Tag Archives: interview

“Bachelor” host Chris Harrison is temporarily “stepping aside” after “excusing historical racism”

Chris Harrison, the longtime host of “The Bachelor” and “The Bachelorette,” announced Saturday that he is “stepping aside” from the franchise for an undisclosed “period of time.” The bombshell announcement comes in the wake of a controversial interview, in which he defended a current contestant’s racist photos. 

“This historic season of The Bachelor should not be marred or overshadowed by my mistakes or diminished by my actions,” Harrison wrote in an announcement posted to Instagram, referencing the current lead of the show, Matt James, who is the first Black male lead. “To that end, I have consulted with Warner Bros. and ABC and will be stepping aside for a period of time and will not join for the After the Final Rose special.”

Harrison added that he was “dedicated” to educating himself on a more profound and productive level. “I want to ensure our cast and crew members, to my friends, colleagues and our fans: this is not just a moment, but a commitment to much greater understanding that I will actively make every day,” he said.

Harrison has faced increasing backlash online this week after defending a contestant who has been accused of racist acts. Rachel Lindsay, the franchise’s first Black female lead and one of the show’s strongest advocates for racial justice, said Friday that she will not renew her contract with the franchise as a result of Harrison’s comments.

“By excusing historical racism, I defended it,” Harrison wrote Saturday. “I invoked the term ‘woke police,’ which is unacceptable. I am ashamed over how uninformed I was. I was so wrong.”

Harrison wrote that he was sorry to the Black and BIPOC community. “My words were harmful,” he said. “I am listening, and I truly apologize for my ignorance and any pain it caused you. I want to give my heartfelt thanks to the people from these communities who I’ve had enlightening conversations with over the past few days, and I am so grateful to those who have reached out to help me on my path to anti-racism.”

It is not clear how long Harrison will be absent from the franchise, or who will take his place during the “After the Final Rose” special, which is not pretaped.

The controversy began after photos surfaced of Rachael Kirkconnell, a contestant on this season of “The Bachelor,” attending an antebellum-themed party in 2018. 

Here’s a breakdown of how it unfolded: 

Harrison’s interview with Rachel Lindsay

Lindsay asked Harrison about the Kirkconnell photos during an interview on Tuesday. Kirkconnell’s season features Matt James as the Bachelor, marking the first time the franchise has chosen a Black male for the role. 

“We all need to have a little grace, a little understanding, a little compassion,” Harrison told Lindsay. “Because I have seen some stuff online — this judge, jury, executioner thing — where people are just tearing this girl’s life apart and diving into, like, her parents, her parents’ voting record. It’s unbelievably alarming to watch this. I haven’t heard Rachael speak on this yet. And until I actually hear this woman have a chance to speak, who am I to say any of this?”

“Well, the picture was from 2018 at an Old South antebellum party,” Lindsay replied. “That’s not a good look.” 

“Is it a good look in 2018 or is it not a good look in 2021?” Harrison asked.

“It’s not a good look ever,” Lindsay said, adding, “If I went to that party, what would I represent at that party?” 

“You’re 100% right in 2021. That was not the case in 2018,” Harrison said, estimating that “50 million people did that in 2018.” 

“That was a type of party,” he said, adding that he is “not defending it.”


Chris Harrison & Rachel Lindsay Talk ‘Bachelor’ Contestant Rachael Kirkconnell by
extratv on
YouTube

Harrison and Kirkconnell apologize

After facing backlash over his comments, Harrison posted an apology to social media on Wednesday. 

“To my Bachelor Nation family — I will always own a mistake when I make one, so I am here to extend a sincere apology,” he said. “I have this incredible platform to speak about love, and yesterday I took a stance on topics about which I should have been better informed.”

“While I do not speak for Rachael Kirkconnell, my intentions were simply to ask for grace in offering her an opportunity to speak on her own behalf,” he continued. “What I now realize I have done is cause harm by wrongly speaking in a manner that perpetuates racism, and for that I am so deeply sorry. I also apologize to my friend Rachel Lindsay for not listening to her better on a topic she has a first-hand understanding of, and humbly thank the members of Bachelor Nation who have reached out to me to hold me accountable. I promise to do better.”

