Michigan State Suspends Employee After Hitler Image Shown

University is reviewing procedures that led to controversial moment
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 23, 2023 2:00 AM CDT
Employee Suspended After Hitler Image Shown on Michigan State Videoboards
Michigan players celebrate with the Paul Bunyan trophy after defeating Michigan State in an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct. 21, 2023, in East Lansing, Mich.   (AP Photo/Al Goldis)

Michigan State athletic director Alan Haller said he has suspended an employee involved in allowing Adolf Hitler's image to be shown on videoboards before playing No. 2 Michigan, the AP reports. The employee, who was not named, will be paid pending an investigation that will help to determine potential action in the future. Haller said no one in the department viewed the entire video before it was streamed on videoboards, exposing a failure in its process. "Antisemitism must be denounced," Haller said in a statement Sunday night. "The image displayed prior to Saturday night's game is not representative of who we are and the culture we embody. Nevertheless, we must own our failures and accept responsibility."

Michigan State streamed the Quiz Channel, which had 40 questions in its latest video, including asking where was Hitler born with his image before showing Austria as the answer. The previous question asked, "In Star Trek, what color was Spock's blood?" before green was shown as the answer. The creator and producer of the Quiz Channel on YouTube said the school didn't ask for permission to use his content or pay him for it and defended his decision to include the question on his platform. "It's an absolutely normal trivia question, shown in an inappropriate setting," Floris van Pallandt wrote on his YouTube page. "Ignoring the dark facets of history is by no means the answer, on the contrary." The channel is publicly available and free for users.

While the Wolverines were finishing off a 49-0 win over the Spartans on Saturday night, Michigan State spokesman Matt Larson apologized that the inappropriate content was displayed more than an hour before kickoff. "MSU will not be using the third-party source going forward and will implement stronger screening and approval procedures for all videoboard content in the future," Larson said. "I am deeply sorry for the image displayed at Spartan Stadium, which made many of our community feel alienated and unsafe," interim university President Teresa Woodruff said Sunday. "It was unacceptable. I asked last evening for a full review of this university event and will take all necessary steps to align our messages and actions to our values." (More Michigan State University stories.)

Get the news faster.
Tap to install our app.
X
Install the Newser News app
in two easy steps:
1. Tap in your navigation bar.
2. Tap to Add to Home Screen.

X