So Andreas Hale, former executive editor of music at BET.com, has been let go. But instead of simply gathering up his pencils, Rolodex and the favorite coffee mug, Hale took to the Web to lay out many of his trials and tribulations during his time at BET.
Hale then hit "send" on an explosive e-mail that landed in our in-boxes Tuesday. The dysfunction that Hale describes is startling, but if we're honest, I think Hale verifies what many of us have long suspected:
As someone who has been critical of BET for many years, it surprised many that I would leave my post at HipHopDX last year to take a position at BET. But it was an opportunity I absolutely had to take. I could no longer be critical of this company without accepting the opportunity to change it when given.
Although I was hired to bring about change, I was systematically shut down. I wasn't hired to make noise, I was hired to be silenced. The truth of the matter is that everything that you thought was wrong with BET is true. Over the past year, I've seen a lot to reinforce my position that BET is too far gone in the negative to turn into a positive. We have all always thought the worst, but to actually see it in action is another thing in its entirety. The unprofessionalism, the tomfoolery, the favors, the misappropriation of resources, the bad ideas that reinforce negative stereotypes, the emasculation of men, the meetings that break down in full-fledged cursing battles, the unpaid overtime, the tears from employees scared for their underpaid and overworked positions and ultimately the unwillingness to change are all harsh realities that I've witnessed firsthand.
That is not to say that there aren't some good people who have sat in the offices of BET. Unfortunately, the good people are not in positions of power to instill any change. Instead, they work their fingers to the bone just to keep their jobs in this harsh economic climate. The other good people ran out of the door as soon as an another employment opportunity presented itself. To say BET was a revolving door would be an understatement. I came in with a plan to provide balance and to deliver good music to the masses and help make BET relevant again -- at least in the dot-com world. Those attempts were shut down by out-of-touch executives who run a dot-com but could barely turn on a computer. By those who judge their metrics by page views over absolute unique visitors (that's ad sales talk). By those who simply don't understand the Internet.
They brought me in because of my track record but never once took a look at my body of work. If they did, they would have known that I was the pen behind editorials such as "BET's Coon Picnic" or were aware of the many times I have been critical of their award shows and programming. All they knew is that I played a major role in making a once-unknown Web site into a online media outlet that surpassed theirs, and they wanted a piece of the action. Too bad they never researched who I really was.
During my tenure, I worked long hours and sometimes succeeded at bringing in decent content to try to reflect the change I wanted to achieve. But it wasn't without opposition. While some interviews and content initiatives were able to make it through, many others were either shut down or met with ridicule. I offered ideas to incorporate the blog world and to spotlight new talent before MTV did. Those ideas were met with comments such as, "This isn't HipHopDX" or "You don't know what you are talking about." BET is not about the quality of your work. Rather, BET is about the relationships you have with powerful people within the company. BET is not about challenging. Instead, BET is about accepting and saying "yes."
If you have known or followed me over the years, you would know that these are things that simply are not in my character and ultimately resulted in my removal. For the artists and labels that I have worked with for years, I tried. I did whatever I could to achieve that balance many of us wanted to see happen. To the writers who wanted to write for BET, I made an attempt but was never given a budget to work with.
Upon my arrival, I was told I would be given a staff. Not true. I had a staff of one to carry out daily operations on a Web site. I fought tooth and nail to accomplish the minimum (an embeddable player and a site people could navigate) and was constantly brushed off. It was a position that was set up for failure. But I endured as long as I could.
Alas, I have been removed from my position after infiltrating the system, and the timing was perfect. I wasn't let go because the site's numbers were down. Not because I didn't work hard. Simply because of a personality clash with an individual whose proverbial ass I didn't kiss enough. Again, not about the work you do but about the relationships you keep and the sides you take.
I'd like to thank BET for covering the cost of my relocation to bring me to the great city of New York/New Jersey. I'd also like to thank them for putting me in close quarters with people who think like me and will hopefully work with in the near future. I'd also like to thank them for providing me enough controversial content that I observed firsthand and will make for many tales to be told.
I said it and I meant in: One year to either make changes or move on. I left HipHopDX on Sept. 16, 2008. Today is Sept. 8, 2009. Eight days short of a year. Most thought I wouldn't even last that long. But in that year I've had, my greatest fears about Black Entertainment Television [were] affirmed.
There is so much wrong with BET that I'd rather not break it down in a single e-mail. It is pretty good fodder for a book, don't you think? As of today, Andreas Hale is a free agent. Source: Andreas Hale via e-mail
I am sure Hale's tell-all account will not go unchallenged by BET. But the bigger question is will Hale's outreach to the digital community force any change upon an organization that still has the potential to do so much good for our community and the world at large?
