TV host Jimmy Fallon ‘very sorry’ for 2000 blackface skit

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NBC’s Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon has apologised for wearing blackface in a Saturday Night Live skit from 2000.

The clip went viral on Monday, and led to calls for Fallon to quit the show.

In his apology on Tuesday, Fallon said there was “no excuse” for his actions, and thanked the public “for holding me accountable”.

Several politicians and media figures, as well as Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, have been embroiled in recent blackface scandals.

Chris Rock has not yet made any public statement about the sketch in which he is depicted making jokes about crack cocaine.

As the hashtag #JimmyFallonIsOverParty trended on Twitter on Tuesday, Fallon released a statement apologising for the 20-year old skit.

“In 2000, while on SNL, I made a terrible decision to do an impersonation of Chris Rock while in blackface,” he wrote.

“There is no excuse for this. I am very sorry for making this unquestionably offensive decision and thank all of you for holding me accountable.”

Saturday Night Live, which has been on air since 1975, has a history of having non-black actors portray African-Americans.

The LA Times reports other famous black figures impersonated by non-black actors include former President Barack Obama, civil-rights activist Jesse Jackson, Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray and musician Sammy Davis Jr.

The controversy also drew some social media commentators to point out that other comedians, such as late night host Jimmy Kimmel and Sarah Silverman have also performed televised comedy sketches in blackface.

NBC, the network that employed Fallon, fired news anchor Megyn Kelly in 2018 after she made controversial comments defending the use of blackface.

More recently, the Canadian prime minister and Virginia Governor Ralph Northam have both successively resisted calls to resign for wearing blackface when they were younger.

What is blackface?

Blackface has a history of perpetuating offensive and racist stereotypes of African Americans dating back more than 200 years in the United States.

“It’s a tradition rooted in racism which is very much about the fear of black people and the laughing at black people,” Dr Kehinde Andrews, Associate Professor in Sociology at Birmingham City University told the BBC in 2017.

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