Don Cherry, the Canadian Skip Bayless, presents a CBC conundrum

CBC hockey commentator Don Cherry's controversial statement Saturday that female reporters shouldn't be allowed in male dressing rooms provoked plenty of outrage from both industry groups and Twitter users, led to a Kif-like sigh on-air from counterpart and frequent foil Ron MacLean, and created a firestorm that still hasn't entirely died out a few days later. However, some (not all) of Cherry's colleagues and his company haven't exactly abandoned him. MacLean's since defended Cherry, and the CBC itself just said Cherry's views are his own, which isn't the strongest response in the world. Given how out of sync Cherry's views are with both employment law and decades of practice (bizarrely enough, the first female reporters in a professional sports locker room were in the NHL, as Robin Herman and Marcel St. Cyr gained access at the 1975 All-Star game, and later that season, Cherry became the first coach to allow Herman locker-room access after regular-season games), some might have expected his company to come down harder on him. However, the CBC's (lack of) response is perhaps to be expected given Cherry's role at the network, which essentially has him as a similar pot-stirrer to ESPN's Skip Bayless.
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