Kirkconnell also apologized on Thursday, writing on Instagram, “I was ignorant, but my ignorance was racist. I am sorry to the communities and individuals that my actions harmed and offended. I am ashamed about my lack of education, but it is no one’s responsibility to educate me.”

“I deserve to be held accountable for my actions,” she added. “I will never grow unless I recognize what I have done is wrong. I don’t think one apology means that I deserve your forgiveness, but rather I hope I can earn your forgiveness through my future actions.”

Franchise stars speak out

Lindsay, who hosts a Bachelor Nation podcast and has made frequent cameos on the show, said that she will not renew her contract with the franchise when it expires. 

“I’m exhausted. I have truly had enough,” Lindsay said on Friday’s episode of her podcast “Higher Learning.” 

“My entire reason for doing ‘The Bachelorette’ — and I was lucky that it worked out for me in the most beautiful way in finding Bryan — is that I wanted to be representative as a Black woman to this audience. And I wanted to pave the way for more people to have this opportunity,” Lindsay said on the podcast.

“But how much more do I want to be affiliated with this? How much more can I take of things like this? I said I was gonna leave if they didn’t have leads of color. Okay, they did that, and they made some other changes. They hired a diversity consultant — who didn’t attend the class? Did Chris Harrison not sit through that? I’m confused as to how you could have whole consultants working for you, yet what happened just happened.”

“I can’t take it anymore,” Lindsay said. “I’m contractually bound in some ways. But when it’s up, I am too. I can’t do it anymore.”

James has also spoken out in support of Lindsay. 

Matt James shared his support for Rachel Lindsay on his Instagram Story.

Matt James / Instagram


“I am beyond grateful to have Rachel as a mentor during this season,” James wrote on his Instagram Story on Friday. “Your advocacy of BIPOC people in the franchise is invaluable, I stand with you and the rest of the women advocating for change and accountability.”

Tayshia Adams, the most recent Bachelorette, said on her Instagram Story on Friday that she is “really hurt and disappointed and confused” by the “ignorance” she’s seen surrounding conversations about race this week. 

Adams, who is Black, added that she is “really hurt” by the response to Kirkconnell’s actions, which she called blatantly racist.

A slew of contestants from Adams’ season shared a joint message to Instagram on Friday, “denouncing racist behavior and any defense thereof.” They added that they “stand united” with Lindsay. 

Season 25 contestants also posted a joint statement on Instagram on Thursday denouncing any “defense of racism.” 

“Any defense of racist behavior denies the lived and continued experiences of BIPOC individuals,” the statement reads. “These experiences are not to be exploited or tokenized.” 

“Rachel Lindsay continues to advocate with ‘grace’ for individuals who identify as BIPOC within this franchise,” it concludes. “Just because she is speaking the loudest, doesn’t mean she is alone. We stand with her, we hear her, and we advocate for change alongside her.”



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Joe Rogan has awkward interview, cringeworthy moment

Let’s just put this out there straight away and bluntly: Is Joe Rogan trippin’?

The veteran cageside commentator was at the UFC Apex on Saturday night for UFC 258 to call his first event of 2021, and his return gave us one very awkward moment with Polyana Viana.

Viana had just scored an impressive first-round submission win over Mallory Martin during their strawweight prelim bout on ESPN. With Rogan on post-fight interview duty, this is how their conversation started:

Rogan: “Before we even talk about the fight, I want to know: What was it like to become famous for beating up that mugger in Brazil?”

Viana, through translator Alex Davis: “Yeah, that was two years ago. Everybody still remembers. I’m really happy, because that inspired a lot of women to start doing self-defense classes.”

Yeah, that’s right. Viana had just looked really good in winning her second consecutive fight, but for some odd reason, Rogan was interested in first talking about something that happened in [checks notes] January 2019.

