Jason Alexander Calls Cricket Gay, Then Gives Best Apology Ever


jason alexander craig ferguson e1338835282971 Jason Alexander Calls Cricket Gay, Then Gives Best Apology Ever

"It's really a kind of gay game."

The most controversial part of the whole Jason Alexander “cricket is gay” fiasco? Is that in this current age of lame, half-assed apologies … his was the best and most substantial apology of all time. It’s refreshing to see somebody genuinely contrite and showing remorse, instead of just making excuses.

To be clear, the kind of cricket that Alexander was referring to was not this guy:

 

20100629172708JiminyCricket Jason Alexander Calls Cricket Gay, Then Gives Best Apology Ever

Nobody mention the jaunty hat.

He meant the actual game of cricket, with a bat and balls and stuff. He’s already done this particular joke before, years ago in Australia, a country where cricket is big and the jokes are bigger.

Last Friday on the CBS’s Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, the Seinfield star unwittingly stepped into the minefield of calling something gay when he meant feminine and …. lame.

“It’s the weirdest … not like a manly baseball pitch; it’s a queer British gay pitch. That’s how I know it’s really kind of a gay game.”

Perhaps he could have added, “Not that there’s anything wrong with that.”

GLAAD was most definitely offended, and a thoughtful, well-crafted apology by Alexander was issued. Promptly. Showing great insight and reflection.

(As follows, in full.)

A MESSAGE OF AMENDS

Last week, I made an appearance on the Craig Ferguson show – a wonderfully unstructured, truly spontaneous conversation show. No matter what anecdotes I think will be discussed, I have yet to find that Craig and I ever touch those subjects. Rather we head off onto one unplanned, loony topic after another. It’s great fun trying to keep up with him and I enjoy Craig immensely.

During the last appearance, we somehow wandered onto the topic of offbeat sports and he suddenly mentioned something about soccer and cricket. Now, I am not a stand-up comic. Stand up comics have volumes of time-tested material for every and all occasions. I, unfortunately, do not. However, I’ve done a far amount of public speaking and emceeing over the years so I do have a scattered bit, here and there.

Years ago, I was hosting comics in a touring show in Australia and one of the bits I did was talking about their sports versus American sports. I joked about how their rugby football made our football pale by comparison because it is a brutal, no holds barred sport played virtually without any pads, helmets or protection. And then I followed that with a bit about how, by comparison, their other big sport of cricket seemed so delicate and I used the phrase, “ a bit gay”. Well, it was all a laugh in Australia where it was seen as a joke about how little I understood cricket, which in fact is a very, very athletic sport. The routine was received well but, seeing as their isn’t much talk of cricket here in America, it hasn’t come up in years.

Until last week. When Craig mentioned cricket I thought, “oh, goody – I have a comic bit about cricket I can do. Won’t that be entertaining?”. And so I did a chunk of this old routine and again referred to cricket as kind of “gay” – talking about the all white uniforms that never seem to get soiled; the break they take for tea time with a formal tea cart rolled onto the field, etc. I also did an exaggerated demonstration of the rather unusual way they pitch the cricket ball which is very dance-like with a rather unusual and exaggerated arm gesture. Again, the routine seemed to play very well and I thought it had been a good appearance.

Shortly after that however, a few of my Twitter followers made me aware that they were both gay and offended by the joke. And truthfully, I could not understand why. I do know that humor always points to the peccadillos or absurdities or glaring generalities of some kind of group or another – short, fat, bald, blonde, ethnic, smart, dumb, rich, poor, etc. It is hard to tell any kind of joke that couldn’t be seen as offensive to someone. But I truly did not understand why a gay person would be particularly offended by this routine.

However, troubled by the reaction of some, I asked a few of my gay friends about it. And at first, even they couldn’t quite find the offense in the bit. But as we explored it, we began to realize what was implied under the humor. I was basing my use of the word “gay” on the silly generalization that real men don’t do gentile, refined things and that my portrayal of the cricket pitch was pointedly effeminate , thereby suggesting that effeminate and gay were synonymous.

But what we really got down to is quite serious. It is not that we can’t laugh at and with each other. It is not a question of oversensitivity. The problem is that today, as I write this, young men and women whose behaviors, choices or attitudes are not deemed “man enough” or “normal” are being subjected to all kinds of abuse from verbal to physical to societal. They are being demeaned and threatened because they don’t fit the group’s idea of what a “real man” or a “real woman” are supposed to look like, act like and feel like.

