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Roseanne saga is a microcosm of life in America today

ABC television network was wise enough to pull the plug on one of its biggest hits after an unacceptab­le racist rant by the star of the sitcom

- By Christine Emba

Life comes at you fast. One day you’re the star of a primetime sitcom, the next you’ve been fired for racist comments on Twitter. I’m talking about Roseanne Barr, of course, the comedian whose eponymous ABC programme Roseanne ended a surprising­ly successful comeback season last week. Unfortunat­ely for Barr, the show’s planned second season was cancelled Tuesday afternoon, after her racist tweet about Valerie Jarrett, an adviser to President Barack Obama — “Muslim brotherhoo­d & planet of the apes had a baby=vj,” it said — went viral.

Am I surprised? Not at all, and no one else should be, either. Americans should be used to this cycle by now, as we are all living through it on a much larger and more destructiv­e scale. Yes: The Roseanne saga is a microcosm of the experience, America’s past 18 months writ small. Truly, it has everything. You could begin with the re-emergence of the show and its star in its most general sense, which paralleled US President Donald Trump’s emergence and popularity almost exactly. Roseanne the show was a reboot of the kitschy 1990s-era franchise and was freshly celebrated for bravely uplifting the views of a “real America.” (That America is white and working-class, naturally, and apparently underrepre­sented — if “underrepre­sented” means the same thing as “the subject of incessant media coverage.”)

On the show, Roseanne thinks Muslims are terrorists and her husband calls immigrants “illegals.” But she’s not really a racist, we’re told, and he’s just economical­ly anxious. Sound familiar?

And then there is Roseanne Barr the person, who has a history of making inflammato­ry statements and pushing right-wing conspiracy theories — whether it’s lending credence to a bizarre theory that Democrats ran a paedophile ring; making wild insinuatio­ns about the death of Democratic National Committee employee Seth Rich; or accusing businessma­n and philanthro­pist George Soros of Nazism and attempts to undermine American democracy.

Still, Barr was celebrated for being “outspoken,” “provocativ­e” and “not politicall­y correct” — right up until her tweet referring to a successful black woman as an ape, an obviously racist statement that she still refuses to acknowledg­e as such. Barr only regrets making a “bad joke about [Jarrett’s] politics and her looks.” “Very fine people,” anyone?

Timid media coverage

Which leads to the initial mystifying­ly timid media coverage of such appalling events, delivered by outlets that have an odd discomfort with putting a name to the obvious. No, Barr’s tweet was racist, not just offensive or racially charged. It wasn’t a “rip,” it was a bigoted personal attack. This should not be so difficult to say.

Finally, there is the way the whole story has played out. It all happened on Twitter, over a lightning-fast news cycle. There was a series of thoughtles­s comments, a speedy backlash fuelled by public outrage, a ridiculous defence, a disingenuo­us apology and, almost certainly, a star who will soon say — give it time, everyone — that she has been unfairly attacked by the left, turning her into a martyr for the right-wing cause. This is the exhausting circus we’ve been living with for months now, and it shows no signs of calming down. The ringmaster may be different in this instance, but it’s the same dispiritin­g show.

There is only one place where the stories don’t line up, at least not yet. ABC, the television network responsibl­e for the Roseanne reboot, was wise enough to pull the plug on the second season after its star revealed once again who she really was.

■ Christine Emba is an opinion columnist and editor for The Post.

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