It was a viral story at the time broken by then-MMA Junkie reporter Fernanda Prates. But did Rogan just read about it this week?

As awkward as that was, though, Rogan rejoined fellow commentators Jon Anik and Daniel Cormier, and he wasn’t quite ready to stop talking about the mugger story. Here’s what was said on air before going to commercial:

Rogan: “We talked about it during the break, but that fight, that thing that she had in Brazil, we didn’t really talk about on the air, did we? Here’s a viral image of a man with his face beat to hell, and it’s because of this woman. He tried to mug her, and she beat the snot out of him. He became a part of multiple memes.”

Cormier: “He’s famous for getting beat up …”

Rogan: “By a beautiful woman, too! What a terrible life!”

Oh, the cringe.

The Blue Corner is MMA Junkie’s blog space. We don’t take it overly serious, and neither should you. If you come complaining to us that something you read here is not hard-hitting news, expect to have the previous sentence repeated in ALL CAPS.

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“Bachelor” host Chris Harrison is temporarily “stepping aside” after “excusing historical racism”

Chris Harrison, the longtime host of “The Bachelor” and “The Bachelorette,” announced Saturday that he is “stepping aside” from the franchise for an undisclosed “period of time.” The bombshell announcement comes in the wake of a controversial interview, in which he defended a current contestant’s racist photos. 

“This historic season of The Bachelor should not be marred or overshadowed by my mistakes or diminished by my actions,” Harrison wrote in an announcement posted to Instagram, referencing the current lead of the show, Matt James, who is the first Black male lead. “To that end, I have consulted with Warner Bros. and ABC and will be stepping aside for a period of time and will not join for the After the Final Rose special.”

Harrison added that he was “dedicated” to educating himself on a more profound and productive level. “I want to ensure our cast and crew members, to my friends, colleagues and our fans: this is not just a moment, but a commitment to much greater understanding that I will actively make every day,” he said.

Harrison has faced increasing backlash online this week after defending a contestant who has been accused of racist acts. Rachel Lindsay, the franchise’s first Black female lead and one of the show’s strongest advocates for racial justice, said Friday that she will not renew her contract with the franchise as a result of Harrison’s comments.

“By excusing historical racism, I defended it,” Harrison wrote Saturday. “I invoked the term ‘woke police,’ which is unacceptable. I am ashamed over how uninformed I was. I was so wrong.”

Harrison wrote that he was sorry to the Black and BIPOC community. “My words were harmful,” he said. “I am listening, and I truly apologize for my ignorance and any pain it caused you. I want to give my heartfelt thanks to the people from these communities who I’ve had enlightening conversations with over the past few days, and I am so grateful to those who have reached out to help me on my path to anti-racism.”

It is not clear how long Harrison will be absent from the franchise, or who will take his place during the “After the Final Rose” special, which is not pretaped.

The controversy began after photos surfaced of Rachael Kirkconnell, a contestant on this season of “The Bachelor,” attending an antebellum-themed party in 2018. 

Here’s a breakdown of how it unfolded: 

Harrison’s interview with Rachel Lindsay

Lindsay asked Harrison about the Kirkconnell photos during an interview on Tuesday. Kirkconnell’s season features Matt James as the Bachelor, marking the first time the franchise has chosen a Black male for the role. 

“We all need to have a little grace, a little understanding, a little compassion,” Harrison told Lindsay. “Because I have seen some stuff online — this judge, jury, executioner thing — where people are just tearing this girl’s life apart and diving into, like, her parents, her parents’ voting record. It’s unbelievably alarming to watch this. I haven’t heard Rachael speak on this yet. And until I actually hear this woman have a chance to speak, who am I to say any of this?”

“Well, the picture was from 2018 at an Old South antebellum party,” Lindsay replied. “That’s not a good look.” 

“Is it a good look in 2018 or is it not a good look in 2021?” Harrison asked.

“It’s not a good look ever,” Lindsay said, adding, “If I went to that party, what would I represent at that party?” 

