The Borneo Post

Cohen’s latest prank involved using fake paedophile detector on Roy Moore

- By Elahe Izadi

SACHA Baron Cohen reliably churns out cringewort­hy moments on his new Showtime series “Who is America?,” but Sunday night’s episode may be the most uncomforta­ble yet.

Cohen - who shows up as various characters in the satirical series - played fake Israeli anti-terrorism expert, Gen Errand Morad, as he interviewe­d former Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, R. And “Morad” brought along “the latest Israeli gadget”: a wand that detects paedophile­s.

Moore lost the December 2017 special election to fi ll an empty Alabama Senate seat to the Democratic candidate, Doug Jones, amid allegation­s that when Moore was a local prosecutor in his 30s, he initiated a sexual encounter with a 14-year- old girl.

Several weeks ago, Moore hinted that he had been tricked by Cohen, and blasted Showtime for tricking other conservati­ve politician­s and personalit­ies.

According to Moore, he received an expenses-paid trip in February to Washington to “receive an award for my strong support of Israel,” he wrote in a statement. “I did not know Sacha Cohen or that a Showtime TV series was being planned to embarrass, humiliate, and mock not only Israel, but also religious conservati­ves such as Sarah Palin, Joe Walsh, and Dick Cheney.”

He added that Cohen’s “art is trickery, deception, and dishonesty” and “as an American, I would never hide my identity and deceive others only to mock and ridicule them as this Showtime Series is designed to do.”

In Sunday’s episode, Cohenas-Morad sits down with Moore and details some fake Israeli research: Sex offenders, “particular­ly the paedophile­s,” secrete an enzyme at “three times the levels of non-perverts,” so Israel has “developed a machine used in schools and playground­s to detect anyone coming in.”

The fake anti-terrorism expert then takes out a wand that sort of looks like a hand-held metal detector. “It’s very simple to use,” he says. “You just switch it on, and because neither of us are sex offenders, it makes absolutely nothing.” The wand beeps every time Cohen puts it near Moore.

“It must be faulty. It’s malfunctio­ning,” Cohen says, as Moore keeps a tight smile. “Is this your jacket? Did you lend this jacket to somebody else?”

“No,” Moore responds. “I’ve been married for 33 ( years). I’ve never been accused of such things.”

Even as Cohen says, “I’m not accusing you at all!,” Moore continues, “If this is an instrument - certainly, I’m not a paedophile.”

“But the machine, the machine works,” Cohen continues.

“Maybe the Israeli technology hasn’t developed properly,” Moore counters.

Finally, Moore ends the interview. “I am simply cutting this conversati­on right now,” he says. “Good night. I support Israel. I don’t support this kind of stuff.”

Appearance­s on “Who is America?” have generated other controvers­ies. Republican Georgia lawmaker Jason Spencer resigned from his seat after his appearance on the show, in which he dropped his pants and repeatedly used the n-word. He also got former vice president Dick Cheney to sign a fake waterboard kit, and several Republican politician­s to endorse a fake program that would arm toddlers.

When asked abut Sunday’s episode, Showtime had no comment.

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 ??  ?? Several weeks ago, former Alabama Senate candidate Moore hinted that he had been tricked by Cohen (right) , and blasted Showtime for tricking other conservati­ve politician­s and personalit­ies.
Several weeks ago, former Alabama Senate candidate Moore hinted that he had been tricked by Cohen (right) , and blasted Showtime for tricking other conservati­ve politician­s and personalit­ies.

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