis for president in 2024.

Since taking over Twitter, Musk has moved to reinstate previously banned accounts, including the account of former President Donald Trump — Trump's account was reinstated after Musk ran a poll in which a majority supported reinstatement. Musk also ran a poll on whether to grant amnesty to suspended accounts that had not violated the law or carried out "egregious spam" — a majority of the votes supported the proposal, and Musk indicated that the proposal would be implemented.

"Currently suspended accounts will be enabled slowly next week after manual review to determine whether they have potentially broken the law or engaged in spam," Musk tweeted on Friday.

"The Twitter Files on free speech suppression soon to be published on Twitter itself. The public deserves to know what really happened," Musk tweeted on Monday. "This is a battle for the future of civilization. If free speech is lost even in America, tyranny is all that lies ahead," also tweeted on Monday.

\u201c@SwipeWright This is a battle for the future of civilization. If free speech is lost even in America, tyranny is all that lies ahead.\u201d
— Colin Wright (@Colin Wright) 1669675739

DeSantis says it would be a 'raw exercise of monopolistic power' for Apple to yank Twitter from App Store and would warrant a congressional response



Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said on Tuesday that if Apple bans Twitter from its App Store, the move would be a "huge mistake and ... raw exercise of monopolistic power" that would warrant a response by the U.S. Congress.

Elon Musk, the billionaire business magnate who bought Twitter earlier this year, noted last week that he would support DeSantis for president in 2024. Earlier this month, former President Donald Trump announced a 2024 White House bid, but DeSantis, a Republican who just won reelection in the Sunshine State, has not announced plans to pursue the presidency.

Watch: Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during visit to Jacksonville youtu.be

"Apple has also threatened to withhold Twitter from its App Store, but won’t tell us why," Musk tweeted on Monday — last week he indicated that if Apple and Google were to boot Twitter from their app stores, he would develop "an alternative phone."

Musk has indicated that he wants Twitter to be a forum for free speech. Since taking over the social media company, he has already reinstated some accounts, including the account of former President Donald Trump. Musk has said that the platform will grant amnesty to previously suspended accounts that had not violated the law or perpetrated "egregious spam."

Twitter has also apparently stopped enforcing its COVID-19-related censorship policy. "Effective November 23, 2022, Twitter is no longer enforcing the COVID-19 misleading information policy," the company has noted.

"The Twitter Files on free speech suppression soon to be published on Twitter itself. The public deserves to know what really happened …" Musk tweeted on Monday. "This is a battle for the future of civilization. If free speech is lost even in America, tyranny is all that lies ahead," he tweeted.

\u201c@SwipeWright This is a battle for the future of civilization. If free speech is lost even in America, tyranny is all that lies ahead.\u201d
— Colin Wright (@Colin Wright) 1669675739

Sports talk show host Colin Cowherd says a red wave is coming on election day because Democrats messed with people's children



Sports commentator Colin Cowherd said that the red wave of Republican victories is coming on election day and blamed it on Democrats messing with people's kids.

Cowherd tweeted his political opinion on Thursday.

\u201cRed wave is coming Tuesday. Don\u2019t mess w people\u2019s kids. It lands differently \u2014 and they will hold a grudge. Can\u2019t blame em. That\u2019s my Ted Talk.\u201d
— Colin Cowherd (@Colin Cowherd) 1667489445

"Red wave is coming Tuesday. Don’t mess w people’s kids. It lands differently — and they will hold a grudge. Can’t blame em. That’s my Ted Talk," he tweeted.

Cowherd didn't elaborate on what he meant, but many users responded that he might have been referring to the pandemic lockdowns for public schools, transgender bathroom policies in schools, or critical race theory being taught in schools.

ESPN anchor Sage Steele agreed with Cowherd's tweet.

"I take pride in not holding grudges..but you're damn right it hits different when it comes to my kids," Steele tweeted. "Being a mom is the only thing that truly matters to me & I am DONE. Have been for 2 years. Too many lines have been crossed & not enough ppl have stood up for our kids. Enough."

\u201cI take pride in not holding grudges..but you're damn right it hits different when it comes to my kids. Being a mom is the only thing that truly matters to me & I am DONE. Have been for 2 years. Too many lines have been crossed & not enough ppl have stood up for our kids. Enough.\u201d
— Sage Steele (@Sage Steele) 1667507049

Not everyone on social media agreed. Some users were angry at Cowherd for appearing to side with Republicans.

