(Timothy T Ludwig\/Getty Images)<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\nThe NFL media has become increasingly dependent upon the opinions of former players. There are fewer former journalists on television. Other than Mina Kimes, most “analysts” played in the NFL.<\/p>\n
And because the NFL is a majority-black league, the vast majority of TV analysts on ESPN and FS1 are black. Or as Bomani would put it, critics of Josh Allen.<\/p>\n
That\u2019s point No. 1.<\/p>\n
Second, the media has grossly racialized the QB conversation, particularly during debates regarding a white and black QBs.<\/p>\n
And Josh Allen is frequently subjected to comparisons to black QBs, for one reason or another.<\/p>\n
As Bomani notes, Allen is synonymous with Lamar Jackson. Allen and Jackson both came into the league with raw skills but unrivaled athletic talent, and quickly exceeded expectations.<\/p>\n
Josh Allen was often compared to Patrick Mahomes following a 2022 playoff shootout in which he looked every bit as special as Mahomes.<\/p>\n
Recently, the media has contrasted Allen to Dak Prescott with the narrative that they both turnover the ball but only Allen gets a pass.<\/p>\n
“Everyone has been giving Dak Prescott all the smoke this off-season about the turnovers. No one gives Josh Allen smoke. What we saw last night was a travesty and it\u2019s something that Josh Allen has done throughout his whole career is turn the football over,” said Damien Woody to a nodding Foxworth:<\/p>\n
The difference is, of course, Allen is dynamic and better than Prescott. But never let the facts get in the way of a good race bait. Woody would never.<\/p>\n
One could argue the racially-charged crusade against Allen originated on draft night in 2018, when a group of journalists dug up and saved old tweets from Allen\u2019s teenage years in which he used the n-word.<\/p>\n
The writers published those posts just hours before the start of the draft, with the apparent intention to damage Allen\u2019s draft stock.<\/p>\n
Clay Travis and Will Cain spoke about the campaign to frame Allen as a racist in 2021, when the media re-cited the same tweets during his breakout NFL season:<\/p>\n
“The damage, to some degree, is already done when the writer writes the story,” said Will.<\/p>\n
“The writer has already impacted the player\u2019s life. When they did it to Josh Allen, Josh Allen then had to go walk into the Bills\u2019 locker room and prove that he is NOT a racist. That\u2019s what that writer did to him by bringing up those tweets.”<\/p>\n
Ultimately, Josh Allen has been culture war-ed. Allen is who the media claims Lamar Jackson is: the subject of a racial bias.<\/p>\n
Pundits denigrate Allen to uplift the QBs they champion.<\/p>\n
He\u2019s no different than Nikola Jokic, whom the NBA media exploited last season as a means to stoke social hysteria.<\/p>\n
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP<\/u><\/strong><\/p>\nFor those reasons, the consensus praise for Allen will never be as loud as the criticism. At least not by a media that has cast Josh Allen as the poster child for the privileged white QB.<\/p>\n
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