Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 14
Jemele Hill Says $3 Billion WNBA Boom Demands Scrutiny, Not Cheerleading
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 14

Jemele Hill Says $3 Billion WNBA Boom Demands Scrutiny, Not Cheerleading

4 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 14
  • Jemele Hill said on her podcast that the WNBA’s growth has brought a wave of new coverage, but many fans still expect journalists to act as team extensions rather than independent reporters.
  • More than $3 billion in media-rights value, rising attendance and richer player pay have pushed the league into the mainstream, Hill argued, making tougher questions and less protective coverage inevitable.
  • Recent flashpoints include backlash over criticism of restrictive locker-room access, the WNBPA’s defense of DiJonai Carrington after Christine Brennan’s question about Caitlin Clark, and team PR cutting off other lines of inquiry.
  • Hill said that treating criticism as betrayal creates a double standard: male athletes face constant harsh analysis, while negative WNBA coverage is often framed as sexism or disloyalty.
  • Her broader point was that if the WNBA wants the benefits of major-league status—higher salaries, better facilities and wider attention—it also has to accept accountability and uncomfortable scrutiny.
Are WNBA players rejecting all media criticism, or a specific style of coverage their male counterparts don't face?
With billion-dollar deals signed, what is the WNBA's plan to bridge the divide between players demanding respect and media demanding access?