Although weâre pretty much free to use whichever language we wish within the body of a piece here, headlines are different. Most profanity is fine, in the proper context. But proper context or not, the granddaddy (âfuckâ) needs approval from our editor-in-chief. Sexually explicit terms are a no-go, and slurs are, too. Well, mostly.
The slur thing is tricky because one of my favorite words is a repurposing of Americaâs most explosive slurâwhich is also Americaâs most explosive word. I probably say âniggaâ 20 times a day, and itâs such a part of my lexicon that I devoted an entire chapter in my book to the rules governing its use and usage. But youâll rarely find that in a headline here. I think Iâve been allowed two headline âniggasâ since Iâve been here. (âTwo Headline Niggasâ wouldâve been a great title for VSB, btw. Oh well.)
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Also, weâre not allowed to use slursâin a headline or the body of a pieceâthat question a Black personâs commitment to Black people. âSelloutâ is fine, because itâs racially transcendent. âCoon,â however, is not.
This makes me sad sometimes because there are so many bizarre and stunning and perplexing and sometimes even hilarious (yup) slurs that have been invented to call Black Americans. And who wouldnât love to see âmoon cricketâ or âjackamammyâ or âswamp donkeyâ in a VSB piece every once in a while? I know I would. But the rules are the rules.
But in the pages of history, every once in awhile, fate reaches out and extends its handâwhich is what happened earlier today, when Terry Crews, the Stacey Dash of Kimbo Slices, tweeted out his repurposing of âcoon.â This man needs therapy!
This is a coon loopholeâa coonhole!âbecause a celebrity tweeting it makes it news. Related: I think âthe coonholeâ wouldâve been both a great alternative title to âthe sunken placeâ and the name of Jason Whitlockâs Outkick columns.
Okay, Iâm hungry now so Iâm done with this. Bye.
Straight From
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