Showing posts with label Paula Deen Racist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paula Deen Racist. Show all posts

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Walmart Cuts Ties With Paula Deen


NEW YORK — Paula Deen lost another chunk of her empire on Wednesday.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. announced that it has ended its relationship with the Southern celebrity chef, part of the continuing fallout in the wake of revelations that she used racial slurs in the past. The world's largest retailer, based in Bentonville, Ark., currently carries a variety of products under her moniker, including food items, cookware and health and wellness products, at all of its 4,000 U.S. namesake stores. The retailer began selling her merchandise several years ago.
"We will not place new orders beyond those already committed," said Dave Tovar, a Wal-Mart spokesman. "We will work with suppliers to address existing inventories and agreements."
Tovar said the retailer is still working through the details with suppliers.
The severed ties with Wal-Mart are the latest blow to Deen's business. Meanwhile, Paula Deen's name is being stripped from four buffet restaurants owned by Caesars. Caesars said Wednesday that its decision to rebrand its restaurants in Joliet, Ill.; Tunica, Miss.; Cherokee, N.C.; and Elizabether, Ind., was a mutual one with Deen.
Last week, the Food Network said that it would not renew the celebrity cook's contract. And on Monday, Smithfield Foods said it was dropping her as a spokeswoman. Smithfield sold Paula Deen-branded hams in addition to featuring her as a spokeswoman.
Meanwhile, the celebrity chef's representatives distributed nine letters supporting Deen from other companies that work with her, as she fights to keep her business empire from crumbling.
Target Corp., which carries Paula Deen-branded products, reiterated Wednesday it was "evaluating the situation."
Deen appeared in a "Today" show interview earlier Wednesday, dissolving into tears and saying that anyone in the audience who's never said anything they've regretted should pick up a rock and throw it at her head.
The chef, who specializes in Southern comfort food, repeated that she's not a racist

Monday, June 24, 2013

Paula Deen Fired: Food Network Cancels Show After Racism Scandal


SAVANNAH, Ga. — The Food Network said Friday it's dumping Paula Deen, barely an hour after the celebrity cook posted the first of two videotaped apologies online begging forgiveness from fans and critics troubled by her admission to having used racial slurs in the past.
The 66-year-old Savannah kitchen celebrity has been swamped in controversy since court documents filed this week revealed Deen told an attorney questioning her under oath last month that she has used the N-word. "Yes, of course," Deen said, though she added, "It's been a very long time."
The Food Network, which made Deen a star with "Paula's Home Cooking" in 2002 and later "Paula's Home Cooking" in 2008, weighed in with a terse statement Friday afternoon.
"Food Network will not renew Paula Deen's contract when it expires at the end of this month," the statement said. Network representatives declined further comment. A representative for Deen did not immediately return phone and email messages seeking comment on the decision.
The news came as Deen worked to repair the damage to her image, which has spawned a vast empire of cookbooks, a bimonthly cooking magazine, a full line of cookware, food items like spices and even furniture.
She abruptly canceled a scheduled interview on NBC's "Today" show Friday morning, instead opting for a direct appeal via online video – one that allowed her and her staff complete control of what she said and how she said it.
"Inappropriate, hurtful language is totally, totally unacceptable," Deen said in the first 45-second video posted on YouTube. "I've made plenty of mistakes along the way but I beg you, my children, my team, my fans, my partners - I beg for your forgiveness."
Deen adopted a solemn tone as she looked straight into the camera. Still, her recorded apology featured three obvious edits – with the picture quickly fading out between splices – during a statement just five sentences long.
It was soon scrapped and replaced with a second video of Deen talking unedited for nearly two minutes as she insists: "Your color of your skin, your religion, your sexual preference does not matter to me."
""I want people to understand that my family and I are not the kind of people that the press is wanting to say we are," Deen says in the later video. "The pain has been tremendous that I have caused to myself and to others."
Deen never mentions Food Network or its decision to drop her in either of her online videos.
Deen initially planned to give her first interview on the controversy Friday to the "Today" show, which promoted her scheduled appearance as a live exclusive. Instead, host Matt Lauer ended up telling viewers that Deen's representatives pulled the plug because she was exhausted after her flight to New York. Deen said in her video she was "physically not able" to appear.
Court records show Deen sat down for a deposition May 17 in a discrimination lawsuit filed last year by a former employee who managed Uncle Bubba's Seafood and Oyster House, a Savannah restaurant owned by Deen and her brother, Bubba Hiers. The ex-employee, Lisa Jackson, says she was sexually harassed and worked in a hostile environment rife with innuendo and racial slurs.
During the deposition, Deen was peppered with questions about her racial attitudes. At one point she's asked if she thinks jokes using the N-word are "mean." Deen says jokes often target minority groups and "I can't, myself, determine what offends another person."
Deen also acknowledged she briefly considered hiring all black waiters for her brother's 2007 wedding, an idea inspired by the staff at a restaurant she had visited with her husband. She insisted she quickly dismissed the idea.
But she also insisted she and her brother have no tolerance for bigotry.
"Bubba and I, neither one of us, care what the color of your skin is" or what gender a person is, Deen said. "It's what's in your heart and in your head that matters to us."

