White Students In Blackface Re-Enact Chris Brown's Assault On Rihanna At New York High School Drawing Criticism [Video/Pic]

 

Video After The Jump

 

Via CNN

 

It was a homecoming rally to cheer on the Waverly Wolverines football team. They were undefeated this year. Everyone was proud.

 

Then, in the midst of the cheers and a sea of red and white pom poms came a 30-second skit that, for some, turned an afternoon of school pride into one of shame.

Three white male students involved in the skit made light of domestic violence, and they did it in racist manner, say some.

Two were in blackface as they re-enacted a 2009 domestic abuse incident in which singer Chris Brown assaulted then-girlfriend Rihanna. The student who played Brown was vying for the school's "Mr. Waverly" title -- a school tradition in which skits are performed and the one that garners the most applause wins the title.



On Monday, Waverly alum Matthew Dishler posted a photograph of the skit on CNN's iReport. He says someone shared the image on Facebook.

The photo went viral.

By Tuesday afternoon, the CNN iReport had more than 46,000 views and showed up on Huffington Post, Buzzfeed and Gawker and in local newspapers.

Suddenly, Waverly High School became synonymous with racism and sexism.

Twitter lit up with comments about the skit. Many were critical, but some defended the skit.

"I don't think it was offensive at all," said Chelsea House, who earned her high school diploma from Waverly last year and moved to Alabama but returned for homecoming last week and saw the skit.

"There's nothing wrong with blackface. There's nothing wrong with dressing up as a black person. Black is but a color," House said.

Waverly Central School District Superintendent Joseph Yelich said Tuesday that he did not believe the students in the skit intended to offend anyone.

Waverly resident Thomas Rumpff, a 2007 graduate of the high school, said he believed most of the kids were unaware of thehistorical context of blackface, a form of theatrical makeup used by white people in minstrel shows that perpetuated racist stereotypes of African-Americans.



Rumpff said the Rihanna incident had also been satirized online and on television before.

"Was this a little bit inappropriate? Yes," he said. But said the incident "has been completely blown out of proportion."

Other incidents of blackface have surfaced this year, including a Colorado Springs second-grader who offended a teacher when he painted his face black to resemble the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

The Waverly High skit was approved by school officials before it was performed, Yelich said. He acknowledged the problem and said he was speaking with students, teachers and staff at the school in the coming days.

"My concern is to start making something teachable out of this particular circumstance," he said.

The desire to win likely fuels outrageous behavior, said Fran Bialy, assistant director of A New Hope Center, an agency that aids victims of rape, domestic violence, assault and hate crimes.

Other skits at the pep rally involved Tarzan and a dairy farmer milking his cows. Last year, a student played Tiger Woods, also in blackface. "I have heard about blackface, but ... they're portraying Hollywood events," alum Ryan Bronson said. "It would be the same thing if he bought a mask."

Bottom line, Bronson said: People are being too sensitive.

"They go crazy about every little thing," he said. "The school and everybody are going to basically stop letting kids be kids."

Dishler said he posted the image not to cast a harsh light on anyone but to prod the school to do better with issues of diversity.

"I don't believe the kids really knew what they were doing is as offensive as it is," Dishler said. "The administration was watching this go on, and they let it happen."

Alum Vlad Chituc also blamed school officials.

He said Waverly, a small town off Interstate 86 just west of Binghamton, New York, could easily be seen as a place that affirmed stereotypes of all sorts.

Of Waverly's 4,444 people, 4,312 were white, according to 2010 census data.

Chituc said he was "extraordinarily offended" by the skit and ashamed that his school seemed to be OK with it.

"On the one hand, I can't blame the kids for being ignorant," Chituc said. "It's a small town, and the kids don't know any better. It's the responsibility of the administration to let the kids know this is not how you behave in 21st-century America. ... They've been failing at that spectacularly.

"The administration should be creating an environment where minorities are welcome, not the butts of racist jokes that make light of domestic violence."

Chituc contacted Waverly High School Principal Kim Forero by e-mail.

He sent CNN Forero's response, which read in part:

"Thank you for your concerns. We will continue to address issues of diversity and respect for all. The format of pep rally will need to be reconsidered. I appreciate your concern for your alma mater."

Yelich, for his part, said he could see how the skit could have been misconstrued and that he intends to set clearer expectations for behavior.

"I have some opportunities here to make positive change," he said.

CNN was not able to obtain the names of the students involved in the skit.

Whatever their intentions were, one thing was clear: Their portrayals of Chris Brown and Rihanna fell short -- the kid who played the dairy farmer was crowned Mr. Waverly.









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Tags: Assault, At, Blackface, Brown's, Chris, Criticism, Drawing, High, In, New, More…On, Re-Enact, Rihanna, School, Students, White, York, [Video/Pic]

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Comment by thatnigga253 on October 24, 2012 at 9:21pm
wow...they have a history of doing this s***
Comment by Bijou BAKSON on October 18, 2012 at 4:24pm
Bottom line, Rihana don't give a f*** what they think. You're alright Breezy! Just enjoy your career, your fans appreciation and the fact that you and Rihana are in love. I know you are strong enough to deal with this. I rest my case.
Comment by BX Brown on October 18, 2012 at 2:04pm
This is some b*******. Like Black Face is NEVER acceptable. I blame the adults for this. I hope that school get protested. This s*** is unacceptable. F*** outta here because I am a black man that finds this deplorable and down right disrespectful of the black community. PERIOD! F*** chris brown and rihanna, they are not important. The black race is way more important.
Comment by Tiff on October 18, 2012 at 2:32am
The school allows it so.....kids only do what they allow them to do....
Comment by joe simonetti on October 18, 2012 at 12:55am
LmAo this must must be eating away at chris by now by people bringing it up all the time.
Comment by Y2 on October 17, 2012 at 9:42pm
Young white people will NEVER get it
Comment by roscoe dash on October 17, 2012 at 7:57pm
If you know Waverly, you know this is racist. Few, if any black students go to this school. Let them make fools of themselves and show how ignorant people still are in the 21st century.
Comment by Mann Ualready on October 17, 2012 at 6:21pm
This s*** was a fail on so many levels
Comment by Rey on October 17, 2012 at 4:39pm
I doubt it was racist. But the problem will be how many black students attend the school. Stating how many white does not mean the rest are black. It was irresponsible and made light of domestic abuse. The kids should have been in trouble due to that. What is a little odd is how the school is handling it, I have seen hick town school suspend students for behavior less than this but along the same lines.
Comment by Mookie on October 17, 2012 at 4:09pm
I think it was

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