Cartoon of tennis star Serena Williams not racist: Australia
watchdog
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[February 25, 2019]
SYDNEY (Reuters) - A cartoon
published in an Australian newspaper that depicted tennis star
Serena Williams having a temper tantrum at the U.S. Open last year
was not racist, Australia's media watchdog said on Monday.
The caricature of an angry Williams - with exaggerated lips and
tongue and a wild plume of curly hair rising above her head as she
stomped on her tennis racket - was condemned as racist by civil
rights leaders, celebrities and fans.
Melbourne's Herald Sun newspaper and cartoonist Mark Knight denied
the image was racist.
The Australian Press Council said on Monday the cartoon did not
breach its standards of practice.
"The Council considers that the cartoon uses exaggeration and
absurdity to make its point, but accepts the publisher's claim that
it does not depict Ms. Williams as an ape, rather showing her as
'spitting the dummy'," the council said, using an Australian phrase
for a child having a temper tantrum.
The image was "a non-racist caricature familiar to most Australian
readers," the council said in a statement.
The newspaper said the cartoon was intended as a lampoon of the
tennis star's angry exchanges with chair umpire Carlos Ramos at the
U.S. Women's Singles final in New York.
Williams clashed with Ramos over penalties she thought she did not
deserve and ultimately lost to Naomi Osaka.
[to top of second column] |
Serena Williams of the United States smashes her racket during the
women's final against Naomi Osaka of Japan (not pictured) on day
thirteen of the 2018 U.S. Open tennis tournament at USTA Billie Jean
King National Tennis Center. Mandatory Credit: Danielle Parhizkaran-USA
TODAY SPORTS
The U.S.-based National Association of Black Journalists said at the
time the cartoon was "repugnant on many levels" and "not only exudes
racist, sexist caricatures of both women, but Williams' depiction is
unnecessarily sambo-like."
"Sambo," a derogatory term for a black person, is the name of a
folkloric figure usually depicted with an exaggerated mouth and an
ape-like stance.
The Council acknowledged that some readers found the cartoon
offensive.
"However ... there was a sufficient public interest in commenting on
behaviour and sportsmanship during a significant dispute between a
tennis player with a globally high profile and an umpire at the U.S.
Open final," it said.
(Reporting by Paulina Duran; Editing by Darren Schuettler)
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