Last weekend, The Ringer boss Bill Simmons interviewed NBA Commissioner Adam Silver at the Sloan Sports Analytics Conference in Boston, but you wouldn’t know it if you were watching ESPN. On Wednesday, ESPN morning show Get Up discussed Silver’s remarks, but when they played a clip of the interview, Simmons — who had a bitter breakup with the network in 2015 — was nowhere to be found. In what can only be described as a supremely petty move, ESPN zoomed in all the way on Silver to cut Simmons out of the frame, effectively erasing him from the clip entirely.

According to Deadspin, Silver said during the interview that many NBA players are “truly unhappy” as “a direct product of social media,” which is… quite a take. But weirdness of that statement aside, it’s how ESPN presented it that’s newsworthy. In an attempt to avoid showing ex-employee Simmons, Get Up zoomed in so far on Silver that it looks like he’s totally alone on stage and speaking into a blue void. Simmons only appears via audio: his disembodied voice says “yes” to Silver’s comments about social media. One Twitter user captured the moment in a before-and-after video (which you can watch above) and compared it to Justice League digitally removing Henry Cavill’s mustache.

Simmons also sounded off on the Get Up clip. He posted a video of the entire segment on Twitter, writing, “2-min mark… Incredible CGI efforts by ‘Get Up’ to cut me out of last Friday’s Adam Silver interview.”

Simmons has had an ongoing beef with ESPN since 2015, when he left the network under acrimonious circumstances. ESPN’s then-president, John Skipper, told The New York Times in 2016 that he “alone made the decision” to fire Simmons. “I severed our relationship with Bill because of his repeated lack of respect for this company, and, more importantly, the people who work here.” Simmons, for his part, has taken multiple shots at the network in the years since his exit. In 2016, he blasted ESPN in a Hollywood Reporter cover story, saying, “They’ve now gotten rid of everybody who is a little off the beaten path. Ask yourself this: ‘Who would work there that you respect right now?'”

You can watch Get Out escalate ESPN’s feud with Simmons in the clip above.