For these people, my building a joke upon the premise I did added to the pejorative stereotype that they are forced to deal with everyday. It is at the very heart of this whole ugly world of bullying that has been getting rightful and overdue attention in the media. And with my well-intentioned comedy bit, I played right into those hurtful assumptions and diminishments.

And the worst part is – I should know better. My daily life is filled with gay men and women, both socially and professionally. I am profoundly aware of the challenges these friends of mine face and I have openly advocated on their behalf. Plus, in my own small way, I have lived some of their experience. Growing up in the ‘70’s in a town that revered it’s [sic] school sports and athletes, I was quite the outsider listening to my musical theater albums, studying voice and dance and spending all my free time on the stage. Many of the same taunts and jeers and attitudes leveled at young gay men and women were thrown at me and on occasion I too was met with violence or the threat of violence.

So one might think that all these years later I might be able to intuit that my little cricket routine could make some person who has already been made to feel alien and outcast feel even worse or add to the conditions that create their alienation. But in this instance, I did not make the connection. I didn’t get it.

So, I would like to say – I now get it. And to the extent that these jokes made anyone feel even more isolated or misunderstood or just plain hurt – please know that was not my intention, at all or ever. I hope we will someday live in a society where we are so accepting of each other that we can all laugh at jokes like these and know that there is no malice or diminishment intended.

But we are not there yet.

So, I can only apologize and I do. In comedy, timing is everything. And when a group of people are still fighting so hard for understanding, acceptance, dignity and essential rights – the time for some kinds of laughs has not yet come. I hope my realization brings some comfort.

Thanks,
Jason Alexander

To finish his apology with hope that one day we might just live in a world in which we are so accepting that we can laugh at each other, freely, is beyond refreshing. It’s damn near inspiring.

In the meantime, it’s so good to see that Jason knocked it off.

 

 

source, source

About Edenland

Eden Riley has a dark past. She blogs at Edenland and lives near Sydney, Australia. She's a writer, mother, stepmother, idiot, derby girl. Eden once waited seven hours to meet Bono. She'd wait even more to meet Eminem but do NOT call her Stan. Her children breathed a new life into her. She has red hair and went to too many schools. It's hard to be her friend. Eden has a dark past dark past let her show u it.



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  • http://twitter.com/KimAZ Kim Bowser

    Well-done, Jason. Good lesson for us all.

  • missbanshee

    I have so many male friends who throw “gay” or “fag” or “queer” around without a single thought to the GLBT community. It enrages me, but (and shame on me, seriously) I rarely do anything but roll my eyes and sigh. I have never been a fan of Jason Alexander, but good on him for doing this apology. Well done, Jason. Watch your mouth next time, okay? And as for my hetero male friends who use slurs like the ones above without a single thought about the people they affect? I’m giving Wanda Sykes your addresses. Get ready to get schooled, boys.

    • http://www.edenriley.com/ edenland

      YES Miss Banshee! I have a twenty-year old stepson who uses these words frequently. And I correct him frequently.

      Ad infinitum.

      (But, I think he’s learning .. slowly.)

  • http://www.sweetney.com Sweetney

    Love him. SO. MUCH.

    • http://www.edenriley.com/ edenland

      Same! How entirely refreshing was it?

  • NinaN2

     Wow! I am shocked at how well thought out and written and sincere his apology is. Good for him for not just handing out the automatic apology notice. He actually stepped back and looked at what happened and tried to understand. Someone’s parents taught him well.

    • http://www.edenriley.com/ edenland

      Same here, Nina. Was totally shocked … and really inspired and proud of him, at the end.

  • http://lynthia.livejournal.com/ Hallie Smith

    Just curious… why, about “lame”?  It means “inadequate or unsatisfactory” just as much as it does “impaired or disabled.”

    If you were kidding, I apologize for being pedantic. :)

    • http://www.doorbellqueen.blogspot.com Liz Miller

       According to the Ableist Word Profile, which I linked to above,

       ”“Lame” is an ableist word. It’s an ableist word because it assumes that
      having difficulty walking is objectively bad, and that therefore, a word
      which is used to describe difficulty walking can be safely used as a
      pejorative to mean “this is bad.” Using “lame” reinforces ableism in our
      culture by reminding people that disability is bad, and that it’s so
      bad that it can be used as a shorthand code to talk about bad things in
      general. Incidentally, the related “lame-brain”? Also ableist. Just so
      we’re all clear on that.”

      “Language has power. We have power when we use language. Language is often used to oppress and abuse. That is
      what this series is about, an attempt to break the ableist habits of
      English language users because those habits enforce ableism in
      English-speaking societies.
      So, what are some good alternatives to “lame”?

