For anyone seeking a comprehensive overview of the global distance running scene, it鈥檚 hard to think of a better resource than . In addition to its own exhaustive previews and race reports of marquee events like the Berlin Marathon or the NCAA Cross Country Championships, the site is updated daily with links to running news both major and obscure. Good luck finding another U.S. publication that cares about the Kenyan national cross-country championships, or the annual Golden Spike track meet in Ostrava, Czech Republic.
But just as LetsRun has established itself as a reliable go-to for the track and field-obsessed, the site鈥檚 message boards can read like the online id of high-mileage frat bros. Within the insular world of distance running fandom, 鈥渢he boards鈥 have a reputation for caustic shitposting, with varying levels of misogyny, racism, and homophobia. As one message board poster 鈥淟etsRun is basically 4chan for runners.鈥
As a countermeasure of sorts, LetsRun kicked off 2020 with that, in addition to some routine updates to the backend of the site, it would be implementing changes to prevent people from using multiple aliases on the boards. Posters don鈥檛 have to register with the site and can remain anonymous, but, going forward, aspiring trolls will be limited to one fake identity per thread, per week.
鈥淭here鈥檒l be some thread and I鈥檒l be like 鈥業 can鈥檛 believe all these people think like this,鈥 LetsRun co-founder Robert Johnson聽(aka 鈥淩oJo鈥) said聽over the phone. 鈥淎nd then you look at it and it鈥檚 the same person posting under eight different names. There鈥檚 a term for that, I think it鈥檚 called 鈥.鈥欌 (Posters鈥 IP addresses are visible to LetsRun administrators.) 聽
When he gave me that example, Johnson cited pro-Russia propaganda as the kind of thing that LetsRun鈥檚 new regulations are hoping to curb. (Although the majority of message board threads are running-themed, politics and dating advice are popular topics. Johnson says he likes to think of the message boards as reflecting what people might talk about when on a run.)
Of course, those in the running community who complain about message board content typically aren鈥檛 worried that it has been hijacked by the Kremlin, but, rather, that it has evolved into a platform for gratuitous viciousness. Chris Chavez, a Sports Illustrated writer and the founder of the running news site , has 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the meanest thing you鈥檝e read about yourself on LetsRun?鈥 as one of the standard questions he asks every guest on his . Last May, the question was put to former high school star Mary Cain, who, due to her precociousness, had been a target of message board vitriol at an extremely young age. Cain said that she had stopped visiting the site in her freshman year of high school, after seeing posts (and photos of herself) suggesting that she was a boy, due to the 鈥渂ulge in her shorts.鈥澛
鈥淚 was in middle school and I was reading this,鈥 Cain told Chavez. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e like, 鈥業 have broken five minutes for the mile as an eighth grader and adult men are in their moms鈥 basements writing articles about me.鈥 So, yeah, I don鈥檛 support those message boards.鈥澛
After Cain made national headlines in November when she accused Alberto Salazar, her former coach, of publicly shaming her for her weight and encouraging her to take birth control pills and diuretics to shed pounds, the message boards were subsequently criticized for abetting a culture that was hostile towards female athletes. In the wake of Cain鈥檚 allegations, former collegiate star Leah O鈥機onnor posted screenshots on her of message board posters denigrating her looks when she was competing for Michigan State in 2015. 鈥淧latforms like this SHOULD NOT exist…聽#fixgirlssports.鈥 O鈥機onnor wrote in her post.
鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 want someone commenting on my weight if I was in high school,鈥 Johnson says, before adding that he believes the topic could, on some level, still be fair game for public discussion, since weight is a factor in running performance. In response to O鈥機onnor鈥檚 comments, Johnson鈥檚 brother (and LetsRun cofounder) Weldon : 鈥淢oderation question: When if ever should we allow the discussion of someone else鈥檚 body/appearance on LetsRun?鈥
While Johnson claims that it is impossible for the site鈥檚 modest staff to monitor everything that goes up on the message boards (there have been nearly 10 million posts since the site was founded in 2000), he points out that, unlike with behemoths like Facebook and Twitter, anyone who has a problem with something that gets posted can submit a complaint that will usually be addressed within hours. Pushing back against the message boards鈥 misogynist image, Johnson maintains that the 鈥渕ost bashed鈥 people in the history of the boards have been white men; when he was a star runner at the University of Oregon in the mid-2000s, the message board invective aimed at Galen Rupp聽was apparently so severe that Oregon鈥檚 associate athletic director聽Vin Lananna and Rupp鈥檚 coach Alberto Salazar approached Weldon Johnson at a track meet and 鈥渓aid into him.鈥 (The site subsequently installed a filter that made it impossible to use the words 鈥済ay鈥 and 鈥淩upp鈥 in the same post.)
Sally Bergesen, the founder and CEO of the women鈥檚 apparel company Oiselle, told me by email that LetsRun鈥檚 message boards were 鈥渉ell for women.鈥 Both Bergesen and , who is in charge of corporate development at Oiselle, say that most professional female runners聽they know avoid the message boards entirely.
鈥淚f RoJo鈥檚 defense is, well, everybody gets shit on, that鈥檚 not very encouraging,鈥 Bergesen told me over the phone. 鈥淏ut in terms of what a white man being slammed versus a woman or a person of color, or a person who is openly gay, there鈥檚 a big difference there because of the power structures that we all live in . . . we are not all equal.鈥澛
According to Johnson, LetsRun鈥檚 negative reputation among women is actually hurting the site鈥檚 bottom line. 鈥淭he image that I鈥檓 sexist, or that the website is sexist, is not good for business,鈥 Johnson says. 鈥淲e should have way more brand advertisers than we do.鈥澛
So what can be done? Johnson concedes that individuals who are not big-name public figures certainly deserve聽鈥渟pecial protection,鈥 and mentioned that he would potentially like to make the high school forum be limited to registered users only. However, citing the example of Twitter, Johnson says聽that he wasn鈥檛 entirely convinced that requiring posters to be registered would make a huge difference. Lesko, meanwhile, suggested that if LetsRun seriously believes that it is missing out on advertising dollars because of misogynist content on the boards, the site should test that theory by investing in additional moderators to approve comments鈥攕omething that LetsRun has previously been unwilling to do on the grounds that it amounts to censorship.
The fact that message board posters can remain anonymous聽is arguably one of the more contentious aspects of the platform. In the statement announcing updates to the message boards earlier this week, LetsRun wrote that allowing posters to retain their anonymity 鈥渁llows for a more honest discussion.鈥 Presumably, anonymity would also make it easier for potential whistleblowers to call out misdeeds, whether it鈥檚 exposing a serial race cheater, or an abusive coach.
By the same token, however, there鈥檚 an obvious downside when people don鈥檛 have to be held accountable for what they say in a public forum. What if those anonymous allegations of cheating are not true? Likewise, the adult men sulking in their mother鈥檚 basements would probably be less inclined to troll the Mary Cains of the world if they actually had to own up to it.聽
While the conundrum of the LetsRun boards isn鈥檛 likely to be resolved any time soon, Bergesen says that she is encouraged that women in running are increasingly taking matters into their own hands, by聽creating to re-direct the narrative of聽their sport. 聽
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have a message board yet, but we might soon,鈥 Bergesen says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e basically saying that we鈥檙e tired of waiting for you guys to figure this out, and we鈥檙e tired of you telling us that you can鈥檛 do anything about it. So we are going to go ahead and start doing our own thing. But wouldn鈥檛 it have been nice if we could have all been hanging out together?鈥