Business & Tech
Fired Sports Reporter Fred Gerteiny Says He Deserves Another Shot
Sports reporter Fred Gerteiny was fired by News 12 Connecticut for a "racially insensitive" tweet. He says he didn't mean it that way.

NORWALK, CT — Fred Gerteiny knows he shouldn't have posted the tweet.
The veteran sports reporter, formerly at News 12 Connecticut, told Patch he meant it as a tongue-in-cheek dig when he fired off a tweet calling South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott an "Uncle Tom." Scott, a Republican who is Black, had just awkwardly tried to defend President Donald Trump's callout to the Proud Boys white supremacist group during the first presidential debate between Trump and Democratic challenger former Vice President Joe Biden.
Gerteiny, who is white, wrote "Thanks Uncle Tom" in a since-deleted tweet the day after the debate. He was fired by News 12 Connecticut that same day. He since deactivated his Twitter and Facebook accounts as a result of the uproar the message caused.
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"[My] whole life changed on one ill-conceived tweet," Gerteiny told Patch.
"I've been getting death threats, and the strange thing is that the threats came from white Trump supporters. They weren't from African Americans ... they actually agreed with me.
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"Technically, I was supporting the African American community. I was backing them up, attacking this [senator] for forgetting where he came from."
Gerteiny, a Westport native who lives in Fairfield, had worked on and off at News 12 for 15 years, eventually becoming the station's de facto sports director. He's been nominated twice for sports Emmy Awards and has a positive reputation in the industry.
The station, however, acted quickly in dismissing Gerteiny, calling the tweet "racially insensitive." He was not given a suspension, something he believes he deserved instead of termination, which came via a Zoom conference call.
"It was about a five-minute meeting, and that was it," Gerteiny said of the firing. "I understand they did what they thought was right, because of the intense pressure they were getting. I thought a suspension would be warranted, you know? Put me on a two-week suspension or whatever."
As for whether he believes the tweet was racially insensitive, Gerteiny said that is complicated because he didn't mean it as a racial insult.
"It's hard for me to live in the shoes of an African American, so I don't know," he said. "If they take it that way, then it is. In my mind, I was supporting them. Maybe I'm wrong."
Gerteiny said white supremacy is evil and asked how Scott could "not realize that" when the senator said that Trump misspoke when telling Proud Boys to stand by. Scott also said Trump should correct his remarks.
"How was this [senator] not sensitive to the needs in his own community?" Gerteiny said, adding he believed the senator's reaction was wrong and he was trying to make that point.
Gerteiny said he wants to work again but acknowledges that it could be back behind the camera as a producer instead of on-air, at least for a while.
"I think, right now, hiring somebody where you can do a Google search on them, you're not going to put that person on the air right now," he said, adding jokingly that he could probably go on the lecture circuit to talk about the dangers of social media.
"People who know me, know me," he said, adding that he tried reaching out to Scott with an apology via Twitter before he deactivated his account.
"I'm not an insensitive person, I'm not a nasty person," Gerteiny said. "This was so out of character for me."
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