"They want a 12 year old rape victim to have to give birth to her attackers baby. But Colin is mad that his kids had to stay home a few weeks from their very expensive private school. What an elitist a**hole," read one tweet.

"WTF are you talking about? Your white privilege is nauseating. Funny how you're quiet when it comes to Republicans destroying the lives of trans youth," responded another detractor.

"Shut up bitch. Move out of LA then cuz that ain’t going red. Dumb bitch," read another reply.

Cowherd rarely strays into the politics field, but he did criticize former President Donald Trump in 2018 when he denounced NBA star LeBron James, saying that politicians should stick to politics and he would stick to sports.

Cowherd's videos on YouTube have garnered over 822 million views.

Here's Cowherd discussing politics:

Colin Cowherd reacts to President Donald Trump's tweet about LeBron James | NBA | THE HERDwww.youtube.com

'Chupacabra?': Mysterious figure caught on camera has Texas city officials seeking answers



A zoo in Amarillo, Texas, is trying to identify a strange figure that was caught on camera lurking just outside a chain-link perimeter fence.

The Amarillo Zoo posted a night-vision photo on Twitter requesting help identifying the "Unidentified Amarillo Object" outside the zoo "in the dark and early morning hours."

"Is it a person with a strange hat who likes to walk at night? A chupacabra? Do you have any ideas of what this UAO- Unidentified Amarillo Object could be?" the caption asks.

\u201cThe Amarillo Zoo captured a strange image outside the zoo in the dark and early morning hours of May 21 (around 1:25 a.m.). Is it a person with a strange hat who likes to walk at night? A chupacabra? Do you have any ideas of what this UAO- Unidentified Amarillo Object could be?\u201d
— CityofAmarillo (@CityofAmarillo) 1654734241

"In the spirit of fun if not curiosity, the City of Amarillo is letting the public offer ideas on the identity of the UAO," the city of Amarillo posted on their website.

"Was it a person with a strange hat who likes to walk at night? A large coyote on its hind legs? A Chupacabra? It is a mystery – for Amarillo to help solve,“ the city said.

"We just want to let the Amarillo community have some fun with this. It is important to note that this entity was outside the Amarillo Zoo. There were no signs of attempted entry into the zoo. No animals or individuals were harmed. There were no signs of criminal activity or vandalism," said the city's Director of Parks and Recreation Michael Kashuba.

“It is definitely a strange and interesting image. Maybe Amarillo can help solve the mystery of our UAO.”

The folks on Twitter were happy to oblige:

\u201c@CityofAmarillo It\u2019s clearly Rocket from Guardians of the Galaxy!\u201d
— CityofAmarillo (@CityofAmarillo) 1654734241
\u201c@CityofAmarillo I'm thinking an owl riding a drunk guy.\u201d
— CityofAmarillo (@CityofAmarillo) 1654734241
\u201c@wintig99 @CityofAmarillo But where are the maracas?\u201d
— CityofAmarillo (@CityofAmarillo) 1654734241
\u201c@CityofAmarillo That\u2019s Gnorm from the 1990 movie A Gnome Named Gnorm!! \ud83e\udd23\u201d
— CityofAmarillo (@CityofAmarillo) 1654734241
\u201c@CityofAmarillo I believe it may the ultra rare IGGY POP action figure.\u201d
— CityofAmarillo (@CityofAmarillo) 1654734241
\u201c@CityofAmarillo I did a deep dive (And by that i mean I just made the picture bigger and looked at the picture with inverted colours among other things) And it looks like its just a drunk guy with a beer bottle and a weird hat.\u201d
— CityofAmarillo (@CityofAmarillo) 1654734241
\u201c@TheMorningSpew2 @colincampbell I think you may be onto something :)\u201d
— Colin Campbell (@Colin Campbell) 1654715127

Elite NYC school suffering 'race meltdown' over 'extreme' anti-racist demands: report



The Dalton School, an elite school in New York City, is reportedly experiencing a "race meltdown" over anti-racist demands by teachers that some are calling "extreme" and "insane."

The Dalton School is an elite K-12 preparatory school on the Upper East Side of Manhattan that has an exorbitant tuition of $54,180, but also prides itself on being extremely progressive. Jim Best, the head of the school, declared that he has "committed Dalton to becoming a visibly, vocally, structurally anti-racist institution."

