Culture Over 450 past Jeopardy contestants call on show to address alleged 'white power' symbol - He also used the slur gypsies. This guy is worse than Hitler!

Over 450 past Jeopardy contestants call on show to address alleged 'white power' symbol​

https://ew.com/tv/jeopardy-alums-open-letter-contestant-offensive-hand-gesture/ (https://archive.ph/lvylI)
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A growing list of more than 450 former Jeopardy contestants are calling for action after a recent winner allegedly flashed a hand gesture that has become associated with white supremacist hate groups, and, in another instance, responded to a clue with a term that is considered a slur.

In an open letter published to Medium on Wednesday, the group writes, "A recent contestant has caused concern among Jeopardy! viewers for two separate occurrences, and we as former contestants feel the need to speak out against the messaging that these choices communicated — either intentionally or unintentionally — by the contestant Kelly Donohue and, implicitly by association, the producers of Jeopardy!"

On Tuesday's episode, Donohue made a hand gesture during his on-camera introduction that he later said on social media signified the number three, as he was the three-day champion. In his previous episodes, he gestured with one finger and two fingers in accordance with the number of games he'd won.

But some viewers were struck by Donohue's specific finger positions, which, according to the open letter, "whether intentional or not, resembled very closely a gesture that has been coopted by white power groups, alt right groups, and an anti-government group that calls itself the Three Percenters." (According to the Anti-Defamation League, the "'okay' hand gesture" began as a hoax but has been used by right-wing trolls and white supremacists.)

The open letter calls on Donohue to publicly apologize "for the ramifications of the gesture he made" and disavow "any connection to white supremacist doctrines," and urges the show to "address Kelly's behavior" and take measures to ensure that "future mistakes of this magnitude never make it on air."
In a since-deleted Facebook post addressing the blowback, Donohue said he just wanted to "count my victories."

"Many of the great champions of old had a little signature hello they would do on-screen when being introduced by Johnny Gilbert," he wrote. "I decided to count my victories. That's a 1. That's a 2. That's a 3. No more. No less. There wasn't a hidden agenda or any malice behind it. Had I managed to repeat as champion, you'd have been treated to a 4."

Representatives for Jeopardy did not immediately respond to EW's request for comment.

The letter also notes that during Monday's episode, Donohue responded to a clue with a term for the Roma people that is considered a slur. Although guest host Anderson Cooper noted as much on air, the signatories point out that "other episodes of the show where questionable responses or misspeaking prompted a pause and re-recording of the dialogue."

They continue, "This probably would have been a good occasion to employ a similar fix. Yes, it may be an innocent or ignorant reply, and yes, it was technically correct. But on a television show for an international audience, the impact on a larger stage needs to be taken into account."
Thus, the former contestants are asking that the writers "remove this word from their vocabulary when it's not being used in the context of a title of an artwork or a direct quotation."

With regard to Donohue's hand gesture, the letter also notes that the Jeopardy production team has in the past taken measures to reshoot or even digitally alter moments deemed unsuitable for broadcast.
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Letter from former Jeopardy! contestants regarding offensive terminology and gesture aired this week​

https://medium.com/@j.contestants.letter/letter-from-former-jeopardy-2eda854efdf1 (https://archive.ph/6rjQV)

A recent contestant has caused concern among “Jeopardy!” viewers for two separate occurrences, and we as former contestants feel the need to speak out against the messaging that these choices communicated — either intentionally or unintentionally — by the contestant Kelly Donohue and, implicitly by association, the producers of “Jeopardy!”.

