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        <title><![CDATA[Howard Stern under fire for past use of blackface, skit with N-word]]></title>
        <atom:link href="https://usagag.com/2020/06/13/howard-stern-under-fire-for-past-use-of-blackface-skit-with-n-word/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
        <link>https://usagag.com/2020/06/13/howard-stern-under-fire-for-past-use-of-blackface-skit-with-n-word/</link>
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            <media:title type="html">Howard Stern under fire for past use of blackface, skit with N-word</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Howard Stern has become the latest in a long list of celebrities and power players to be forced to confront their use of blackface.</p><p>On Thursday a video appeared online showing Stern in minstrel-style makeup, liberally using the N-word. It was cut together with a recent appearance on “The View” during which he claimed he’d never used that word.</p><p>Sources tell Page Six that the clip — a skit that seems to take aim at Ted Danson’s infamous 1993 blackface performance with then-girlfriend Whoopi Goldberg — was part of Stern’s “New Year’s Rotten Eve Pageant,” which aired on pay-per-view on December 31 that year.</p><p>In the video he plays Danson, and addresses his long-time black sidekick Robin Quivers, making corny and highly racist jokes, such as, “What do you call a black rocket scientist?,” the punchline to which is the N-word.</p><p>When his audience seems shocked by the language, Stern defends himself by saying, “Whoopi wrote it!” Then he calls Quivers a “smelly” N-word, and again excuses himself by saying, “Whoopi wrote that.”</p><p>The point of the skit seems to be that Danson used Goldberg’s apparent blessing of his behavior as license to be freely racist.</p><p>Longtime Stern employee Steve Grillo of the Aftershock XL podcast network — who worked on the special — tells Page Six that he doesn’t believe Stern is racist and that he never used that language off-air. He said that because the show was on pay-per-view and wasn’t governed by Stern’s longtime nemesis the FCC, their attitude was, “We’ve got the whole world watching — let’s push the limits.” He added, “The leash was off and they were going to be rabid dogs.”</p><p>The clip was first posted by controversial filmmaker Tariq Nasheed and bubbled up among right-wing Twitter users — possibly because Stern recently came out against President Trump — and was eventually retweeted by Donald Trump Jr.</p><p>A rep for Stern didn’t get back to us.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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