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Hear the Shocking Audio from an Atlanta Sports Radio Show Mocking a Disabled NFL Player That Got Them Fired
NEW YORK, NY - MAY 30: Former NFL player Steve Gleason attends the Social Innovation Summit May 2013 - Day Two on May 30, 2013 in New York City. Credit: Getty Images for Social Innovati

Hear the Shocking Audio from an Atlanta Sports Radio Show Mocking a Disabled NFL Player That Got Them Fired

"Smother me."

ATLANTA (AP) -- The cast of an Atlanta sports radio show has been fired after mocking a former NFL player who has Lou Gehrig's disease, a station official said Monday.

The show, Mayhem in the AM, was broadcast on 790 The Zone Monday morning. In a statement, General Manager Rick Mack said the station regrets comments made about ex-New Orleans Saints safety Steve Gleason.

A picture of the statement posted on the 790 am website.

The 36-year-old suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. ALS patients lose the ability to speak and move, which has happened to Gleason.

The station lists the hosts as Nick Cellini, Steak Shapiro and Chris Dimino. But Mack didn't give the names of those fired.

During the segment, two of the on-air personalities took a call from a third host who pretended to be Gleason by using a voice that sounded automated - mimicking another famous ALS patient, Stephen Hawking.

The host pretending to be Gleason told a series of jokes and eventually asked the two others to do him a favor by smothering him.

All three took to Twitter Monday evening to apologize to fans and others who criticized the segment. Listeners and critics turned to the station's Facebook page to call for the hosts' termination.

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 30: Former NFL player Steve Gleason attends the Social Innovation Summit May 2013 - Day Two on May 30, 2013 in New York City. Credit: Getty Images for Social Innovation

Gleason played for the Saints between 2000 and 2006. Team Gleason, an organization named after the former NFL player, is geared toward finding a cure for ALS, raising awareness of the disease and connecting patients to technology, equipment and services tailored to fit their needs.

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