ESPN' Mark Jones, Known For Hateful Tweets About White People And Police, Leaves X In Protest Of 'Hate'
ESPN broadcaster Mark Jones is leaving social media platform X. He announced – they all have to announce it, don't they? – that he was leaving the platform because it is "too hateful."
Of course, he then promoted his new Bluesky account. They have to do that too, don't they?
Jones' departing X for Bluesky was expected. That's what all the cool kids of liberal media are doing. Mark Jones has always wanted to be one of the cool kids of liberal media. He's not.
However, the more amusing element of the story is his supposed reasoning: "X is too hateful." Hmm. Here's the problem: Mark Jones operated one of the most hateful accounts on X, and Twitter before that.
Shall we run through some of the many examples? In the past three years, while at ESPN, Mark Jones has posted the following on his X/Twitter page:
ESPN, which recently re-signed Mark Jones, has no comment on any of the above posts by Mark Jones. We've asked – several times.
ESPN's Mark Jones.
Jones' X account is filled with hate, racism, bigotry, and far-left conspiracies. He's a ghoul. But because he was ESPN's only black NBA play-by-play commentator until recently (ESPN signed Michael Grady), the network was fearful of not re-signing him or laying him off in 2023, sources tell OutKick.
The belief within the company, and later corroborated by Dan Dakich, is that Mark Jones tries to overcompensate on social media because he was ridiculed by "Black Twitter" earlier in his career for marrying a white woman.
Put simply, Mark Jones is trying hard to show Black Twitter that he is one of them by posting tweets that make him look anti-white.
Like Jemele Hill, Mark Jones is not actually a racist. He just wants the public to think he's racist against white people because of


