Toronto Star

Roseanne blames Ambien for tweet; drug maker replies

Sanofi says ‘racism is not a known side effect’ in social media post

- DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK— The maker of Ambien said Wednesday that “racism is not a known side effect” after Roseanne Barr cited the insomnia drug in explaining the tweet that led ABC to cancel her show.

Hours after ABC pulled the plug on Roseanne because of her offensive tweet about former Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett — and quickly breaking a promise to stay off Twitter — the comedian was busy posting on the social media platform.

Barr tweeted that what she did was unforgivea­ble and urged supporters not to defend her. She said of the Jarrett tweet, “It was 2 in the morning and I was ambien tweeting.”

The drug maker Sanofi took to social media to say that “while all pharmaceut­ical treatments have side effects, racism is not a known side effect of any Sanofi medication.”

Barr later tweeted that she has had odd experience­s while taking the drug late at night. “I blame myself, not Ambien,” she tweeted.

After not mentioning Barr’s firing in a campaign-style rally in Tennessee Tuesday night, U.S. President Donald Trump broke his silence on Twitter. He noted that Robert Iger, chief executive of ABC parent Walt Disney Co., called Jarrett to tell her that ABC did not tolerate Barr’s comments.

“Gee, he never called President Donald J. Trump to apologize for the HORRIBLE statements made and said about me on ABC,” Trump wrote. “Maybe I just didn’t get the call?”

Trump revelled in the success of Roseanne after Barr’s character in the show came out as a supporter of his presidency.

Roseanne was an instant hit when it returned this spring after a two-decade hiatus. But after Barr’s tweet that likened Jarrett, who is Black, to a cross between the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and the Planet of the Apes, ABC cancelled the show in a one-sentence statement from network entertainm­ent president Channing Dungey. She called it “abhorrent, repugnant and inconsiste­nt with our values.”

Barr’s agent also dropped her and several services pulled Roseanne reruns.

Jarrett, who said she was “fine” after the slur, urged in an MSNBC special Tuesday about racism that the incident be- come a teaching moment.

Barr showed no signs of abandoning Twitter, engaging in a series of tweets that apologized to those who lost their jobs because of the Roseanne cancellati­on and expressed remorse she was being branded a racist. While asking not to be defended, she retweeted comments from supporters that attacked ABC and complained that conservati­ves are tweeted more harshly than liberals for their behaviour.

 ??  ?? ABC cancelled
Roseanne after Barr’s racist tweet about a former Obama adviser.
ABC cancelled Roseanne after Barr’s racist tweet about a former Obama adviser.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada