My apology for something I wrote last week
I have no other explanation, but I was wrong.
Dead wrong.
It was the kind of unforced blunder that requires only forthright contrition.
Here it is.
Last week in this space, I referred to an NFL team called the Baltimore Colts.
There is no such team.
There hasn’t been a team in Baltimore named the Colts since March of 1984, when the teamĢƵ owner, Robert Irsay, loaded up 15 trucks and spirited the entire team out of Baltimore and sent them to Indianapolis in the dead of night.
When I wrote that the previous weekĢƵ Monday Night Football game had been played between the Baltimore “Colts” and the Las Vegas Raiders – I meant to write Baltimore Ravens.
I don’t know what got into me. It was a terrible mistake.
I’m sorry.
This humility stuff is kind of liberating.
I’ve seen that sort of thing in the past.
I recall listening to a Pittsburgh Pirates baseball game on April 23, 1998, and I heard the Pirates play-by-play announcer – Lanny Fratarre – report that the actor James Earl Jones had died that day.
Fratarre was lamenting the fact that Jones, among his many film and stage characterizations, had played a pivotal role in that classic baseball movie “The Field of Dreams.”
Fratarre sounded genuinely mournful after his announcement.
As I wrote in a column a few days later, “I thought for a brief moment that Fratarre would ask for the dayĢƵ game to be postponed. Maybe even canceled,” because of the dreadful weight of that development.
(That was in jest, considering what I wrote next.)
That Mr. Fratarre suddenly stopped himself mid-sentence and he said, “Wait a minute. I’m sorry. James Earl Ray has died. Not James Earl Jones.”
James Earl Ray, who assassinated Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., had died in prison.
What followed was a profuse and genuine apology by Fratarre.
“I feel like a fool,” he said.
A fool? For what? He’d made an honest mistake, and he wasn’t trying to hide it. He corrected it without blaming anybody but himself. He got my respect that day.
It was certainly refreshing.
When you think about it, wouldn’t it be nice if politicians and their hired (political) guns were as capable of being as contrite as Mr. Fratarre?
Especially since there are certain politicians and their associates who’d do anything to avoid admitting they’re wrong about anything.
There have been 63 lawsuits filed by the Trump campaign and on Donald TrumpĢƵ behalf as an attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.
None has been successful.
More and more of them have been dismissed and called “frivolous,” and “without merit,” by the judges handling them.
Recently it was reported that there are court filings that indicate that three of TrumpĢƵ attorneys (Sidney Powell, Rudy Giuliani, and Jenna Ellis) knew they were promoting false conspiracy theories about the election results, but they kept repeating them.
Shortly after the election, the trio had gone public with wild claims about the company handling certain voting machines – despite knowing those claims weren’t true.
ThatĢƵ just how those folks roll.
They’ve learned from the master – Donald Trump.
HeĢƵ incapable of being contrite about anything.
HeĢƵ still somehow finding the time to dispute the results of the 2020 election.
That could be why the results of a recent CNN poll are chilling.
According to the poll, 78% of Republicans still believe Joe Biden didn’t get enough votes to legitimately win the election.
ThatĢƵ nearly 8 out of 10 of them.
ThereĢƵ hardly anybody standing up and yelling, “I feel like a fool,” the way Lanny Fratarre did that day in 1998.
There are few Republicans with the kind of character, and standing, who would rip the cover from “The Big Lie,” and set the record straight once and for all.
Have we reached a point in this country where two disparate facts can coexist in the same space?
Joe Biden won the election. Donald Trump lost and continues to lose it.
Period.
Edward A. Owens is a multi-Emmy Award winner, former reporter, and anchor for Entertainment Tonight, and 40-year TV news and newspaper veteran. E-mail him at freedoms@bellatlantic.net.