Danny Baker calls ‘racist’ royal baby tweet ‘ridiculous, stupid and idiotic mistake’

‘You never think these things are going to happen to you’

Jacob Stolworthy
Thursday 09 May 2019 14:41 BST
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Danny Baker insists he didn't realise the connotations of a tweet which got him sacked: 'Nobody invites this onto themselves'

Radio host Danny Baker has insisted he’s not racist after being fired by the BBC for a controversial tweet about the royal baby.

The former 5 Live presenter, 61, sparked a backlash after seemingly mocking Meghan Markle’s heritage in a now deleted post that featured an image of two people holding hands with a small monkey dressed in a suit. He posted it, moments after the Duke and Duchess of Sussex revealed their son, with the caption: “Royal baby leaves hospital.”

Baker admitted the tweet was “ridiculous, stupid and idiotic” in an interview with Sky News and has now claimed he forgot about the baby's mixed-race heritage in a new Twitter apology.

“I’ve seen these things happen to other people but you never think it’s going to happen to you,” he said. ”The unconscious and ridiculous tweet I did yesterday has started all this off.”

He continued by saying he’s not some “slathering, secret racist”, adding: “What I did was make a ridiculous, stupid and idiotic mistake.”

The BBC confirmed Baker’s firing with the following statement: “This was a serious error of judgment and goes against the values we as a station aim to embody. Danny’s a brilliant broadcaster but will no longer be presenting a weekly show with us.”

Baker believes the BBC could have handled the situation better and described ”the call to fire” him as “a masterclass of pompous faux-gravity”.

He said that bosses “took a tone that said [he] actually meant that ridiculous tweet”, adding: “Literally threw me under the bus. Could hear the suits knees knocking.”

Baker’s tweet received a huge backlash on social media from many, including journalist and author Elizabeth Day, who said she was “revolted” by the post.

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“[I’m] insulted by his assertion that he had no idea of the racist connotations of that picture and disgusted by the continued wilful blindness of these privilege-inhabiting k***heads,” she wrote on Twitter.

One celebrity who jumped to the defence of Baker, though, was comedian Dara Ó Briain. While disagreeing with the tweet, he felt that the BBC’s decision was too extreme.

“What? Danny Baker got fired? But he immediately apologised and deleted the tweet!” he wrote. “I mean, literally, in the event of mistakenly causing offence, what else can you do? Genuinely amazed by that.”

Many Twitter users expressed confusion over the fact the BBC would fire Baker for a “racist” tweet, but wouldn’t swing the axe on Alan Sugar, who came under fire for the same reason last year. In 2018, he was criticised after comparing Senegal’s World Cup team to vendors “from the beach in Marbella”.

British music journalist Simon Price wrote: “The BBC is taking an awfully long time to sack Alan Sugar from The Apprentice over his unambiguously racist tweet about the Senegal football team last summer, but I’m sure they’ll get round to it eventually.”

After posting the initial tweet, Baker swiftly deleted it and commented: “Sorry my gag pic of the little fella in the posh outfit has whipped some up. Never occurred to me because, well, mind not diseased.”

He continued: “Soon as those good enough to point out its possible connotations got in touch, down it came. And that’s it.”

The royal baby – whose name is Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor – was born on Monday 6 May before making his first public appearance at Windsor Castle two days later.

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