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Part of a series on Washington Redskins Name Controversy. [View Related Entries]


Overview

#CancelColbert is a Twitter hashtag campaign launched to rally up support for the cancellation of Comedy Central's satirical news show The Colbert Report in March 2014 after the show host Stephen Colbert tweeted a joke that was perceived as racially insensitive towards Asian Americans on Twitter.

Background

On the March 26th, 2014, The Colbert Report featured a segment titled “The Sport Report” in which Stephen Colbert mocks Daniel Snyder, the owner of the NFL team Washington Redskins, for starting a foundation to support Native Americans while maintaining his team’s offensive name. In lampooning Snyder's contradictory stance on racial relations, Colbert proposed that he would start his own offensively named charity, saying:

"I am willing to show Asian community I care by introducing the Ching-Chong Ding-Dong Foundation for Sensitivity to Orientals or Whatever."

On March 27th, the Twitter account @ColbertReport[1], which is an official Comedy Central account but not handled by Colbert or the show's writers, tweeted the quote (shown below). It was removed less than 24 hours later.

The Colbert Report ColbertReport 1h am willing to show #Asian community l care by introducing the Ching-Chong Ding-Dong Foundation for Sensitivity to Orientals or Whatever. Collapse わReply Retweeted ★ Favorite More FAVORITES 〗L.LD 193 255 6:02 PM-27 Mar 2014 Details

About two hours after @ColbertReport sent out the tweet Twitter user @Suey_Park[4] re-introduced the hashtag #CancelColbert, which was first used on May 21st, 2013, by @DRM4GOD[3] who was angered when Colbert seemed to make light of the Benghazi scandal, in a tweet calling the remark racist.


In less than 24 hours the hashtag[5] was tweeted out over 49,000 times.

Notable Developments

Colbert's Response

About six hours after the initial tweet, @ColbertReport sent out a tweet to clarify their connection to the show, saying,


An hour later they followed up with a further clarifying tweet which read,


Shortly after on March 28th, Colbert tweeted from his official Twitter account @StephenAtHome[6] jokingly throwing his support behind #CancelColbert and again pointing out @ColbertReport is not controlled by the show,


In less than 24 hours the tweeted gained over 1,900 retweets and over 2,500 favorites.

News Media Coverage

The story was picked up by major news media outlets on March 28th, including TIME[7], The Huffington Post[8], and USA Today.[9]

The same day, Suey Park, who started the hashtag trend, appeared on the live stream news show Huff Post Live[6] to discuss her issues with Colbert's remarks and the hashtag.

Several major websites also published essays and think pieces about the larger context of the Twitter outrage, including Jezebel’s[12] “What We Can Learn From the Embarrassing #CancelColbert Shitstorm,” which outlined what fans should do when they believe their favorite show or celebrity is being unfairly attacked online, and Salon’s[11] “Twitter killed Stephen Colbert’s joke," which defended Colbert's quip as a "totally legitimate dig," while questioning whether the joke, taken out of its context, was well-suited for the shortform microblogging service.

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#CancelColbert

#CancelColbert

Part of a series on Washington Redskins Name Controversy. [View Related Entries]

Updated Sep 23, 2019 at 08:28AM EDT by Y F.

Added Mar 28, 2014 at 12:55PM EDT by Molly Horan.

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Overview

#CancelColbert is a Twitter hashtag campaign launched to rally up support for the cancellation of Comedy Central's satirical news show The Colbert Report in March 2014 after the show host Stephen Colbert tweeted a joke that was perceived as racially insensitive towards Asian Americans on Twitter.

Background

On the March 26th, 2014, The Colbert Report featured a segment titled “The Sport Report” in which Stephen Colbert mocks Daniel Snyder, the owner of the NFL team Washington Redskins, for starting a foundation to support Native Americans while maintaining his team’s offensive name. In lampooning Snyder's contradictory stance on racial relations, Colbert proposed that he would start his own offensively named charity, saying:

"I am willing to show Asian community I care by introducing the Ching-Chong Ding-Dong Foundation for Sensitivity to Orientals or Whatever."




On March 27th, the Twitter account @ColbertReport[1], which is an official Comedy Central account but not handled by Colbert or the show's writers, tweeted the quote (shown below). It was removed less than 24 hours later.


The Colbert Report ColbertReport 1h am willing to show #Asian community l care by introducing the Ching-Chong Ding-Dong Foundation for Sensitivity to Orientals or Whatever. Collapse わReply Retweeted ★ Favorite More FAVORITES 〗L.LD 193 255 6:02 PM-27 Mar 2014 Details

About two hours after @ColbertReport sent out the tweet Twitter user @Suey_Park[4] re-introduced the hashtag #CancelColbert, which was first used on May 21st, 2013, by @DRM4GOD[3] who was angered when Colbert seemed to make light of the Benghazi scandal, in a tweet calling the remark racist.




In less than 24 hours the hashtag[5] was tweeted out over 49,000 times.

Notable Developments

Colbert's Response

About six hours after the initial tweet, @ColbertReport sent out a tweet to clarify their connection to the show, saying,




An hour later they followed up with a further clarifying tweet which read,




Shortly after on March 28th, Colbert tweeted from his official Twitter account @StephenAtHome[6] jokingly throwing his support behind #CancelColbert and again pointing out @ColbertReport is not controlled by the show,




In less than 24 hours the tweeted gained over 1,900 retweets and over 2,500 favorites.

News Media Coverage

The story was picked up by major news media outlets on March 28th, including TIME[7], The Huffington Post[8], and USA Today.[9]

The same day, Suey Park, who started the hashtag trend, appeared on the live stream news show Huff Post Live[6] to discuss her issues with Colbert's remarks and the hashtag.



Several major websites also published essays and think pieces about the larger context of the Twitter outrage, including Jezebel’s[12] “What We Can Learn From the Embarrassing #CancelColbert Shitstorm,” which outlined what fans should do when they believe their favorite show or celebrity is being unfairly attacked online, and Salon’s[11] “Twitter killed Stephen Colbert’s joke," which defended Colbert's quip as a "totally legitimate dig," while questioning whether the joke, taken out of its context, was well-suited for the shortform microblogging service.

Search Interest

External References

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Recent Images 9 total


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