On Monday, April 26, Kelly responded to a clue with a term for the Roma that is considered a slur. The use of this term doesn’t necessarily indicate malice; until recently, it was widely used by English speakers. Current diversity style guides, however, suggest that it not be used, and that Roma or Romani be used instead. Host Anderson Cooper noted this on-air. However, many of us witnessed occasions in tapings of other episodes of the show where questionable responses or mis-speaking prompted a pause and re-recording of the dialogue. This probably would have been a good occasion to employ a similar fix. Yes, it may be an innocent or ignorant reply, and yes, it was technically correct. But on a television show for an international audience, the impact on a larger stage needs to be taken into account. A search of recent show archives reveals that the writers of clues have used the term “Gypsy” five times in the last two years. We ask the writers to remove this word from their vocabulary when it’s not being used in the context of a title of an artwork or a direct quotation. It would be best if they could craft clues that positively showcase the cultural heritage of the Roma and distance the association with hurtful stereotypes from the past.

Tuesday, April 27, was a more widely felt misstep. During his on-camera introduction, Kelly made a gesture with his hand that he has since claimed was an indication that he had won three games. He had, on previous episodes, indicated with one finger and two fingers that he had won one and two games, and no reasonable person would have interpreted those gestures differently. However, this gesture was not a clear-cut symbol for the number three. He held his thumb and forefinger together with his other three fingers extended and palm facing inward, and he tapped his chest. This, whether intentional or not, resembled very closely a gesture that has been coopted by white power groups, alt right groups, and an anti-government group that calls itself the Three Percenters. In a public Facebook post that has since been deleted, Kelly states, “That’s a 3. No more. No less.” His public Facebook profile also featured a cover photo of Frank Sinatra making a similar gesture. This was either erased or made private on Wednesday morning, along with hundreds of public comments on his few “Jeopardy!”-related posts. Regardless of his stated intent, the gesture is a racist dog whistle. Some of the first people to notice this were not affiliated with “Jeopardy!” in any way — they were viewers who couldn’t believe what they’d seen, captured it on video, and shared it to Twitter. Among them were people of color who, needless to say, are attuned to racist messaging and not appreciative that the show allowed this symbol to be broadcast.

During other tapings of “Jeopardy!” episodes, changes have been made to avoid negative messaging making it to air. On more than one occasion, contestants have made gestures during their introductions that were seen as undesirable for broadcast and were asked by the production team to reshoot the footage without the gesture. A couple of years ago, a contestant unintentionally wagered a monetary amount that used numerical values coopted by white supremacist groups and, since the total didn’t affect the outcome of the game, “Jeopardy!” digitally altered the numbers in the version that aired. This should have been done in this case. Intentional or not, the burden was on the production team to catch the similarity to a hate symbol and make sure it didn’t end up on air.

Most problematic to us as a contestant community is the fact that Kelly has not publicly apologized for the ramifications of the gesture he made. If something has been misconstrued, an apology and a total disavowal of any connection to white supremacist doctrines is called for. We saw that gesture air on television. We are among the public it affected, and we are a diverse group of people. People of color, religious minorities, and other marginalized groups already live in a United States and a Canada that have structural and institutional racism, sexism, antisemitism, ableism, homophobia, and transphobia embedded into their history and function. These people deal with microaggressions nearly every day of their lives, through words, actions, and assumptions that remind them on a constant basis that they are not the default, they are not the mainstream, they are not “real citizens.” And that is hard enough. That is enough for them to bear and enough for us to keep trying to recognize, to address, and to fight. That is already a series of walls and fences that keeps us from truly reaching the American ideal of e pluribus unum.

We cannot stand up for hate. We cannot stand next to hate. We cannot stand onstage with something that looks like hate. We are ashamed to be associated with brands and identities that suffer the taint of hateful statements and actions — particularly if they go unchallenged by those at the top.

Executive producer Mike Richards recently said, “I think politically, the country is incredibly divided and that makes me sad, and I really have always thought that ‘Jeopardy!’ is a great uniter that way. It is apolitical and there’s no place for divisiveness on it in any way, and that is what I want it to be going forward.” This event was the opposite of apolitical speech. It was perceived by people across demographic boundaries as a wink and a nod by white men about their superiority. And that speech is out there and the damage has been done. “Jeopardy!” is a program that ostensibly prizes knowledge and education. It would be prudent to address this now to uphold that reputation. Leaving this messaging unchecked will encourage others to attempt similar things in the future. Is the production team of “Jeopardy!” prepared for more of this? Prepared for more attempts to disguise contempt as innocent gesturing? Prepared for the backlash and ramifications should one of those moments ever become tied to real-world violence?

