Albuquerque Journal

Kathy Griffin: Attacks by Trump ‘broke me’

Comedian defiant as criticism continues

- BY KATIE METTLER AND CLEVE R. WOOTSON JR. THE WASHINGTON POST

A defiant, tearful Kathy Griffin said Friday that she regretted making a photo of herself holding a mask that looked like President Trump’s bloody severed head, but that she wasn’t going to stop criticizin­g the president or fighting for others to do so.

The comments were the fasttalkin­g comedian’s first beyond a video-recorded apology on social media. The image outraged Trump, his family and many others earlier this week. She said five promoters had canceled scheduled shows since then, and she’d been fired by CNN.

“A sitting president of the United States and his grown children and the first lady are personally trying to ruin my life forever,” she said. “You guys know him; he’s not going to stop.”

She said the online attacks on her in the past few days — including death threats — were a distractio­n mobilized by a president embattled by scandal. And she sought to frame it as the kind of “bullying” she’d received from older white men her entire career.

“I’m not good at being appropriat­e,” she said. “I’m only good at doing comedy one way. It’s in your face. I’m going to make fun of the president. And I’m going to do it more now.”

Although she reiterated her apology, she told reporters that a person shouldn’t have to die for a joke in the United States. “The threats that I am getting are … detailed, and they are specific. And today it’s me, but tomorrow it might be you.”

Still, she cried as she told the gathered reporters: “I don’t think I’ll have a career after this. I’m going to be honest; he broke me.”

Chelsea Clinton and Griffin’s friend, CNN host Anderson Cooper, were among those with sharp criticisms of the gruesome photo, but reactions from President Trump, first lady Melania Trump and Donald Trump Jr. were especially incensed.

President Trump tweeted that Griffin should be “ashamed of herself,” and that his 11-year-old son, Barron, was “having a hard time with this.” “Sick!” he added. Trump’s eldest son, Donald Jr., wrote on Twitter that Griffin’s photo was “disgusting but not surprising.”

“This is the left today,” he said. “They consider this acceptable. Imagine a conservati­ve did this to Obama as POTUS?” He also called out CNN in subsequent tweets, urging the network to sever ties with the comedian.

CNN later announced its decision to part ways with Griffin.

Even after Griffin apologized, Trump Jr. was unsatisfie­d.

He tweeted, “The #kathygriff­in phony apology would be a lot easier to believe if there wasn’t a video of her mocking the response she knew was coming.”

Perhaps the harshest and most emotional denounceme­nt came in a rare statement from the first lady:

“As a mother, a wife, and a human being, that photo is very disturbing. When you consider some of the atrocities happening in the world today, a photo opportunit­y like this is simply wrong and makes you wonder about the mental health of the person who did it.”

Outside the first family, Griffin’s stunt garnered near universal condemnati­on from the right and left.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Comedian Kathy Griffin speaks, next to her attorney, Lisa Bloom, during a news conference Friday in Los Angeles to discuss the backlash over a photo and video shoot she participat­ed in.
MARK J. TERRILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Comedian Kathy Griffin speaks, next to her attorney, Lisa Bloom, during a news conference Friday in Los Angeles to discuss the backlash over a photo and video shoot she participat­ed in.

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