The school's website has a "Commitment to Anti-Racism" page, where it outlines it's "anti-racism vision." The objectives include: "All Dalton students will have a deep historical understanding of racial and structural inequities in the U.S., and particularly the history of anti-black racism."

Despite the prep school already committed to anti-racism, the teachers at the Dalton School are allegedly demanding the institution be even more committed to anti-racism. The New York Post reported on the eight-page "anti-racist manifesto signed by dozens of faculty members with a sweeping list of demands."

The purported demands, some based on critical race theory, include:

  • Hiring 12 full-time diversity officers, and multiple psychologists to support students "coping with race-based traumatic stress."
  • Assigning a staffer dedicated to black students who have "complaints or face disciplinary action," and a full-time advocate to help black kids "navigate a predominantly white institution."
  • Paying the student debt of black staffers upon hiring them.
  • Requiring courses that focus on "Black liberation" and "challenges to white supremacy."
  • Compensating any student of color who appears in Dalton promotional material.
  • Abolishing high-level academic courses by 2023 if the performance of black students is not on par with non-blacks.
  • Requiring "anti-racism" statements from all staffers.
  • Overhauling the entire curriculum, reading lists and student plays to reflect diversity and social justice themes.
  • Divesting from companies that "criminalize or dehumanize" black people, including private prisons and tech firms that manufacture police equipment or weapons.
  • Donating 50 percent of all fundraising dollars to NYC public schools if Dalton is not representative of the city in terms of gender, race, socioeconomic background, and immigration status by 2025.

Colin Wright, managing editor Quillette, posted some of the demands on Twitter. He wrote, "The Dalton School in Manhattan is having a race meltdown. Teachers are holding the school for ransom with demands, but they're so extreme the school will crumble if they give in. But they'll crumble if they don't, too!"

1/ The Dalton School in Manhattan is having a race meltdown. It's absolutely insane. Teachers are holding the schoo… https://t.co/yNgKMWHQv7
— Colin Wright (@Colin Wright)1608363442.0


6/ And continued... https://t.co/gSkENG2uiK
— Colin Wright (@Colin Wright)1608398319.0

Naked Dollar writer Scott Johnston, who first revealed the alleged manifesto, said, "Dalton's teachers are refusing to come back" until the demands are met.

The Post spoke to parents of children who attend the elite school.

"My ancestors experienced white supremacy by being slaughtered," a Jewish parent reportedly said. "The idea that being white automatically means you are privileged or a white supremacist is ridiculous. My child comes from people who had to fight for everything they got. It's just about skin color now."

Earlier this year, the pricey school received pushback from parents who were unsatisfied with the school's remote education during the coronavirus pandemic. The Dalton School went to all-digital instruction until at least mid-year. Approximately 70 parents signed a petition to open the school, which stated, "Zoom-school is not Dalton."

"We are, in short, frustrated and confused and better hope to understand the school's thought processes behind the virtual model it has adopted," a letter from parents to the school reads, according to Bloomberg. "Please tell us what are the criteria for re-opening fully in person. Covid-19 is not going away and waiting for that to happen is misguided."

The Dalton School is known for its famous alumni such as Anderson Cooper, Christian Slater, and Claire Danes. The school is also where Jeffrey Epstein was hired as a teacher by former headmaster Donald Barr, father of former United States Attorney General William Barr.

In November, journalist Megyn Kelly announced that she had pulled her two sons from a "woke, far-left" elite NYC prep school that planned to implement an extreme racial social justice agenda.

"It's so out of control on so many levels, and after years of resisting it, we're going to leave the city," she said on "The Megyn Kelly Show." "We pulled our boys from their school, and our daughter is going to be leaving hers soon, too. The schools have always been far left, which doesn't align with my own ideology, but I didn't really care. Most of my friends are liberals; it's fine. I come from Democrats as a family."

New Colin Kaepernick project calls for utopian future without police or prisons



Former professional NFL quarterback turned social justice activist Colin Kaepernick has launched a new project aimed at building a utopian police-less and prison-less future.

What are the details?

In "Abolition for the People," Kaepernick teamed up with Medium publication, LEVEL, to publish "30 stories from organizers, political prisoners, scholars, and advocates" over the next month with the goal of furthering the pursuit of "abolition" for minority individuals.

