The story still refers to "gay" hookups rather than same-sex hookups. An academic point, perhaps, but as far as I know, no one verified the sexual self-identification of all those Hines fingered. It looks as if he's being rewarded for waiting it out . . .
Internet Responds to Daily Beast Writer's Apology: Too Little, Too Late
In an article titled "What I've Learned," Hines, who is a
straight, married man, wrote that he was "deeply sorry" for the story, which
"never should have been conceived, written, or published."
"The story about athletes using dating apps in the Olympic village did not ask consent and did not advance the public good," Hines wrote. "The article intruded into the lives of people who had a right to be left alone. For some readers it brought up old, ugly LGBTQ stereotypes. And I didn't accurately represent myself during the reporting of the piece. These were all profound failures, and I’m sorry for them."
"The story about athletes using dating apps in the Olympic village did not ask consent and did not advance the public good," Hines wrote. "The article intruded into the lives of people who had a right to be left alone. For some readers it brought up old, ugly LGBTQ stereotypes. And I didn't accurately represent myself during the reporting of the piece. These were all profound failures, and I’m sorry for them."
In an editor's note at the bottom of Hines's apology, it was announced
that Hines would be returning full-time to his senior editor and London-based
reporter positions.
Cyd Zeigler, the cofounder of OutSports, an LGBT sports website, wrote about the note from Hines, describing it as "a delayed apology without empathy" and
"little more than a press release." It was probably Hines's editors who asked
that he write the apology, Zeigler wrote, adding that had Hines written a
heartfelt apology and not an "academic" one, LGBT people would have felt they
were truly heard.
"You let this fester for the better part of a year. You offered no
empathy in your apology," Ziegler wrote. "I'll continue to wait for a real
one."
Several writers and editors responded to the news on Twitter:
The Daily Beast’s @NicoHines, who used Grindr at the Olympics for a kinda exposĂ©, apologizes many months later. thebea.st/2mlC6TJ
.@NicoHines deeply apologized for his olympic grindr story, and i just want to say, deeply fuck that guy thedailybeast.com/articles/2017/…
Why did it take @thedailybeast's @NicoHines a whole 7 MONTHS to issue tepid apology for outing gay Olympians? thedailybeast.com/articles/2017/…
Nico Hines, the Daily Beast journalist who wrote that awful Olympics Grindr stunt, is back. Should we forgive him? slate.com/blogs/outward/…
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