It took outcry, 15 hours for BBC to remove slur from BAFTA broadcast
Remember when racists were afraid to voice their beliefs in public for fear of being labeled βracistsβ? I know, itβs hard to think back that far, before 2016 when Fox News gave Tucker Carlson his own primetime show and βExecute the [Now Exonerated] Central Park Fiveβ Donald Trump won the election.
Weβve slipped so far. Now barely a day goes by without a major media platform giving equal time to Jim Crow-era ideals (because there are always two sides), a member of Congress explaining away their leaderβs stunningly bigoted Truth Social post, or a major cultural institution normalizing a word that should never be normalized because they failed to see it as offensive.
This week, the N-word was shouted at βSinnersβ actors Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo as they presented the honor for visual effects during the BAFTA Awards ceremony in London. The slur was involuntarily blurted by John Davidson, whose life experience dealing with Tourette syndrome inspired the film βI Swear.β The situation was painful and humiliating, but given the circumstances, the offensive nature of the incident could have been handled with common sense and empathy. Yet the British Broadcast Company deployed none of that.
Instead, the BBC failed to remove or bleep the slur from its initial broadcast, even though it had a two-hour delay before the show aired on BBC One in the U.K. Even after the outcry over the inclusion of the N-word in its initial broadcast, the network waited almost 15 hours before removing the slur from BBCβs iPlayer streaming service.
In a statement, the BBC said that the slur was βaired in errorβ and they would βnever have knowingly allowed this to be broadcast.β Yet the BBC did catch and remove a remark by βMy Fatherβs Shadowβ director Akinola Davies Jr. that it found to be offensive. His call to βfree Palestineβ was deleted from the recording before the show aired. #BBCPriorities.
And because everything must be swept up, co-opted and expanded upon by AI, the repeating of the offensive word wasnβt just confined to the BBCβs airing of the award show. Google apologized Tuesday after a computer-generated news alert about BAFTAβs racial slur incident included the word. Its notification alert, linked to an article from the Hollywood Reporter, invited readers to βsee more,β leading them to additional context that included the slur.
In a statement, Davidson said he was βdeeply mortified if anyone considers my involuntary tics to be intentional or to carry any meaning.β He removed himself from the audience during Sundayβs show to avoid another potential incident.
Thereβs no reason why we canβt acknowledge Davidsonβs disability while also recognizing the harm that the word caused. He sees it, of course. The aforementioned film inspired by his life shows what itβs like to live with involuntary vocal tics that belie your own beliefs or intentions.
Lindo and Jordanβs Oscar-nominated film, βSinners,β depicts another sort of struggle: Black folks trying to survive, and daring to thrive, in Jim Crow-era Mississippi. Whites hurl the N-word at them daily, accompanied by varying degrees of hatred, disgust and violence. The film reinforces a basic truth, that the word isnβt just a word. Itβs a holdover from the Antebellum South, used to demean and dehumanize, to shackle self-determination, to keep Black folks down. How anyone in the BBC edit bay, or otherwise, could miss such a hateful, loaded slur is frankly unbelievable.
BAFTA apologized for putting guests in a βvery difficult situationβ and thanked Jordan and Lindo for their βincredible dignity and professionalism.β It wasnβt a great response. The actors were humiliated on a public stage, in front of their peers, then thanked for keeping their cool, as if it was up to them to save the day β when they were the targets of the slur. As a colleague of mine said, βItβs always βbe professional,β and βact with dignity and grace,β when you just want to flip a table.β
The BAFTA slur heard round the world, or at least on both sides of the Atlantic, was not an intentionally deployed hate bomb. But it still stings, especially here in the United States, as racist rhetoric from on high has hit a fever pitch.
Trump earlier this month posted a video on Truth Social depicting former President Obama and wife Michelle Obama as apes. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt initially defended the post, claiming it was part of a longer video that portrayed Trump as βKing of the Jungleβ and Democrats as characters from the βLion King.β She told critics to βstop the fake outrage.β The video was deleted 12 hours after it was posted, and the White House blamed a staffer for βerroneouslyβ making the post. Trump never apologized, claiming he βdidnβt seeβ the portion of the videoβs racist imagery. βNo, I didnβt make a mistake,β he said.
MAGAβs reaction to Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny performing the Superbowl LX halftime show added to the xenophobic pile-on, from Trump calling the selection of the Spanish-language rapper and singer a βterrible choiceβ for the show and saying βall it does is sow hatredβ to counterprogramming for conservatives by Turning Point USA pointedly called the βAll-American Halftime Show.β Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and House Speaker Mike Johnson rallied behind the Bad Bunny alternative.
Todayβs onslaught of racist ideology isnβt just confined to rhetoric. ICEβs immigration sweeps of American streets have targeted people who look like immigrants, and the administration is looking at ways to whitewash the horrors of slavery by changing how Black history is presented at public sites and museums. (Trump says historical sites focus too much on slavery instead of the βsuccessβ of the country.)
Thereβs plenty of pushback, but thereβs also plenty of capitulation from media outlets who fear being sued (or worse) by a weaponized FCC.
Davidson now says he intends to apologize directly to Jordan and Lindo for his BAFTA Awards outburst. But heβs shouldering a burden that all the entities involved should claim. Thereβs no scapegoat here, just the daily erosion of civility and the undermining of hard-fought freedoms.