As people whose lives have been largely beneficially impacted by this show and its community, we really hope to see a statement and a disavowal of both of this week’s events, and we would like to see “Jeopardy!” address Kelly’s behavior. We know that contestants sign morals and ethics-related agreements when they prepare to appear on the show, and we would ask the production team to evaluate this situation within that framework. We would like to know whether a sensitivity and diversity auditor is involved in the show’s writing. Finally, we hope to see changes made so that future mistakes of this magnitude never make it on air.
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Update: Statement by Kelly Donohue

I’m truly horrified with what has been posted about me on social media. I absolutely, unequivocally condemn white supremacy and racism of any kind. People who know me personally know that I am not a racist, but for the public at large it bears repeating: I am not a racist and I reject and condemn white supremacy and all forms of bigotry for the evil they are. It’s shameful to me to think anyone would try to use the stage of Jeopardy! to advance or promote such a disgusting agenda. During the taping of my fourth episode, I was simply raising three fingers to mark my 3rd win. There was nothing more I was trying to indicate.

I deeply regret this terrible misunderstanding. I never meant to hurt a soul and I assure you I am no friend of racists or white supremacists.

I removed the previous post because the comments were more than I could bear. I stand by the statement itself and you can find it reported in other media. I did, however, understand the fair criticism that I did not include a forceful condemnation of white supremacy in my initial statement. I hope my feelings on that matter are clear now.

https://www.facebook.com/kpdonohue/posts/10104001842098167 (https://archive.ph/GFWpg)
 
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So... They're upset because he said a word they very recently decided was racist, has to sign 3 with his hand by holding his index finger down rather than cupping his pinky in his palm because he has short fat fingers(personal experience) and this somewhat resembles the 'OK' hand sign which they also very recently decided was racist and finally they're most upset that he hasn't apologized for being white-- these terrible offenses...

I agree with the doubt in 450 people going along with this. But I'm sure the show will cave and my Grandmother will rant about political nonsense infecting her favorite show but I hope he doesn't.
 
Moral busybodies need to neck themselves for the good of humanity.
I've never see someone use the term Roma unless they were an SJW.
A kiwi Eurofag once said the only people who defend gypsies are those who haven't had to deal with them, and despite being a burgerfag I agree 100%. They sound like a goddamn human nuisance.
 
"We're not like fundies!" scream the sjw liberals, when this is an exact fucking mirror of "rock on" is the sign of the devil, they're all fucking devil worshippers, reeeeee "pictures taken out of context".

You know if most people went into a psychologist and said "people on tv are trying to brainwash me with their hand signals" you'd be labelled a schizo and put on some heavy antipsychotics. God I wish.
 
According to the Anti-Defamation League, the "'okay' hand gesture" began as a hoax but has been used by right-wing trolls and white supremacists.
See, this is the thing that really fucks me up.

The ok hand gesture = white power started as a hoax, they acknowledge that it started as a hoax, but they still completely shit themselves over it.

Any regular person would be like "fuck the nazis" and use the gesture in spite of it but the left are absolute cucks and if the alt-right wants to co-opt the ok hand gesture they just fucking let them and then get mad and try to cancel people when they didn't get the memo that this completely innocuous thing is now a fucking hate crime.

Fuck this gay earth.
 
How much faker and more homosexual can this leftist moral panic get?

Reminder 4chan meme'd the "ok symbol" into a faux symbol of white supremacy to see if the shitlibs would pick it and and run with it. Kek.

See, this is the thing that really fucks me up.

The ok hand gesture = white power started as a hoax, they acknowledge that it started as a hoax, but they still completely shit themselves over it.

