BSP-04 ‘Racist’ Serena Williams cartoon given Australian all-clear

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AUSTRALIA-US-TENNIS-MEDIA-WILLIAMS-CARTOON

‘Racist’ Serena Williams cartoon given Australian all-clear

SYDNEY, Feb 25, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A controversial Australian newspaper
cartoon of Serena Williams which was blasted as racist and sexist did not
breach media standards, the country’s press watchdog ruled Monday.

Melbourne Herald-Sun illustrator Mark Knight’s caricature in September
showed a butch and fat-lipped Williams throwing a temper tantrum at last
year’s US Open after losing to Naomi Osaka.

It sparked widespread condemnation across the world, including from Harry
Potter author JK Rowling and the Washington Post, which likened it to the era
of racial segregation in the United States.

The Herald-Sun defiantly republished the cartoon on its front page in the
wake of the criticism under the headline “WELCOME TO PC WORLD”.

The Australian Press Council received complaints that Williams’ depiction
“may cause it to be an offensive and sexist representation of a woman and a
prejudicial racial stereotype of African-American people generally”.

It said there was concern about her being shown with “large lips, a broad
flat nose, a wild afro-styled ponytail hairstyle different to that worn by Ms
Williams during the match and positioned in an ape-like pose”.

But it accepted that the newspaper’s intent was simply to depict her
behaviour as “childish by showing her spitting a pacifier out while she jumps
up and down”.

“The Council considers that the cartoon uses exaggeration and absurdity to
make its point,” it said.

“It accepts the publisher’s claim that it does not depict Ms Williams as an
ape, rather showing her as ‘spitting the dummy’, a non-racist caricature
familiar to most Australian readers.”

The Council did acknowledge that some readers found it offensive, but added
that there was “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 US Open final”.

“As such, the Council does not consider that the publication failed to take
reasonable steps to avoid causing substantial offence, distress or prejudice,
without sufficient justification in the public interest.”

The furore followed 23-time Grand Slam champion Williams smashing her
racquet and calling the umpire a “thief” and a “liar” during her Flushing
Meadows meltdown.

At the time, Knight — who has a reputation for controversial cartoons —
said the uproar was a sign that the “world has just gone crazy”.

“The cartoon about Serena is about her poor behaviour on the day, not about
race,” he said.

Australia is a highly multicultural country, but also sees occasional
public dust-ups about the use of racially and sexually loaded language.

BSS/AFP/MSY/0932 hrs