A corporate conglomerate is a terrible thing to waste.
What do YOU think?


Comments: (97)
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By: BROOKLYN on 9/09/2009 9:23AM
My son did work for them one day taping a gosple show. He said those were the most unorgainized people he'd ever seen and would never do it again.
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By: walt on 9/11/2009 8:53AM
"Bad Entertainment Television" is a dead channel on cable television. The CEO and the top "Toms and Maimies" of this company ought to be ashamed of themselves for selling out. "106 and Garbage" and "College Hill" are destroying the minds and moral fibers of our children and our culture. Why don't they just air some past episodes of Maury and Jerry Springer and rename it "The Ghetto Channel".
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By: Jarmon on 9/09/2009 10:09AM
This like so many other so called black entities, has sold out to the mighty dollar. Thug life, pimps ans ho's are all a part of the bigger picture which is get them (blacks) back into slavery where they belong at least in their mentality anyway. The programming reinforces a marginal part of our society that we as responsible folks fight to correct. The name should be changed to BS exploitative TV. Thank you Andrea for being man enough to expose it and more importantly thank you for being a black man that has a sense of responsibilty to us.
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By: ABROWN on 9/09/2009 10:08AM
ANDREAS HALE SO MANY JOBS IN TODAY'S MARKET ARE THIS WAY AN IT SEEMS THE BAD SOME HOW ALWAYS OUT WEIGHS THE GOOD. HOPFULLY THE YOUNG AND INSPIRING WILL SEE THIS AS FOOD FOR THOUGHT WHEN LOOKING FOR EMPLOYMENT IN FIELDS SUCH AS THIS ONE. SOME TMES YOU GOTTA STRAIGHT BLOW SH** UP...
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By: ChiChiBoo on 9/09/2009 10:53AM
I like the others on here do not watch BET. I stopped "drinking the Kool-Aid" a long time ago also and do not allow my kids to watch it either. their is no "entertainment' on that channel anywhere. You can't just stick Debra Lee in my face and expect me to believe she/BET is for our people and our culture and we are going to be okay with that. In my opinion- she is a "house ni**er".
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By: Kat on 9/09/2009 11:35AM
I don't watch BET either. I stopped watching it a long time ago. I used to love it when Donnie Simpson and Sheri Carter used to host Video Soul. Now the foolishness they show is just too coonish for me. I don't know anybody who does watch it anymore. I tuned in for the Michael Jackson tribute on the awards show and I was not pleased with the way that turned out. Haven't and won't turn to that channel again.
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By: bevjames on 9/09/2009 12:24PM
I was a BET employee for two years and I can assure you that Andreas Hale is telling the truth. The managers are incredibly unprofessional, one VP dated more than 30 women at corporate. Another VP stuck a sign on an employee's back that said "kick me." The buffoonery, shucking and jiving, the sheer tomfoolery was mindboggling. A senior VP was sleeping with an employee. She found out he was also seeing someone else and the senior VP sent an email to this employee stating that "I guess we have something in common." Mind you, the recipient of the email reported to the senior VP. Well, the executive was forced to lay off people in her department, but coincidentally, she gave the guy she was screwing a promotion and a corner office. That's just the tame stuff; you ain't even heard the worst of it.
The best people left pretty quickly; they were smart enough to use their BET experience to move on to better-run companies.
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By: ADMR on 9/09/2009 9:05PM
Yikes!
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By: ds on 9/09/2009 12:44PM
BET needs to transform itself back to the good ole days with Donnie Simpson,when you could watch tv as a family and make memories. BET is not allowed in my house because it only reflects images of what I do not want my children to be/become. It has been a long time since BET had a program or some type of entertainment that reflected or was for more than one type of audience. WE today need programs to balance our different cultures, social economic status, education, arts, so that we may begin to stimulate our minds as BET did in the past.
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By: Messina on 9/09/2009 1:58PM
1. Bet is only strong as the companies weakest link.
2. Black Entertainment Television's programming is completely tacky and tasteless by the way shows have been and continue to be packaged.
3.I see ignorant folk cussing and screaming possibly because they are "KEEPING IT REAL" or whatever the scripted reality show calls for in that scene.
It's sad that a company claims to have the viewers interest at heart but continue to show crap followed by garbage ending with mess.
I'm not embarrassed by The Bet Network and the shows don"t define me as a person I never expected anything out of Bet in the first place.
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