Celebrity chef Paula Deen's contract with the Food Network will not
be renewed, the network said Friday, the latest fallout over revelations
this week that she admitted to using a racial epithet in the past.
Sources :
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/06/21/showbiz/paula-deen-racial-slur/index.html
Deen's contract with the network, which airs three shows featuring the chef, expires at the end of the month, it said.
The Food Network's
announcement followed reports that Deen acknowledged in a lawsuit
deposition to using the "N word." Earlier in the week, the network said
it would monitor the situation, but that it "does not tolerate any form
of discrimination."
In a statement, Deen thanked the network for 11 "great years."
"... I have had the
pleasure of being allowed into so many homes across the country and
meeting people who have shared with me the most touching and personal
stories," she said. "... This would not have been possible without The
Food Network. Thank you again. Love and best dishes to all of ya'll."
It was a stunning turn of
developments for the chef whose Southern, folksy flare with food made
her a household name, spawning a line of kitchenware, cookware and food.
It also came at the end
of a head-spinning day of developments that began when Deen backed out
of an interview with "Today" on NBC. She later apologized and begged for
forgiveness in a video on YouTube that she pulled and replaced with a
self-produced video where she again apologized.
"I want to apologize to
everybody for the wrong that I've done," Deen said in the first video
statement. "I want to learn and grow from this. Inappropriate and
hurtful language is totally, totally unacceptable. 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."
A short time later, Deen replaced the professionally edited video with one she made herself.
In that video, she apologized for backing out of the interview, saying she was "physically not able" to do it at the time.
"I'm taking this
opportunity now that I've pulled myself together and am able to speak to
offer an apology to those that I have hurt," she said.
"... My family and I are
not the kind of people the press are wanting to say we are," she said.
"...Your color, your religion, your sexual preference does not matter to
me. But it's what's in the heart, and my family and I try to live by
that."
Deen's public relations manager said after Deen recorded the first statement, she said it was not what she wanted to say.
"She picked up her own
handi-cam and recorded it herself without a production team present,"
according to Juda Engelmayer, senior vice president of 5W Public
Relations.
Deen and her brother are
being sued for alleged sexual and racial harassment by a former manager
of Deen's restaurants in Savannah, Georgia.
Lisa T. Jackson's
lawsuit alleges that Deen and Bubba Hier committed numerous acts of
violence, discrimination and racism that resulted in the end of her
five-year employment at Deen's Lady & Sons and Uncle Bubba's Oyster
House eateries in Savannah.
Deen's lawyer has called the allegations false.
"Contrary to media
reports, Ms. Deen does not condone or find the use of racial epithets
acceptable," her lawyer, Bill Franklin said. "She is looking forward to
her day in court."
The language in question was revealed recently as part of a deposition of Deen by Jackson's lawyers in May.
Jackson lawyer: "Miss Deen, have you told racial jokes?"
Deen: "No, not racial."
Jackson lawyer: "Have you ever used the 'N word' yourself?"
Deen: "Yes, of course."
Deen testified that she
probably used the racial slur when talking to her husband about "when a
black man burst into the bank that I was working at and put a gun to my
head."
"I didn't feel real favorable towards him," she said, referring to the robber.
Jackson lawyer: "Have you used it since then?"
Deen: "I'm sure I have, but it's been a very long time."
Deen said she couldn't
remember other contexts in which she used the slur, but "maybe in
repeating something that was said to me."
"But that's just not a
word that we use as time has gone on," she said. "Things have changed
since the '60s in the South. And my children and my brother object to
that word being used in any cruel or mean behavior."
Deen's company issued a
statement Thursday saying the chef used the epithet, but in a "quite
different time" in American history.
"She was born 60 years
ago when America's South had schools that were segregated, different
bathrooms, different restaurants and Americans rode in different parts
of the bus. This is not today."
Sources :
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/06/21/showbiz/paula-deen-racial-slur/index.html
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