September 24, 2004
Segments of the series of strips include a woman who would rather sleep than work, and a black man smoking marijuana in a boardroom (not unlike NBC's The Apprentice).
A humor columnist for The Washington Post blasted that paper's "pathetically weak and wrong decision" on the comic.Universal Press is no stranger to controversy tied to the "N" word, having caught flack from Project 21 (as well as myself) over the use of the word by political cartoonist Ted Rall over the summer.Universal Press Syndicate gave papers a choice of running the strip with the three symbols in the middle of the "N" word, or with symbols for all five letters in the word, or re-running an old strip. The most severely edited version also deletes the knives from the knife fight. This is the version carried by the Los Angeles Times.
Kathie Kerr, director of communications at Universal Press Syndicate, told E&P that at least four papers killed this week's strip entirely. She said that McGruder had not commented, adding that he is "kind of his own wild child" and that this is "not the first time" the "N" word had been used in the strip.
Greg Melvin, associate editor at Universal, called the content "defensible because it's really trenchant satire," in an interview with a St. Petersburg Times reporter.
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Posted by: DarkStar at September 26, 2004 12:31 PM (cnw1A)
Posted by: Andy at September 29, 2004 09:17 PM (WC1fj)
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