Paula Deen Scandal Continues As Employees Tell Rainbow/PUSH Coalition Of Alleged Discrimination


An attorney for the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition said current and former Paula Deen employees told him the famous cook and her brother discriminated against black employees, one of whom was consistently referred to as "my little monkey."
After Deen acknowledged using a racial slur, the story went viral and the Food Network announced on Friday that it would not renew her contract when it expires at the end of June.
Deen and her brother, Bubba Hiers, are being sued by Lisa T. Jackson, a former employee who claims she endured a hostile work environment replete with racial slurs.
Robert Patillo, an attorney for Rainbow/PUSH, a civil rights group founded by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Jr., said one current and two former employees told him white employees are routinely paid more than black employees and are promoted more quickly. A black man who had threatened to go to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said Deen's brother told him "you don't have any civil rights here," Rainbow/PUSH said in a press release.
Rainbow/PUSH said it has "found evidence of systemic racial discimination and harassment" by Deen and that "a family member consistently referred to a black cook as 'my little monkey.'"
Patillo, who conducted interviews in Savannah where Deen's restaurant is located, said current and former employees told him that Deen "preferred white and light-skinned blacks to work with customers" and that darker-skinned blacks were relegated to "back-of-the-house operations."
Patillo said employees have been reluctant to talk to him about their experience with Deen because they fear retaliation.
Deen could not be reached on Saturday for comment on the Rainbow/PUSH allegations.
She acknowledged in a deposition that she used a racial slur "a very long time" ago. CBS News has also reported that Deen said jokes often target minority groups.
"I can't, myself, determine what offends another person," the station quoted Deen as saying.
With social media ablaze, Deen on Friday released a pair of videos apologizing and begging for forgiveness.
"I want to apologize to everybody for the wrong that I've done," she said. "I want to learn and grow from this. Inappropriate, hurtful language is totally, totally unacceptable."
In an interview with The AJC, Patillo said Deen's use of a racial slur isn't the problem.
"It's a free country," Patillo said. "We have freedom of speech, and you can say what you want. Our issue is whether that mindset has filtered into employment decisions."
Patillo said there are strong indications that Deen's operation mistreats and limits opportunities for black employees.
"What we've found is that there has been disparate treatment," Patillo said. "What we'd like is to have her remedy the situation."
Those remedies, Patillo said, should include giving blacks a fair chance for employment and promotion, sensitivity training and providing an avenue of recourse for those who have been mistreated.
Responses to the Deen controversy continued on Saturday, with fans coming to her defense and others decrying her insensitivity.
On the Kelley clan's first pilgrimage to Savannah, Paula Deen's Lady and Sons Restaurant on West Congress Street was one of their priority stops. Debbie Kelley, a nurse, is the cook in the family. She has several of Deen's recipe books and much of her cookware. Kathy Hanshaw, another part of the Ohio troupe, gave them to her. Debbie and her husband, David Kelley, and two children, 7-year-old Dylan and 6-year-old Madyson, had the fried chicken and banana pudding. They declared it worth the trip.
All in the party had heard of Deen's troubles, and were withholding judgment. "I think it's unfair until everyone knows the whole story," said Sandy Kelley, sister to David Kelley.
"She needs fair treatment," said Debbie Kelley.
"A lot of times, when the media gets something, it just explodes and you really don't get all the facts, said David Kelley, who operates a plastics plant at home.
But none in the group said the language that Deen had admitted using was acceptable. "This is a different age and time. I don't think that word should be used," said Sandy Kelley.
Scores of people vented on the Food Network's Facebook page. On Facebook, a 'We Support Paula Deen' page had more than 128,000 likes. A 'Bring Back Paula Deen' page started at 5 p.m. Friday by Jimmy Beck, of Carrollton, had more than 1,200 likes. "I am only 20, but I know what forgiveness is. I think it's time we move away from this crazy political correctness," Beck wrote in an email to the AJC.
More than 100 people have commented in AJC's The Buzz column.
An AJC Twitter call-out netted numerous emails and phone calls.
"I don't think Paula should ever use the N-word, but I don't think it merited her being fired from the Food Network," said Wilbur E. Jordan, Jr., a 28-year old Augusta resident. "I do feel her apology was heartfelt."
Learell Faulk, 33, of Calhoun, was critical of the decision not to renew Deen's contract.
"I understand that Food Network is a business with an image to protect and anything short of firing Paula Deen would appear to support her past mistakes," said Faulk, who is white. "The fact that Food Network is being forced by society into this decision is nothing less than hogwash."
Darah Cubit, who described herself as a 22-year-old black woman from the West Coast, said she was not surprised to learn that Deen had used a racial slur.
"After all, she is an older white woman in one of the most notorious slave states in the country," Cubit said. "However, my problem is that for years the people around her had been condoning this behavior and accepting the clearly biased opinions she had communicated off camera. Her personal beliefs and biases obviously would have affected how most of her viewers, being of slave descent, support her restaurants, shows, and special appearances."
Said Libby Middleson, of Mississippi, "I am sad that Ms. Deen has become a victim of her own behavior, but I am happy that we are at least discussing the part institutional racism still plays in our lives in America. It is my hope that we grow from this event."
Staff writer Jim Galloway contributed to this report. ___