      Try thinking about the situation the word is being applied to. Some
      suggestions might be: bad, boring, dull, not worth my time, frustrating,
      irritating.”

      • http://lynthia.livejournal.com/ Hallie Smith

        Interesting.

        I find I don’t really agree with their stance; if a word is being used properly and non-insultingly, it seems a bit much to ban it all together.  The issue isn’t the word, it’s the people who use it incorrectly.  (I am, for the record, anti-banning just about anything.  Books, words, whatever – it’s too unyielding.)

        It is, of course, entirely up to the author of the article to decide how to handle such situations.  Myself, I see that she used the word in such a way that it would be a ridiculous stretch to imagine that what she truly meant was that cricket is a game populated by people with less than fully functioning limbs, rather than a game that is found to be wanting in some way, and I find no reason to suggest that her language was inappropriate.

        • http://www.doorbellqueen.blogspot.com Liz Miller

           I tend to go with what people in the affected community ask for. Folks with disabilities have asked that lame not be used in the sense that Eden used it, and they’ve asked for people to spread the word. I am spreading the word by asking nicely that people not use it when I see it being used. Especially in an otherwise wonderful post, which I’ve linked to everywhere.

          If lame is replacing gay in a post about someone apologizing for using the word gay in that context, then it definitely IS being used insultingly. YOU may not think it’s hurtful, I’ve been assured it is. Why would you argue that an excellent writer should continue to use a word that is hurtful to others?

          • http://lynthia.livejournal.com/ Hallie Smith

            I’m certainly not arguing that the author be hurtful; I’m actually not really trying to argue at all.  O, the futility of trying to win an argument on the internet!

            And to that end, I think I had better stop now.  I have points I feel are valid, but clearly you do as well.  We may have to simply agree to disagree.

          • http://www.edenriley.com/ edenland

            Hey Hallie ….. may we live in interesting comment box times! I appreciate your comments, and am reserving my right to think about it.

            I swear a lot on my blog, and get asked to tone it down (which I won’t do) … but I wonder if my use of the word lame is similar to the use of the word “retard” as an adjective. Which I hate.

            Interesting.

            I need cake. 

          • http://lynthia.livejournal.com/ Hallie Smith

            I just had cake.  Lemon.  Good stuff.

            I think your example actually illustrates what I meant perfectly.  If you were to say “that guy is a retard” rather than “that guy makes my brain itch with stupidity,” then I think you would be out of line.  That’s not a socially appropriate way to use the word.  If, however, you said “I used a ditch to retard the spread of flames from a fire” then you have said nothing inappropriate.  Could you have used a different word?  Sure.  But for two hundred years or so the word meant “to slow,” and I don’t see that forty years of some people being jerks means you can’t use it in its proper place anymore.

            This may have something to do with the fact that I have a degree in English Lit.  I love words.  I want to use them all.  ALL THE WORDS!

      • Snarky_Amber

        Most disabled/differently abled folks I know don’t have a problem with the use of the word “lame” in the context used here – i.e., as a synonym for “feeble”. They are much more insulted by the use of the word to describe a person with disabilities, because “lame” is a synonym for “feeble,” which I think most people with paraplegia would emphatically reject as a self-qualifier, since they are some of the fittest people I know (from the waist up at least!) So, since there’s not really consensus in the disabled community, I’m reluctant to ask a writer to change her wording in a case like this.

        • http://www.doorbellqueen.blogspot.com Liz Miller

           Like I said, I’ve been told it’s hurtful, and been asked to spread the word that it’s hurtful. Many people may disagree, but if anyone is hurt by it, and there are terrific synonyms for it in that context, what’s the big deal about changing?

          Look, I wrote a whole post about why these discussions are necessary and useful, after I read the series about hurtful words that I linked to above.

          I’ve had to work on my own vocabulary around this, but I’m trying to be a good ally.

  • jouljet

    It is indeed a sensational apology.  Actually thought out and reasoned – impressed with the effort and, like you Eden, his ending with hope!

  • http://www.edenriley.com/ edenland

    Hi Liz … wow, I’m taking some time to digest your comment, as well as this whole exchange with Hallie. I’ve never heard of the term “ableism” before, really interesting.

    I’m so sorry that my use of the word lame was offensive. I wonder if people are taking things way too literally, or if I’m just being ignorant. If my using lame as an adjective is as wrong as Jason using the word gay, in the way he did.

    All things to ponder. Thanks for pointing it out, and taking the time to comment. 

    • http://www.doorbellqueen.blogspot.com Liz Miller

      Thank you, Eden. I really like your very thoughtful writing, and am enjoying the discussion here!

      All my best