Reforms such as "use-of-force policies, body cameras, more training, and police accountability" simply won't cut it, Kaepernick argues in an essay introducing the project. In fact, he says, reforming the white supremacist institutions of police and prisons ultimately only serves to commend them.

Instead, project creators say: "The only answer is abolition, a full dismantling of the carceral state and the institutions that support it."

Thread/ABOLITION FOR THE PEOPLE: The Movement For a Future Without Policing & PrisonsThe collection of 30 essay… https://t.co/6L901GAbHj
— Colin Kaepernick (@Colin Kaepernick)1602013670.0

After all, Kaepernick writes, "The central intent of policing is to surveil, terrorize, capture, and kill marginalized populations, specifically Black folks."

As for prisons, they only exist to "isolate, regulate, and surveil" black and brown people.

"Prisons do not disappear problems, they disappear human beings," he says, borrowing from writer Angela Davis.

Sure enough, only once society rids itself of these terroristic morally corrupt systems, will it be "safer, healthier, and truly free."

What else?

It should be noted that found nowhere in the essays so far is any explanation of how exactly a little utopia-destroying thing called crime will be monitored and controlled. Kaepernick and his fellow writers seem to believe that crime and criminals will simply vanish when police and prison systems are dismantled.

All Kaepernick musters on the topic is this:

To be clear, the abolition of these institutions is not the absence of accountability but rather the establishment of transformative and restorative processes that are not rooted in punitive practices. By abolishing policing and prisons, not only can we eliminate white supremacist establishments, but we can create space for budgets to be reinvested directly into communities to address mental health needs, homelessness and houselessness, access to education, and job creation as well as community-based methods of accountability.

Again and again in the essays, "crimes" are reinterpreted as mistakes and "criminals" as unfortunate souls who only want to be loved. People are inherently good and never do bad things, right?

"If our children mess up, and sometimes even if they don't, they go to prison," writes one essayist. "If their children mess up in ways our children can't even imagine, they become presidents of companies, politicians, and president of the United States."

Kaepernick adds that "prisons do not contain a 'criminal population' running rampant but rather a population that society has repeatedly failed." Translation: Criminals have not failed society, but society has failed "criminals."

The people within society who mess up shouldn't be punished, Kaepernick argues, they should be helped to do better.

No word yet on what justice the activists would seek for the racist police officers who have killed in the line of duty. Perhaps all they deserve is a mental health evaluation and counseling.

Colin Kaepernick says 'the white supremacist institution of policing' must 'be abolished'



Former San Francisco 49ers quarterback-turned-activist Colin Kaepernick declared Wednesday that "the white supremacist institution of policing" must "be abolished," after news broke that the three officers involved in the March raid that led to the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor would not be charged in her death.

What are the details?

Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron (R) held a much-anticipated press conference Wednesday afternoon explaining that a Louisville grand jury decided two of the officers involved would not be charged and that the third would face three counts of wanton endangerment for firing at other residences during the incident.

According to the Associated Press, Cameron warned, "There will be celebrities, influencers and activists who having never lived in Kentucky will try to tell us how to feel, suggesting they understand the facts of this case, that they know our community and the Commonwealth better than we do, but they don't."

He added, "Let's not give in to their attempts to influence our thinking or capture our emotions."

Kaepernick tweeted after the announcement:

"The white supremacist institution of policing that stole Breonna Taylor's life from us must be abolished for the safety and well being of our people."

The white supremacist institution of policing that stole Breonna Taylor’s life from us must be abolished for the sa… https://t.co/0R0X1LCjtF
— Colin Kaepernick (@Colin Kaepernick)1600903061.0

The former NFL player has become a household name after sparking controversy years ago when he began kneeling during the national anthem at NFL games in protest of police brutality.

Since the death of George Floyd in late May, protests have been ongoing across the U.S. in the name of racial equality, with some descending into riots involving violence, looting, arson. The protests have given rise to an anti-police movement, and some activists have invoked Kaepernick in their demonstrations.

Protesters have often called for justice in the death of Breonna Taylor, as well as several other black Americans who have died during altercations with law enforcement.

What's the background?

The night Taylor died, police conducted a raid on a residence where she was with her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker. Walker opened fire on police, believing the situation was a break-in, and officers shot back, killing Taylor.