“You’re 100% right in 2021. That was not the case in 2018,” Harrison said, estimating that “50 million people did that in 2018.” 

“That was a type of party,” he said, adding that he is “not defending it.”


Chris Harrison & Rachel Lindsay Talk ‘Bachelor’ Contestant Rachael Kirkconnell by
extratv on
YouTube

Harrison and Kirkconnell apologize

After facing backlash over his comments, Harrison posted an apology to social media on Wednesday. 

“To my Bachelor Nation family — I will always own a mistake when I make one, so I am here to extend a sincere apology,” he said. “I have this incredible platform to speak about love, and yesterday I took a stance on topics about which I should have been better informed.”

“While I do not speak for Rachael Kirkconnell, my intentions were simply to ask for grace in offering her an opportunity to speak on her own behalf,” he continued. “What I now realize I have done is cause harm by wrongly speaking in a manner that perpetuates racism, and for that I am so deeply sorry. I also apologize to my friend Rachel Lindsay for not listening to her better on a topic she has a first-hand understanding of, and humbly thank the members of Bachelor Nation who have reached out to me to hold me accountable. I promise to do better.”

Kirkconnell also apologized on Thursday, writing on Instagram, “I was ignorant, but my ignorance was racist. I am sorry to the communities and individuals that my actions harmed and offended. I am ashamed about my lack of education, but it is no one’s responsibility to educate me.”

“I deserve to be held accountable for my actions,” she added. “I will never grow unless I recognize what I have done is wrong. I don’t think one apology means that I deserve your forgiveness, but rather I hope I can earn your forgiveness through my future actions.”

Franchise stars speak out

Lindsay, who hosts a Bachelor Nation podcast and has made frequent cameos on the show, said that she will not renew her contract with the franchise when it expires. 

“I’m exhausted. I have truly had enough,” Lindsay said on Friday’s episode of her podcast “Higher Learning.” 

“My entire reason for doing ‘The Bachelorette’ — and I was lucky that it worked out for me in the most beautiful way in finding Bryan — is that I wanted to be representative as a Black woman to this audience. And I wanted to pave the way for more people to have this opportunity,” Lindsay said on the podcast.

“But how much more do I want to be affiliated with this? How much more can I take of things like this? I said I was gonna leave if they didn’t have leads of color. Okay, they did that, and they made some other changes. They hired a diversity consultant — who didn’t attend the class? Did Chris Harrison not sit through that? I’m confused as to how you could have whole consultants working for you, yet what happened just happened.”

“I can’t take it anymore,” Lindsay said. “I’m contractually bound in some ways. But when it’s up, I am too. I can’t do it anymore.”

James has also spoken out in support of Lindsay. 

Matt James shared his support for Rachel Lindsay on his Instagram Story.

Matt James / Instagram


“I am beyond grateful to have Rachel as a mentor during this season,” James wrote on his Instagram Story on Friday. “Your advocacy of BIPOC people in the franchise is invaluable, I stand with you and the rest of the women advocating for change and accountability.”

Tayshia Adams, the most recent Bachelorette, said on her Instagram Story on Friday that she is “really hurt and disappointed and confused” by the “ignorance” she’s seen surrounding conversations about race this week. 

Adams, who is Black, added that she is “really hurt” by the response to Kirkconnell’s actions, which she called blatantly racist.

A slew of contestants from Adams’ season shared a joint message to Instagram on Friday, “denouncing racist behavior and any defense thereof.” They added that they “stand united” with Lindsay. 

Season 25 contestants also posted a joint statement on Instagram on Thursday denouncing any “defense of racism.” 

“Any defense of racist behavior denies the lived and continued experiences of BIPOC individuals,” the statement reads. “These experiences are not to be exploited or tokenized.” 

“Rachel Lindsay continues to advocate with ‘grace’ for individuals who identify as BIPOC within this franchise,” it concludes. “Just because she is speaking the loudest, doesn’t mean she is alone. We stand with her, we hear her, and we advocate for change alongside her.”



