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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Dana Hunsinger Benbow

UFC reporter Charly Arnolt leaves ESPN for OutKick: ‘Cancel culture doesn’t exist here’

UFC reporter Charly Arnolt has left ESPN, but fight fans can still see her on the worldwide leader.

Hours after digital media company OutKick and its founder, Clay Travis, announced they had lured host Arnolt away from ESPN to join their conservative-leaning organization that covers sports, news and politics, Arnolt told IndyStar she is looking forward to finally being able to speak freely.

“It feels like I was a little bit stifled in the past,” said Arnolt, 35, who spent the past five years at ESPN and the last two years under a full-time contract. “People are too scared to speak up for the fear of being called politically incorrect. The idea of cancel culture, it doesn’t exist here. I speak freely.

“I have a lot of opinions that I haven’t been able to express, and I can’t wait to get started.”

Arnolt, a former sports anchor at Fox59 in Indianapolis, will co-host a new show in development, which will be announced before the football season.

Travis tweeted Monday that Arnolt “will be one of the hosts of our new Outkick morning show debuting this summer. She’s leaving @espn so she can actually say what she thinks. Awesome addition.” Travis, who founded OutKick in 2011 then sold it to Fox Corporation in 2021, has been an outspoken critic of ESPN.

Through a spokesperson Monday, ESPN declined comment on Arnolt leaving the company.

Even though Arnolt is no longer with ESPN, she confirmed in an Instagram post that she’s “still working with UFC,” which has a broadcast deal with ESPN for all of its events. Because the UFC is in charge of its own production, Arnolt can still be seen on ESPN’s airwaves. The UFC tabbed her to work UFC Fight Night 222 this Saturday on ESPN+.

Arnolt, an Indianapolis native, told IndyStar that throughout her career she has struggled covering “ultra important issues as they affect not just sports but our society and culture in general.”

“There are a lot of issues people refuse to remain unbiased about because of the network they’re on,” she said.

When asked what her political leanings were, Arnolt said, “I’m not going to put a stamp on my political beliefs. I think a lot of what OutKick does best is they approach everything from a common sense standpoint and that is where I stand.

“There are a lot of issues if you use a little common sense, you can find the answer the right way.”

Arnolt’s morning show on OutKick will cover not only sports but pop culture and politics. Arnolt will remain in New York City, where she has lived for the past six years.

Beyond her show, Arnolt will be featured across OutKick platforms “to discuss trending topics and to provide her authentic takes on the most pressing stories in sports,” the company said. She also will likely appear as a guest host on Fox News programming “here and there,” she said.

While with ESPN, Arnolt hosted “First Take,” “SportsCenter” and made regular appearances on ESPN+’s weekday morning show, “SportsNation.” She also launched an ESPN podcast called “First Take, Her Take.” Before joining ESPN full time, Arnolt was with WWE as Charly Caruso.

This story originally published at the Indianapolis Star, part of the USA TODAY Network.

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