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MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow: ‘I wasn’t asked about Anderson Cooper’

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MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow is all about keeping them honest, telling the Guardian that closeted gay anchors should come out. But, hey, that doesn’t mean she’s referring to a certain CNN anchor.

In the interview with the publication, which was published Monday, the openly gay anchor is asked if she feels frustration toward “an equally well-known news presenter who is widely assumed to be gay but has never come out?”

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“I’m sure other people in the business have considered reasons why they’re doing what they’re doing,’ she answers, ‘but I do think that if you’re gay you have a responsibility to come out.”

The interview drew much attention, with blogs suggesting she was referring to Cooper, who has never acknowledged -- or denied -- that he is gay. Maddow responded to the noise in a self-penned blog post Monday evening, stressing that she wasn’t singling anyone out.

“In that interview, I wasn’t asked about Anderson Cooper, I didn’t say anything about him, he literally was never discussed during the interview at all -- even implicitly,” she wrote. “I don’t tend to be shy when I criticize -- you wouldn’t have to read between the lines if that’s what I was trying to do.’

She goes on to list the ethics of “coming out,” in case you were looking for a guideline.

Do you agree that news anchors have a responsibility to be transparent about their sexuality?

-- Yvonne Villarreal
twitter.com/villarrealy

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