Read original article here

Chris Harrison facing more backlash for appearing to defend “Bachelor” contestant accused of racist acts

Chris Harrison, the longtime host of the “Bachelor” franchise, is facing increasing backlash online after appearing to defend a contestant who has been accused of racist acts. Rachel Lindsay, the franchise’s first Black female lead and one of the show’s strongest advocates for racial justice, said Friday that she will not renew her contract with the franchise as a result of Harrison’s comments.

The controversy began after photos surfaced of Rachael Kirkconnell, a contestant on this season of “The Bachelor,” attending an antebellum-themed party in 2018. 

Here’s a breakdown of how it unfolded: 

Harrison’s interview with Rachel Lindsay

Lindsay asked Harrison about the Kirkconnell photos during an interview on Tuesday. Kirkconnell’s season features Matt James as the Bachelor, marking the first time the franchise has chosen a Black male for the role. 

“We all need to have a little grace, a little understanding, a little compassion,” Harrison told Lindsay. “Because I have seen some stuff online — this judge, jury, executioner thing — where people are just tearing this girl’s life apart and diving into, like, her parents, her parents’ voting record. It’s unbelievably alarming to watch this. I haven’t heard Rachael speak on this yet. And until I actually hear this woman have a chance to speak, who am I to say any of this?”

“Well, the picture was from 2018 at an Old South antebellum party,” Lindsay replied. “That’s not a good look.” 

“Is it a good look in 2018 or is it not a good look in 2021?” Harrison asked.

“It’s not a good look ever,” Lindsay said, adding, “If I went to that party, what would I represent at that party?” 

“You’re 100% right in 2021. That was not the case in 2018,” Harrison said, estimating that “50 million people did that in 2018.” 

“That was a type of party,” he said, adding that he is “not defending it.”


Chris Harrison & Rachel Lindsay Talk ‘Bachelor’ Contestant Rachael Kirkconnell by
extratv on
YouTube

Harrison and Kirkconnell apologize

After facing backlash over his comments, Harrison posted an apology to social media on Wednesday. 

“To my Bachelor Nation family — I will always own a mistake when I make one, so I am here to extend a sincere apology,” he said. “I have this incredible platform to speak about love, and yesterday I took a stance on topics about which I should have been better informed.”

“While I do not speak for Rachael Kirkconnell, my intentions were simply to ask for grace in offering her an opportunity to speak on her own behalf,” he continued. “What I now realize I have done is cause harm by wrongly speaking in a manner that perpetuates racism, and for that I am so deeply sorry. I also apologize to my friend Rachel Lindsay for not listening to her better on a topic she has a first-hand understanding of, and humbly thank the members of Bachelor Nation who have reached out to me to hold me accountable. I promise to do better.”

Kirkconnell also apologized on Thursday, writing on Instagram, “I was ignorant, but my ignorance was racist. I am sorry to the communities and individuals that my actions harmed and offended. I am ashamed about my lack of education, but it is no one’s responsibility to educate me.”

“I deserve to be held accountable for my actions,” she added. “I will never grow unless I recognize what I have done is wrong. I don’t think one apology means that I deserve your forgiveness, but rather I hope I can earn your forgiveness through my future actions.”

Franchise stars speak out

Lindsay, who hosts a Bachelor Nation podcast and has made frequent cameos on the show, said that she will not renew her contract with the franchise when it expires. 

“I’m exhausted. I have truly had enough,” Lindsay said on Friday’s episode of her podcast “Higher Learning.” 

“My entire reason for doing ‘The Bachelorette’ — and I was lucky that it worked out for me in the most beautiful way in finding Bryan — is that I wanted to be representative as a Black woman to this audience. And I wanted to pave the way for more people to have this opportunity,” Lindsay said on the podcast.

“But how much more do I want to be affiliated with this? How much more can I take of things like this? I said I was gonna leave if they didn’t have leads of color. Okay, they did that, and they made some other changes. They hired a diversity consultant — who didn’t attend the class? Did Chris Harrison not sit through that? I’m confused as to how you could have whole consultants working for you, yet what happened just happened.”

