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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think John Davidson and BAFTA owe an apology

907 replies

notaurewhatusername · 23/02/2026 20:10

I have sympathy for anyone with Tourette’s. I genuinely do. It’s a difficult condition and I’m not for one second suggesting John Davidson is a bad person or that he chose to say what he said. But sympathy for a condition doesn’t mean the impact on others gets ignored.

Intent matters but so does impact. If I accidentally stand on someone’s foot I still say sorry, even though I didn’t mean to do it. “I didn’t mean it” and “I acknowledge I hurt you” are not mutually exclusive. I wouldn’t get annoyed at the suggestion of apologising simply because I didn’t mean it, so why is this different? Especially as it was a public stage in front of millions. I don’t expect John to apologise every day in normal interactions, but at such a public forum - he should. Michael B Jordan looked visibly devastated. It was so sad.

When he saw two Black men and the n-word came out — not H**ky at the white hosts for example, not some other neutral word, the n-word directed at Black people in the room — that caused real harm to real people. Tourette’s tics are shaped by what the brain reaches for as most “forbidden” in a given moment, and what it reached for when he saw two Black men was a racial slur aimed at them. That raises really uncomfortable questions about unconscious bias that most people would rather sidestep entirely.

It doesn’t make him a conscious racist. But it does make it a conversation worth having, because our unconscious associations don’t come from nowhere — they’re shaped by everything we’ve absorbed over a lifetime. That connotation being the first place his brain went is something that deserves acknowledgement, not just a pass because of the diagnosis. And as a POC, I have to be honest — this is heartbreaking. Not just the incident itself but what it represents.

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve tried to explain to white friends and colleagues that certain spaces feel uncomfortable, that you notice the stares, that you carry this constant low level awareness of how you might be being perceived. And so often the response is “you’re imagining it” or “you’re being too sensitive.” You get gaslit into doubting your own lived experience. Well — moments like this are exactly why it isn’t in our heads. This is the reality POC navigate every single day. Always on alert. Always doing that mental calculation of whether someone is judging you for the colour of your skin. That emotional labour is exhausting and largely invisible to people who’ve never had to carry it.

John thanking the audience for their “understanding” puts the burden entirely on those who were hurt to just get over it. That’s not the same as acknowledging the pain caused. AIBU to think a bit more than “thanks for understanding” was needed here — from both of them?

OP posts:
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15
OonaStubbs · 02/03/2026 22:29

If Jim Davidson had shouted out the n-word at an awards ceremony it would be an entirely different story...

YiddlySquat · 02/03/2026 22:32

OonaStubbs · 02/03/2026 22:29

If Jim Davidson had shouted out the n-word at an awards ceremony it would be an entirely different story...

Well yes because he’s actually a racist who doesn’t have Tourette’s

Triskellion75 · 02/03/2026 22:41

OonaStubbs · 02/03/2026 22:29

If Jim Davidson had shouted out the n-word at an awards ceremony it would be an entirely different story...

Does Jim Davidson have Tourettes?

mollypuss1 · 02/03/2026 23:35

OonaStubbs · 02/03/2026 22:29

If Jim Davidson had shouted out the n-word at an awards ceremony it would be an entirely different story...

What a fucking stupid thing to say.

OonaStubbs · 03/03/2026 00:17

I'm sorry. It was a bad joke.

DotAndCarryOne2 · 03/03/2026 07:45

OonaStubbs · 02/03/2026 22:29

If Jim Davidson had shouted out the n-word at an awards ceremony it would be an entirely different story...

You think this is funny ?

Superkitty2025 · 03/03/2026 13:18

The lack of empathy and understanding for a socially disadvantaged disabled man with no control over his disability, particulaly by people who may have experienced victimisation themselves, is both sickening and enlightening. No humans, regardless of historic or ethnic heritage is immune from their own tribalism and racism. It's not acceptible from any group in society, no matter the attempts to justify it.

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