While introducing one of the Oscar’s Best Picture nominees, “Black Panther”, The Daily Show host Trevor Noah threw what Twitter universally agreed was a racism jab at Mel Gibson over the actor’s rants years ago.
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Noah, who was a voice-over artist in “Black Panther”, jokingly brought up all the times people have come approached him to talk about Wakanda – a fictional country in Sub-Saharan Africa in Marvel’s universe.
“Black Panther may be an African hero, but his story and his appeal are universal. I know this personally because of all the people that constantly come up to me and say, ‘Wakanda Forever!’ […] Even backstage, Mel Gibson came up to me like, ‘Wakanda Forever'. He said another word after that, but the Wakanda part was nice”.
Even though Trevor didn’t specify what that “another word” was, many suggested that the merciless shade at the Oscar-winning actor was racism-related.
The joke could have been an allusion to a 2010 voicemail, in which someone, who is believed to be Gibson, was heard yelling at a woman, who is alleged to be his ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva, and saying: “if you get raped by a pack of n****s, it will be your fault”.
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Many social media users suggested that Noah had crossed a line with the long-overdue joke…
…while others hailed him for the super-timely shot, and thanked him for not “letting anyone” forget that Gibson is “a racist”:
Back in 2006, Gibson’s name was all over the news after his drunk-driving arrest by a Jewish officer in California, where he was recorded making anti-Semitic remarks, such as “F*cking Jews. The Jews are responsible for all the wars in the world”. The “Mad Max” star publicly apologised, calling the incident a “moment of insanity”; the arrest was expunged from his record in 2009 after he had served three years probation.
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Despite the initial fallout from both the 2006 and 2010 scandals, Gibson seems to have managed to rehabilitate himself in the eyes of the Academy. In 2016, his “Hacksaw Ridge” film nabbed two Oscars and was nominated for four others, including Best Picture and Best Director.