Initial reports claimed that law enforcement was executing a "no-knock" warrant, but Cameron said during his press conference that an independent witness had confirmed that officers did announce themselves before entering.

Louisville declared a state of emergency ahead of the grand jury announcement on Wednesday. During protests that night, two officers were shot and hospitalized with non-life-threatening wounds.

Stephen Smith slaps down co-host after he calls Fox News 'extreme right wing propaganda' over Jacob Blake shooting



Sports commentator Stephen Smith rebuked his co-host Max Kellerman after he gave a very one-sided account of the debate over the police shooting of Jacob Blake.

The pair launched into a fiery debate on their show "First Take" while talking about controversial comments from Hall of Fame linebacker Brian Urlacher about the police shooting that inspired rioting and looting. Urlacher claimed in a social media post that Blake had been reaching for a knife when police shot him. While a knife was recovered in the car, it has not been established if Blake was reaching for it when he was shot.

"He's susceptible to low quality information it seems to me," said Kellerman of Urlacher.

"If you exist in a Fox News silo or a Facebook silo of extreme right wing propaganda, what you will notice, and by the way this even makes its way into the mainstream. When a Black man is killed by law enforcement, the stories that come out about him, especially with those silos with low quality information, paint him as a very bad person. And focus on, even if he was in commission of a crime at the moment he was shot, focus on the worst aspects of their lives, and dehumanize them," he explained.

"Whereas Kyle Rittenhouse, white militia, seventeen year old kid, drove to Kenosha and killed two people, in cold blood, two protesters," Kellerman added, "in cold blood including the second person, who tried to stop him from killing more people, and drove all the way home and was arrested the next day finally, the cops were practically aiding him, they gave him water when they first saw him."

Kellerman claimed that some of the media was humanizing Rittenhouse, and added that they "do the same to white terrorists, who blow up government buildings and shoot up schools."

"What you don't want to do is hear the other point!"

Smith was displeased with Kellerman's framing of the issue and the debate quickly got heated.

"You know you've got to be careful about generalizing. When you talk about low-quality information, you've got to be specific about that," said Smith.

"Excuse me, just like you brought up Fox News," Smith continued as Kellerman tried to interrupt, "there are people that could look at CNN or MSNBC and they're going to have their opinions about those networks."

"No, this is not an issue of opinion, Stephen A," responded Kellerman. "I'm talking about independent fact-checking organizations and the quality of the information…"

"Max, you're not right," interrupted Smith, "Hold on. No, no. We listened to you! We heard you, alright! But the point is do you know that Brian Urlacher got that information from Fox News? Do you know that? How do you know what television network he was watching? That's the point!"

"No, I didn't, and I didn't say he did," replied Kellerman.

"Don't even bring it up. Alright then! You said low-quality information, you mentioned Fox News. I watch them all, I watch them all!" said Smith.

"No but I saw certain facts," continued Kellerman, "certain facts that he was incorrect about, including he reached for the knife, because that's where it's framed in low-quality information news silos."

Part of the debate was circulated on social media:

This was...in other words...an interesting exchange...with Stephen A. Smith defending Fox News and right-wing… https://t.co/P6zzylESAQ
— Colin Kaepernick 7️⃣ Was Exiled Exercising Rights (@Colin Kaepernick 7️⃣ Was Exiled Exercising Rights)1598636318.0

"Listen, I saw 'certain facts' everywhere," continued Smith. "There are a multitude of outlets, we heard you. See, that's your problem! Cause you like to talk and then what you don't want to do is hear the other point, because you want your point to be stuck with everybody."

Kellerman said that Smith was misrepresenting what he said, and continued decrying Fox News and Facebook.

"I don't want people doing that on First Take, I don't want people doing that on First Take! Period!" said Smith.

While ESPN posted more of the segment between Kellerman and Smith on their YouTube account, their video omitted the portion where Smith defended Fox News and other outlets. Similarly, the Twitter version of the exchange omitted Smith's later comments where he explicitly denounced the police shooting of Blake.

Kellerman made headlines on Thursday when he made similar comments about fans of SEC college football being "easy to propagandize and almost immune to facts," in regards to the coronavirus pandemic.

Here's ESPN excerpted version:

First Take reacts to the Bears disavowing Brian Urlacher following his criticism of NBA protestswww.youtube.com