Any regular person would be like "fuck the nazis" and use the gesture in spite of it but the left are absolute cucks and if the alt-right wants to co-opt the ok hand gesture they just fucking let them and then get mad and try to cancel people when they didn't get the memo that this completely innocuous thing is now a fucking hate crime.

Fuck this gay earth.

In China, they would be nationalist as fuck and pro-CCP. In the Middle East, they would be anti-feminist and pro-Sharia Law. And in Nazi Germany, they would be ratting out Jews and accosting them in the streets... after also being pro-communist.

"Social justice" is the hollow ideology of BDP. Searching for a role, any role.
 
See this is queer - aka corruptor - culture.

Queering says, ok, but what if this innocent thing...wasn’t? What if we looked at it differently, invested it with corruption? Hate? Lust? Envy? Pick a deadly sin, what if this innocent thing was actually evil? And as long as we’re asking that, shouldn’t we - SHOULDN’T WE - also ask ourselves if everything corrupt is actually innocent? Hmm?

What if your fave was problematic? What if nothing is what it is, and everything is the opposite of what it is? What if burning down cities is good and stopping one black girl from stabbing another is bad? What if being on time and following rules is bad and also racist? What if respecting other people’s boundaries is bad and ignoring them is good and anti-racist? What if shoplifting is good and stopping shoplifting is bad? What if kids watching porn is good? How about incest, maybe that’s good too, you think? Oh hey what if medical experimentation upon autistic children is good and protecting kids from that is bad?

IF YOU RILLY THONK ABOUT IT. I MEAN RILLY.

All this Pomo shit is...to a sound mind, to a mind with a foundation AND a roof, a fully functional mind that was allowed to mature before being introduced to the question of what if everything innocent was corrupt and everything corrupt innocent, an interesting enough thought exercise that one can then shelve next to other interesting but unproductive and even harmful ones.

But when a mind NEVER is allowed to grow to be sound, no foundation, nothing is ever solid, everything considered innocent prior to around 2010, we now tell children from infancy is corrupt, and everything corrupt innocent...it isn’t an interesting thought experiment. It’s ruined human beings who never stood a chance.
 
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See this is queer - aka corruptor - culture.

When I was a kid I saw this movie where Ted Danson was a pedo who had been molesting his daughter. So he’s in a therapy session and one of the other pedos is talking about how he knew his own 7-yo daughter wanted to have sex with him. His evidence was that she was always hugging him and wanting to sit in his lap.

This is an essentially queer idea, or a queering, at least. Queering says, ok, but what if this innocent thing...wasn’t? What if we looked at it differently, invested it with corruption? Hate? Lust? Envy? Pick a deadly sin, what if this innocent thing was actually evil? And as long as we’re asking that, shouldn’t we - SHOULDN’T WE - also ask ourselves if everything corrupt is actually innocent? Hmm?

What if your fave was problematic? What if nothing is what it is, and everything is the opposite of what it is? What if burning down cities is good and stopping one black girl from stabbing another is bad? What if being on time and following rules is bad and also racist? What if respecting other people’s boundaries is bad and ignoring them is good and anti-racist? What if shoplifting is good and stopping shoplifting is bad? What if kids watching porn is good? How about incest, maybe that’s good too, you think? Oh hey what if medical experimentation upon autistic children is good and protecting kids from that is bad?

IF YOU RILLY THONK ABOUT IT. I MEAN RILLY.

All this Pomo shit is...to a sound mind, to a mind with a foundation AND a roof, a fully functional mind that was allowed to mature before being introduced to the question of what if everything innocent was corrupt and everything corrupt innocent, an interesting enough thought exercise that one can then shelve next to other interesting but unproductive and even harmful ones.

But when a mind NEVER is allowed to grow to be sound, no foundation, nothing is ever solid, everything considered innocent prior to around 2010, we now tell children from infancy is corrupt, and everything corrupt innocent...it isn’t an interesting thought experiment. It’s ruined human beings who never stood a chance.
Shit like this was the precursor to Sodom and Gomorrah being set on fire.
 
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