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Fox News under fire for ‘racist’ Chinatown segment about Asian-Americans: ‘Do you know karate?’ | Fox News under fire for ‘racist’ Chinatown segment about Asian-Americans: ‘Do you know karate?’ |
(35 minutes later) | |
Fox News aired a controversial segment on The O’Reilly Factor that managed to include an overwhelming number of Asian stereotypes within a short, five-minute time span. | Fox News aired a controversial segment on The O’Reilly Factor that managed to include an overwhelming number of Asian stereotypes within a short, five-minute time span. |
Jesse Watters – an American correspondent known for his street interviews – focused on interviewing people in New York City’s Chinatown about their preferred presidential candidates, Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump. | Jesse Watters – an American correspondent known for his street interviews – focused on interviewing people in New York City’s Chinatown about their preferred presidential candidates, Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump. |
In the segment, Watters asks a number of election-based questions, asking for opinions of Mr Trump’s position on China. But he also toggled to more generic, stereotypical subject matter about the lives of the Asian people he interviewed. | In the segment, Watters asks a number of election-based questions, asking for opinions of Mr Trump’s position on China. But he also toggled to more generic, stereotypical subject matter about the lives of the Asian people he interviewed. |
Among the questions included: “Am I supposed to bow to say ‘hello’?”; “Do you know karate?”; “Do they call Chinese food in China just ‘food’?”; Do you have any traditional Chinese herbs for performance?” | Among the questions included: “Am I supposed to bow to say ‘hello’?”; “Do you know karate?”; “Do they call Chinese food in China just ‘food’?”; Do you have any traditional Chinese herbs for performance?” |
The segment was edited to include clips from movies that featured stereotypical Asian caricatures as a comedic response to the answers. One clip featured Japanese-American actor Pat Morita as Mr Miyagi in the 1984 film The Karate Kid. | |
Some people interviewed did not appear to speak English and did not respond to Watters’ questions. They were promptly ridiculed. | Some people interviewed did not appear to speak English and did not respond to Watters’ questions. They were promptly ridiculed. |
The segment has been widely criticised as racist. | The segment has been widely criticised as racist. |
“This is one of the most blatantly racist things I have ever seen,” Farhad Manjoo, a tech reporter for the New York Times, tweeted. “How can anyone at @FoxNews defend this? It’s nuts.” | “This is one of the most blatantly racist things I have ever seen,” Farhad Manjoo, a tech reporter for the New York Times, tweeted. “How can anyone at @FoxNews defend this? It’s nuts.” |
ESPN’s Pablo S Torre said: “The worst part about this bluntly racist Fox News segment is all the people who have no idea it’s bluntly racist.” | ESPN’s Pablo S Torre said: “The worst part about this bluntly racist Fox News segment is all the people who have no idea it’s bluntly racist.” |
In the talkback following the segment, Bill O’Reilly, anticipating a backlash to the segment said he knew the programme was “going to get letters”. | In the talkback following the segment, Bill O’Reilly, anticipating a backlash to the segment said he knew the programme was “going to get letters”. |
But Watters assured him – and likely the viewers – that the segment was “all in good fun”. | But Watters assured him – and likely the viewers – that the segment was “all in good fun”. |
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