Boston Herald

Joy Reid apologizes for LGBTQ snubs

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NEW YORK — MSNBC’s Joy Reid, under fire for homophobic language in old blog posts, apologized yesterday for any past comments that belittled or mocked the LGBTQ community and says she hasn’t been able to verify her claim that her account was hacked.

Reid opened her weekend show “AM Joy” by acknowledg­ing she has said “dumb” and “hurtful” things in the past. “The person I am now is not the person I was then,” she said.

But she was unable to explain blog posts from a decade ago that mocked gay people and individual­s who were allegedly gay. Reid has denied posting them but says security experts who looked into whether she had been a hacking victim found no proof.

“I genuinely do not believe I wrote those hateful things because they are completely alien to me. But I can definitely understand, based on things I have tweeted and have written in the past, why some people don’t believe me,” she said.

“I have not been exempt for being dumb or cruel or hurtful to the very people I want to advocate for. I own that. I get it. And for that I am truly, truly sorry.”

The posts that came to light in December were written for “The Reid Report,” her blog when she was covering Florida politics a decade ago. In posts, she refers to then-Florida Gov. Charlie Crist as “Miss Charlie” and suggested he was “ogling the male waiters” on his honeymoon after marrying his wife. She questioned whether the marriage was a sham by a gay man who thought it would help him politicall­y.

Reid apologized, saying her remarks were “insensitiv­e, tone deaf and dumb.” Yesterday, she apologized also to Ann Coulter for using transgende­r stereotype­s to describe the conservati­ve commentato­r.

“I look back today at some of the ways I’ve talked casually about people and gender identity and sexual orientatio­n, and I wonder who that even was. But the reality, like a lot of people in this country, that person was me.”

After reading her five-minute statement, Reid then led a panel discussion on gender stereotype­s and issues facing the LGBT community.

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