“I can’t take it anymore,” Lindsay said. “I’m contractually bound in some ways. But when it’s up, I am too. I can’t do it anymore.”

James has also spoken out in support of Lindsay. 

Matt James shared his support for Rachel Lindsay on his Instagram Story.

Matt James / Instagram


“I am beyond grateful to have Rachel as a mentor during this season,” James wrote on his Instagram Story on Friday. “Your advocacy of BIPOC people in the franchise is invaluable, I stand with you and the rest of the women advocating for change and accountability.”

Tayshia Adams, the most recent Bachelorette, said on her Instagram Story on Friday that she is “really hurt and disappointed and confused” by the “ignorance” she’s seen surrounding conversations about race this week. 

Adams, who is Black, added that she is “really hurt” by the response to Kirkconnell’s actions, which she called blatantly racist.

A slew of contestants from Adams’ season shared a joint message to Instagram on Friday, “denouncing racist behavior and any defense thereof.” They added that they “stand united” with Lindsay. 

Season 25 contestants also posted a joint statement on Instagram on Thursday denouncing any “defense of racism.” 

“Any defense of racist behavior denies the lived and continued experiences of BIPOC individuals,” the statement reads. “These experiences are not to be exploited or tokenized.” 

“Rachel Lindsay continues to advocate with ‘grace’ for individuals who identify as BIPOC within this franchise,” it concludes. “Just because she is speaking the loudest, doesn’t mean she is alone. We stand with her, we hear her, and we advocate for change alongside her.”



Read original article here

Manchin ‘couldn’t believe’ seeing Harris’s West Virginia TV interview

West Virginia Sen. Joe ManchinJoseph (Joe) ManchinSunday shows preview: New COVID-19 variants spread in US; Redditors shake Wall Street with Gamestop stock Biden wants Democrats to keep Trump trial short Joe Manchin could show the Senate a better way forward MORE (D), a key swing vote in the Senate, expressed frustration on Friday about an interview Vice President Harris gave to a TV station in the state and said the White House had not notified him beforehand.

Speaking with NBC affiliate WSAZ, the centrist Democrat said the vice president’s interview was “not a way of working together” and called on the White House to help find a “bipartisan pathway forward.”

“I saw [the interview]. I couldn’t believe it. No one called me [about it],” Manchin said, according to WSAZ. “We’re going to try to find a bipartisan pathway forward, but we need to work together. That’s not a way of working together.”

Harris had given the interview to push for the White House’s coronavirus relief proposal.

“To your point, in West Virginia, 1 in 7 families is describing their household as being hungry, 1 in 6 can’t pay their rent, and 1 in 4 small businesses are closing permanently or have already closed, so it’s a big issue in West Virginia and across the country,” Harris told WSAZ. “That’s why the president and I are offering the American Rescue Plan.”

A request for further comment from Manchin’s office was not immediately returned. The White House also did not immediately return an email regarding the senator’s comments.

Manchin is seen as one of the most important votes in the divided Senate going into President Biden’s first 100 days in office. The West Virginia senator has expressed some reluctance about some of the provisions in the White House’s COVID-19 relief plan, seen as Biden’s first legislative push, including the $1,400 direct payments to Americans in the bill. He previously supported a bill in December that provided $600 payments to Americans making less than $75,000 per year.

Some Republican senators issued their own call Sunday for a bipartisan compromise bill that Sen. Bill CassidyBill CassidySunday shows preview: New COVID-19 variants spread in US; Redditors shake Wall Street with Gamestop stock OVERNIGHT ENERGY: Biden signs series of orders to tackle climate change | Republicans press Granholm on fossil fuels during confirmation hearing Republicans press Granholm on fossil fuels during confirmation hearing MORE (R-La.) indicated would likely total less than half of what Democrats have asked for.



