Leaked Tennis Channel email compares Comcast to âbrutal captorâ
- Share via
Ken Solomon, chief executive of the small Tennis Channel, regrets the 4 a.m. email blast he sent staff members of the Santa Monica-based network.
Solomon composed the email last month from his Paris hotel room, hours after the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia delivered a crushing blow against the independent Tennis Channel in a long-running legal dispute with cable giant Comcast Corp. The three judges who heard the case sided with Comcast.
In a lengthy rant, Solomon compared Comcast to a âbrutal captorâ that committed a sexual assault on the Tennis Channel for nearly a decade. He described the judicial panel as a âMad Hatter of a courtâ and âthree Lone Ranger judges.â
PHOTOS: Hollywood Backlot moments
The court decision, Solomon said, was âa travesty of justice, wholly wrong and unfair and just plain hard to believe.â
Solomonâs email was first reported Wednesday by Deadspin.com, the salacious sports news website owned by Gawker Media.
Late Wednesday, Solomon apologized.
âI regret several ill-chosen, excessively colorful and inappropriate words in a private email to colleagues a few weeks ago reflecting my disappointment with a legal decision,â Solomon said in a statement. âThe email dealt with an issue that we are obviously passionate about, but the words do not accurately reflect my thoughts about the case or those involved, and I am very sorry that I used them.â
At the time he lobbed the email, Solomon -- a prominent fundraiser for President Obama -- had put in a long day overseeing the Tennis Channelâs coverage of the French Open in addition to dealing with fall-out from the ruling.
PHOTOS: Cable vs. broadcast ratings
Last month, the three judges on the appeals court set aside the Federal Communications Commissionâs determination that Comcast had discriminated against the independently owned Tennis Channel.
Comcast provides wider distribution to the sports channels it owns, the Golf Channel and NBC Sports Network. However, the court disagreed with the FCC and said there was not enough evidence that Comcast was guilty of discrimination.
âEven Ray Charles could see the shameful way they treat those they do not own,â Solomon wrote in the email solution. âItâs like being raped for a decade by a brutal captor, finally winning in a long and painful public court trial (while you canât get work because of your Scarlet Letter), and then on appeal years later from a pre-decided Mad Hatter of a court asking you, the victim, to produce a video to prove that it ever happened. Forget the scars, bruises and painful clarity with which everyone knows that your story is simply 100% true, where is your proof dear Alice???â
Comcast declined to comment on Solomonâs email.
The two sides have been wrangling for more than three years. Comcast makes its two sports channels available to all of its 22 million cable TV customers. In contrast, Comcast has placed the Tennis Channel in a higher-priced package of channels with about 5 million subscribers. The more limited distribution has crimped Tennis Channelâs revenue, and its prospects for growth.
Last monthâs court ruling was seen by analysts as a blow to the Tennis Channelâs prospects to sell itself to a major media company.
The email could hamper the Tennis Channelâs chances for a favorable ruling from some of the same judges should Tennis Channel ask the full panel of appellate court judges to reconsider the case.
The Tennis Channel has not decided whether to ask for a rehearing at the appellate level or petition the U.S. Supreme Court.
ALSO:
Talent agency CAA mocked in ads by rival WME
Fox Searchlight loses key ruling in intern labor lawsuit
Fox wraps upfront advertising sales at nearly $1.8 billion
Comcast wins appeals court victory in Tennis Channel dispute
More to Read
From the Oscars to the Emmys.
Get the Envelope newsletter for exclusive awards season coverage, behind-the-scenes stories from the Envelope podcast and columnist Glenn Whippâs must-read analysis.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.