Rutgers Blasts Imus' "Despicable" Remarks
But Players Stop Short Of Saying Radio Host Should Be Fired; They Will Meet With Him Privately
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Rutgers Women Vs. Imus
Members of the Rutgers Scarlet Knights women's basketball team describe how their "moment was taken away" by the comments made by radio host Don Imus. Nancy Cordes reports.
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The Wrong Kind Of History
The women's basketball team at Rutgers University will meet with radio host Don Imus to let him know their displeasure at his derogatory remarks. Richard Schlesinger reports.
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Rutgers Players Speak Out
CBS News RAW: Essence Carson, Rutgers University women's basketball team captain, said she and her teammates were hurt by radio host Don Imus' disapraging remarks.
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Rutgers basketball players listen as coach C. Vivian Stringer speaks at a news conference, April 10, 2007. From left are Rashidat Junaid, Myia McCurdy, Brittany Ray, Epiphanny Prince and Dee Dee Jernigan, all freshmen. (AP)
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Don Imus on the air, April 10, 2007. (MSNBC)
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Rutgers team captain Essence Carson, April 10, 2007. (CBS)
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The Rutgers University team at a news conference on April 10, 2007. (CBS)
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Rutgers head coach C. Vivian Stringer, April 10, 2007. (CBS)
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In the meantime, however, the televised version of "Imus in the Morning" has lost three sponsors: Staples, Bigelow Tea, and Procter & Gamble.
Starting Monday, Imus will be suspended for two weeksfor calling the Rutgers players "nappy-headed hos."
Rutgers' athletic director, Robert E. Mulcahey III, thought a meeting with Imus offered the team's players a chance to listen to him and hear what he has to say. Several players said they wanted to ask the host why he would make such thoughtless statements.
Ten young women donned their game faces today and walked out onto the national stage, reports CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes. They were determined to show they are nothing like the derogatory terms used to describe them.
"We all agreed the meeting with Mr. Imus will help," Essence Carson, a member of the team that lost the NCAA women's championship game to Tennessee last week, said. "We do hope to get something accomplished during this meeting."
With uncommon poise for students so young, the Rutgers Scarlet Knights described how they went from elation to outrage in the space of 24 hours, adds Cordes. They went from playing in the college basketball championship to being humiliated on a national radio show.
"Unless they've given 'ho' a whole new definition, that's not what I am," said player Kia Vaughn.
Head coach C. Vivian Stringer said her players "are the best this nation has to offer, and we are so very fortunate to have them at Rutgers University. They are young ladies of class, distinction. They are articulate, they are gifted. They are God's representatives in every sense of the word."
She said it's not about the players "as black or nappy-headed. It's about us as a people. When there is not equality for all, or when there has been denied equality for one, there has been denied equality for all."
She further said: "While they worked hard in the classroom and accomplished so much and used their gifts and talents, you know, to bring the smiles and the pride within this state in so many people, we had to experience racist and sexist remarks that are deplorable, despicable, and abominable and unconscionable. It hurts me."
"You imagine in sports that the winners circle is genderless and colorless, and they got disabused of that notion rather abruptly," Sally Jenkins, a sports columnist for the Washington Post, told CBS News correspondent Richard Schlesinger.
In Washington, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino was asked if President Bush thought Imus' punishment was strong enough.
"The president believed that the apology was the absolute right thing to do," Perino said Tuesday. "And beyond that, I think that his employer is going to have to make a decision about any action that they take based on it."
Imus started the firestorm after the Rutgers team, which includes eight black women, lost the championship game. He was speaking with producer Bernard McGuirk and said "that's some rough girls from Rutgers. Man, they got tattoos ..."
"Some hardcore hos," McGuirk said.
"That's some nappy-headed hos there, I'm going to tell you that," Imus said.
Imus' comments about the Rutgers players struck a chord, in part, because it was aimed at a group of young women enjoying athletic success.
It also came in a different public atmosphere following the Michael Richards and Mel Gibson incidents, said Eric Deggans, columnist for the St. Petersburg Times and chairman of the media monitoring committee of the National Association of Black Journalists. The NABJ's governing board, which doesn't include Deggans, wants Imus canned.
"What I did was make a stupid, idiotic mistake in a comedy context," Imus said on his show Tuesday morning, the final week before his suspension starts.
Asked by NBC "Today" host Matt Lauer if he could clean up his act as he promised on Monday, he said, "Well, perhaps I can't." But he added, "I have a history of keeping my word."
Of the two-week suspension by MSNBC and CBS Radio, he said: "I think it's appropriate, and I am going to try to serve it with some dignity."
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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See all 613 CommentsCable commentator Bill Maher said he appeared on Tuesday programs, despite advice he skip it. "When have I ever been careful?" he said. He also questioned whether this was the most important civil rights issue in the nation that black leaders were spending so much time on it.
AMEN
He did nothing wrong. CBS should be ashamed of themselves for caving in to Sharpton.
Is that not racist??? WAS JESSE JACKSON FIRED FOR HIS RACIST REMARKS???
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I agree, what Don Imus said was disgusting.
BUT, "Freedom of Speech" is designed to protect speech that is "politically INCORRECT"
Sharpton and Jackson need to remember, this country has freedom of speech.
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WAS JESSE JACKSON FIRED FOR HIS RACIST REMARKS???
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I agree, what Don Imus said was disgusting.
BUT, "Free Speech" is to protect speech that is "politically INCORRECT"
Sharpton and Jackson need to remember, this country has freedom of speech.
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This is certainly not an excuse for Imus, he should definitely should have known better, but why do only these standards apply to whites?