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Activision Calls Proposal to Interview At Least One Diverse Candidate Per Job “Unworkable”

Activision Blizzard reached out to provide a response to today’s report claiming Vice “mischaracterized” the SEC filing made by the company’s attorneys. In this new statement, Activision Blizzard says its objections were “rooted in the fact that the AFL-CIO proposal failed to adequately consider how to apply these practices in all of the countries we operate in.”The AFL-CIO is a federation of labor unions and is based in the United States. The organization is affiliated with the International Trade Union Confederation, and several affiliated unions do cross borders into Canada. IGN has asked Activision Blizzard to clarify whether the AFL-CIO specifically requested these hiring rules to be applied across all of Activision Blizzard’s international businesses, or just ones based in the United States.

Here’s Activision Blizzard’s full statement below:

Activision Blizzard is committed to inclusive hiring practices and to creating a diverse workforce; it is essential to our mission. Vice completely mischaracterized the SEC filing made by our outside attorneys. In fact, our hiring practices are rooted in ensuring diversity for all roles. We engage in this aggressively and successfully. Our objection was rooted in the fact that the AFL-CIO proposal failed to adequately consider how to apply these practices in all of the countries we operate in.

Our games have uniquely influenced popular culture and have helped to increase tolerance and inclusion through their connectivity as well as the heroes we portray and our stories that celebrate diversity, equity and inclusion in so many powerful ways.

In order to ensure that our games stay true to our mission–to connect and engage the world through epic entertainment–we require that all candidates of all backgrounds, ethnicities, genders, races and sexual orientations are considered for each and every open role. We aggressively recruit diverse candidates so the workforce provides the inspired creativity required to meet the expectations of our diverse 400 million players across 190 countries. We remain committed to increasing diversity at all levels throughout Activision Blizzard worldwide.

Original Story: A new report has found that Activision Blizzard is resisting the adoption of a hiring practice that would require the company to interview at least one candidate who is a qualified woman or minority candidate. Activision Blizzard, via its attorneys have called this practice “unworkable.”

In a new report from VICE, the AFL-CIO, the largest labor federation in the United States, submitted a shareholder proposal to Activision Blizzard and Electronic Arts (EA) requesting it adopt a hiring policy that would require each company to include women and people of color in its initial pool of potential candidates.

The AFL-CIO is a shareholder in both Activision Blizzard and EA, and the letter request was sent to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).The proposal is modeled after the Rooney Rule in the National Football League. Adopted in 2003, the rule required NFL teams to interview at least one non-white candidate for a coaching job. VICE reports that the rule was later expanded to include women and other marginalized candidates.

Activision, a company of over 9,000 employees and the makers of some of the biggest games like Call of Duty Black Ops: Cold War and World of Warcraft: Shadowlands, has reportedly chafed at this proposal. It has taken measures to exempt itself by claiming that these guidelines are excluded from the SEC’s guidelines for shareholder proposals.

Furthermore, a letter by Activision, obtained by Motherboard claims, “While the Company has implemented a Rooney Rule policy as envisioned [for director and CEO nominees], implementing a policy that would extend such an approach to all hiring decisions amounts to an unworkable encroachment on the Company’s ability to run its business and compete for talent in a highly competitive, fast-moving market.”

Activision claims that this proposal violates SEC guidance as a way for a shareholder to “micromanage” the company. In a statement to VICE, EA says it will “consider the stockholder proposal” with its Board of Directors.

It should be noted that these proposals are legally non-binding. What they end up doing, however, is to highlight issues and pave a way forward for a company to address them. But Activision appears to get ahead of having these discussions altogether.

Matt T.M. Kim is a reporter for IGN. You can reach him on Twitter @LawofTD.

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AstraZeneca CEO Pascal Soriot interview on supplies to the EU

Pascal Soriot, chief executive officer of AstraZeneca.

Simon Dawson | Bloomberg | Getty Images

AstraZeneca’s CEO Pascal Soriot has defended its delayed rollout of the coronavirus vaccine to the EU, saying the drugmaker is “working 24/7” to fix production issues. But he also noted that the EU had ordered three months later than the U.K., however, and this meant it was behind in dealing with supply issues.

