| Koreans not so thick-skinned after all?
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Days after toasting the ratings
success of its Winter Olympics coverage, NBC
sought on Thursday to quiet a controversy sparked
by comedian Jay Leno with a joke about South
Korea's disqualified short-track
skater.
The network issued a statement
Thursday defending the "irreverent comedy" of its
late-night TV host while insisting no offense was
intended by Leno when he joked last week that
skater Kim Dong-sung "was so mad he went home and
kicked the dog, and then ate him."
Ridicule
of the Korean practice of eating dog meat has long
been a national sore point with citizens and
politicians of the Asian nation.
Leno's
remark, part of his opening monologue last
Thursday, came a day after Kim crossed the finish
line first in the 1,500-meter short track race in
Salt Lake City but was disqualified for allegedly
impeding U.S. rival Apolo Anton Ohno, who was then
awarded the gold medal.
The judge's
decision outraged the South Korean public, and
Leno's joke, broadcast on South Korean television
Saturday, added fuel to the fire, prompting harsh
condemnations in the press from South Korean
politicians. Former Prime Minister Kim Jong-pil
was quoted as calling Leno "ill-mannered" and
said, "We should not let such a man, one without
common sense, host a TV program." He vowed to send
a letter of protest to NBC.
As of Thursday,
NBC had received no such letter, a network
spokeswoman said. But the network issued a brief
statement "to assure the Korean community that it
is not the intent of the show, Jay Leno or NBC to
offend them." The statement went on to defend the
"The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" as "one of the
most popular and irreverent comedy programs on
television for 10 years."
"By its nature,
comedy can be impolite, and the humor on 'The
Tonight Show' is no exception," NBC said. "People
have different opinions about where the lines
should be drawn."
LENO TALKS WITH
ASIAN-AMERICAN LEADERS
A spokeswoman for
"The Tonight Show" said neither the network nor
Leno would have any further comment.
Karen
Narasaki, who chairs the Multi-Ethnic Media
Coalition and the Asian Pacific American Media
Coalition, said Korean Americans also took offense
at Leno's remarks, and she found NBC's statement
"very weak." But she said Leno himself was "very
gracious" during a 30-minute telephone
conversation with her and the head of the
Korean-American Coalition, Charles Kim. But she
said the comedian at first professed surprise that
his joke was so hurtful because "from his
perspective it was based in fact."
Narasaki
said she explained that context was everything and
that such humor amounts to ethnic stereotyping.
"We said for example that while it's true that
some African Americans eat fried chicken and
watermelon, you wouldn't make a joke about
it."
In the end, she said, Leno "...didn't
say, 'I apologize.' But he said he didn't intend
to offend anybody or hurt anybody, and if he had
known then what we were telling him, he wouldn't
have told the joke. And that's really what we were
looking for."
Leno's joke flew in the face
of South Korea's prevailing national sentiment
that its short-track skating star was robbed of
the gold medal due to American favoritism at the
U.S.-hosted Olympics, even though an Australian
was the chief referee for the event.
It was
not the first time NBC has drawn South Korean ire
over the Olympics. The network faced angry
protests in 1988 during its coverage of the Summer
Games in Seoul when it broadcast an ugly incident
in which a Korean boxer staged a sit-in and
coaches threw chairs at a referee over a disputed
boxing call.
The controversy came days
after NBC celebrated solid ratings for its
coverage of the Salt Lake City Olympics exceeded
the CBS telecast of the 1988 Winter Games in
Nagano, Japan by 18 percent. NBC said it expected
to reap a $75 million profit from its Olympics
coverage, which was heavily promoted on "The
Tonight Show."
The network is owned by
General Electric Co.
(Pardon our
confusion - we at ITD thought that the Koreans
were proud of their "cultural cuisine". If that's
the case, why such outrage at what was, after all,
merely a joke? The fact is that they are aware
that it's viewed by the civilised world as an
obscene habit. Otherwise this humour would not
have touched such a raw nerve. Nice one, Jay! -
ITD)
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| Reuters |
28th February 2002
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