But I think he'll end up leaving this program and moving on to bigger and better things. He'll leave because the job offers will come pouring in.
CBS is full of nappy headed ho's
WAS JESSE JACKSON FIRED FOR HIS RACIST REMARKS???
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I agree, what Don Imus said was disgusting.
BUT, "Free Speech" is to protect speech that is "politically INCORRECT"
Sharpton and Jackson need to remember, this country has freedom of speech.
...
WAS JESSE JACKSON FIRED FOR HIS RACIST REMARKS???
...
I agree, what Don Imus said was disgusting.
BUT, "Free Speech" is to protect speech that is "politically INCORRECT"
Sharpton and Jackson need to remember, this country has freedom of speech.
...
WAS JESSE JACKSON FIRED FOR HIS RACIST REMARKS???
...
I agree, what Don Imus said was disgusting.
BUT, "Free Speech" is to protect speech that is "politically INCORRECT"
Sharpton and Jackson need to remember, this country has freedom of speech.
...
WAS JESSE JACKSON FIRED FOR HIS RACIST REMARKS???
...
I agree, what Don Imus said was disgusting.
BUT, "Free Speech" is to protect speech that is "politically INCORRECT"
Sharpton and Jackson need to remember, this country has freedom of speech.
...
WAS JESSE JACKSON FIRED FOR HIS RACIST REMARKS???
...
I agree, what Don Imus said was disgusting.
BUT, "Free Speech" is to protect speech that is "politically INCORRECT"
Sharpton and Jackson need to remember, this country has freedom of speech.
...
There is also some responsibility needed in the black community to quit using the same language then crying foul when it comes out of a white mouth. Watch one of Chris Rock's old routines and count the number of times he uses the n word and "cracker." It got him noticed and made him famous, which is the same shock jock technique used too often in the media.
As for Jesse Jackson, he is living proof that hypocrisy comes in all colors.
LOL
Yes, it doesn't protect yur job though, where does the Constitution say that? It only keeps you from going to jail.
When will the focus be on a person%u2019s content of their character instead of their race? People make money by keeping Race in the forefront of the news. Would the Legislative Black Caucus have a job if everyone were called Americans that lived here? It is OK to remember a fault from time to time as to never let it happen again, but to make a living from dredging up past wrongs is a disservice to all those who actually endured the hardship. I myself will not accept the hate, guilt, or be held accountable for the transgressions of people who claimed to be wronged by people before my Grandfather was born. Don%u2019t push your opinions on the rest of us. If you want to that is on you but don%u2019t expect me or millions of others to accept your guilt trip. Make your life based on your abilities if you can, not clinging to the sorrows of hundreds of years past in hopes of explaining your own weaknesses, failures, and shortcomings! Take responsibilities for your own actions and choices quit trying to blame your problems on how others were treated!
What goes around comes around.
Yes it was politically incorrect and I applaud him for it. I despsie political correctness in the name of not offneding someone. Get e thicker skin.
But America would do well to see that racism is alive and well in our country, and it remains a threat to the freedom of ourselves and our neighbors. The threat doesn't need to be combated through exploitation of talking heads like Sharpton and Jackson thouhg, but through the hearts of individual Americans who call all the heritages of the world their own.
One million individual boycotts of Imus's program will do more to put a hammer down on racism in this country than will a new brand of political correctness fertilized by political hacks like Sharpton and Jackson.
Imus will reap the whirlwind of his own ignorance all the more, when American's revulsion of his racist comments comes down to a personal reaction by each of us to reject it.
Second, with Spike Lee making movies using "nappy haired hos", and record producers making CD's saying 'kill the hos" WE HAVE ACCEPTED THIS BEHAVIOR. If you fire Imus, you must fire Spike Lee, and all the record producers, and musicians who use the same words. It can't be both ways.
NO
Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Should Imus be fired for using the racist phrase "nappy-headed ho's"???
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Snoop Doggy Dogg - Down 4 my ******
Who cares what he said?
The BOTTOM LINE is, that rules have been broken and reprimand is due. In this case, 2 weeks off of the air does NOT serve Justice.
Furthermore, asking for Justice (that Don Imus be taken off the air) DOES NOT mean that he is not forgiven. It is asking that Justice be served.
Posted by janem4 at 10:23 AM : Apr 10, 2007
And the Republicans have done so well?
Get a life you nappy headed ho.
LOL
The BOTTOM LINE is, that rules have been broken and reprimand is due. In this case, 2 weeks off of the air does NOT serve Justice.
Furthermore, asking for Justice (that Don Imus be taken off the air) DOES NOT mean that he is not forgiven. It is asking that Justice be served.
And if MSNBC still wishes to air his show, or if CBS Radio continues to produces Imus' hateful show, they both should also be sanctioned and fined, or otherwise dealt with by the FCC for airing and promoting obscene and indecent materials on the public airwaves in violation with FCC licensing standards.
An apology is not enough:
There must be consequences commensurate with the offense of spreading hate, making disparaging statements about a group of people - here, Black women and feeding into hateful stereotypes that damage the image and value of Black women overall in society.
Posted by lkwrealestat at 10:29 AM : Apr 10, 2007
Well duh, it's who he has always been on his show. It's what some people watch it for. So up to now it was o.k. but say nappy headed ho and things change?
Bull...he didn't do anything wrong. I watched him and he said it in humor. Get over it! He shouldn't of said he was sorry he should of called Sharpton a nappy headed ho instead.
If CBS radio and MSNBC continue to finance, promote and air the Don Imus show, thereby evidencing their refusal to follow the obscenity broadcast rules, FCC must sanctioned them as demanded by FCC obscenity laws and standards
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