It didn’t take long for ABC to go back to ignoring Hillary Clinton’s growing e-mail scandal. A day after all three networks covered a “scathing” new report accusing the Democrat of violating federal rules, Good Morning America on Friday totally avoided the subject. In contrast, NBC’s Today and CBS This Morning both stayed on the story. But the two networks couldn’t agree whether Clinton was going on “offense” or staying on “defense.”

While GMA reporters couldn’t be bothered to cover the e-mail scandal, the show devoted the entire last half hour to a concert by singer Flo Rida. For those who like to read their TV news, ABC allowed the Clinton scandal to appear in the crawl at the very bottom of the screen. Quickly appearing (and then disappearing) across the screen were the words: “Hillary Clinton to ABC News about the e-mail controversy: 'If I could go back, I would do it differently.'”

On Today, a network graphic proclaimed, “Clinton Goes on the Offensive: Defends Private E-Mail Use Amid Report Fallout.” On CBS This Morning, reporter Julianna Goldman offered a different take: “Hillary Clinton played defense Thursday following the State Department inspector general's support which concluded diplomatic security officials did not and would not approve her exclusive reliance on a personal e-mail account.”

On Today, Welker offered this hopeful assessment, saying, “Hillary Clinton will try to turn the page today from the scathing inspector general report about her use of private e-mails.” However, later the segment, she seemed less optimistic: “Now that e-mail issue just isn't going away for Clinton. She's awaiting the results of an FBI investigation.”

On Thursday, the network morning shows saw the new inspector general report as “scathing” and “stark,” something that “undercuts” Clinton’s honestly. However, as ABC indicates, journalists will likely revert to ignoring the scandal. By that evening, ABC’s David Muir on World News worried that the candidate is not fighting back hard enough against Trump.

A transcript of the Today segment is below: