Research/Study
Clay Travis exploits Damar Hamlin’s heart attack to justify a COVID misinformation campaign
Published
Founder and CEO of the Rupert Murdoch-owned sports website Outkick Clay Travis is a frequent Fox guest once known for stunts like eating only pudding to protest the lack of NFL games shown in the Virgin Islands. Last week he used his habit of over-the-top grandstanding to push COVID-19 misinformation by blaming the vaccine for Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin’s on-field collapse on January 2.
Hamlin’s sudden heart attack emboldened Travis and other right-wing figures to baselessly spread anti-vaccine conspiracy theories under the guise of concern. They allege that a supposed increase of cardiovascular incidents involving athletes is related to the vaccine. The conspiracy theory, which can be traced back to far-right Austrian populist party websites, holds no scientific weight: There is no evidence correlating COVID-19 vaccination to reported incidents of athletes collapsing. Instead, cardiologists have suggested that Hamlin likely experienced a condition called commotio cordis, in which an impact to the chest during a specific time in the heartbeat cycle can cause cardiac arrest.
Despite the lack of evidence, and after reports indicated that Hamlin’s situation was growing less critical, Travis spent the next week repeating the debunked conspiracy theory. He focused his outrage — spread on Twitter, Outkick The Show, and The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show — on how he was not “allowed” to claim vaccines were connected to the incidents involving Hamlin or Air Force Academy football player Hunter Brown, while heavily implying that they were.