The EU has reacted angrily to a delay in AstraZeneca’s supply of coronavirus vaccine, which is expected to be approved by the European medicines regulator by the end of the week, to the bloc.

The 27-member bloc was expecting around 80 million doses of the jab by the end of March, but now will reportedly receive only around 31 million doses. As member states struggle to access vaccine supplies and rollout jabs, the EU has said it could limit exports of Covid-19 vaccines made in the EU.

Speaking to the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, Soriot said that delays in the supply of its coronavirus vaccine were caused by a variety of production issues.

“We believe we’ve sorted out those issues, but we are basically two months behind where we wanted to be,” he said

The British-Swedish drugmaker had also experienced “teething issues like this in the U.K. supply chain,” Soriot noted, but as the U.K. contract was signed three months before the European vaccine deal, the company “had an extra three months to fix all the glitches we experienced.”

However, he said AstraZeneca still planned on delivering a good bulk of the vaccines promised to the EU in February. “But, you know, if we deliver in February what we are planning to deliver, it’s not a small volume. We are planning to deliver millions of doses to Europe, it is not small,” he told the newspaper.

A Brazilian doctor voluntarily receives an injection as part of phase 3 trials of a vaccine developed by the University of Oxford and British pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, in July 2020.

Nelson Almeida | AFP | Getty Images

Asked what amount the EU could expect to receive, Soriot said that as soon as the vaccine is approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA), “we will be shipping at least 3 million doses immediately to Europe, then we’ll have another shipment about a week later and then the third or fourth week of February. And the target is to deliver 17 million doses by February.”

“It’s not as good as we would like to, but it’s really it’s not so bad,” he said. Globally, Soriot said production capacity would be 100 million doses from February onward.

Anger in the EU

Talks between AstraZeneca and the EU were held on Monday, after which the EU’s Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides said that discussions had “resulted in dissatisfaction with the lack of clarity and insufficient explanations.”

The EU has asked AstraZeneca to provide it with a detailed plan of vaccine deliveries and when distribution will take place, with further discussions set for Wednesday.

Some countries, including Italy, have threatened legal action against AstraZeneca for the delay. Others have asked why the U.K., which is heavily reliant on the AstraZeneca jab in its vaccination rollout, has sprinted ahead in its vaccination drive and had not experienced supply shortages, as yet. It has immunized more than 6.8 million people, with at least a first dose of the two-dose vaccine.

Soriot said that the U.K. production plant was more productive, and insisted there was no anti-EU context.

“First of all, we have different plants and they have different yields and different productivity. One of the plants with the highest yield is in the U.K. because it started earlier. It also had its own issues, but we solved them all, it has good productivity, but it’s the U.K. plant because it started earlier.”

“We’re not doing it on purpose. I’m European, I have Europe at heart. Our chairman is Swedish, is European. Our CFO is European. Many people in the management are European. So we want to treat Europe as best we can.”

He noted that the drugmaker had a “best effort” type of agreement with the EU as it had wanted to be supplied at the same time as the U.K., even though it was later to request the vaccine. “We didn’t commit with the EU, by the way. It’s not a commitment we have to Europe: it’s a best effort.”

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson poses for a photograph with a vial of the AstraZeneca/Oxford University Covid-19 candidate vaccine.

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Scaling-up and production issues

With a coronavirus vaccine developed, clinically trialed and approved in less than a year, Soriot said it was natural to experience glitches in the scaling-up process.

“We are scaling up to hundreds of millions, billions of doses of vaccines at a very high speed. A year ago, we didn’t have a vaccine. When you do that, you have glitches, you have scale-up problems,” he said, adding there were current problems with the production of the vaccine substance in two European plants.

“For Europe, the drug substance is essentially produced in two plants, one in the Netherlands, one in Belgium. The drug product is actually produced in Italy and Germany. So from a drug product viewpoint, we have full capacity. We have zero problem. The current problems have to do with manufacturing the drug’s substance,” he said.

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