Boston Herald

TV station sorry for throwing banana at Harlem Globetrott­er

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A Black member of the Harlem Globetrott­ers said two white news anchors threw fruits, including a banana, at him while he was performing basketball tricks on an Alabama news show earlier this year.

Maxwell Pearce spoke about the matter Saturday on social media, a day after WBRC-TV aired a show that featured an interview with Pearce about the January incident on Good Day Alabama. During that same newscast, WBRC News Director Shannon Isbell offered an on-air apology to Pearce.

“In a moment of levity during a segment, two members of my team were tossing fruit as well as a basketball,” Isbell said during the show. “One of them threw a banana without knowing the racial implicatio­ns of that action.”

An edited version of the segment posted on Pearce’s YouTube page shows a tangerine being thrown at him during the show by Mickey Ferguson, a weather forecaster on the show.

Pearce, 24, hands the tangerine back to Ferguson before someone behind the camera once again throws the fruit back at Pearce. The video then shows the banana being thrown at him.

“When I caught the fruit, I was so stunned and shocked that I didn’t even know how to react,” Pearce told The Associated Press.

He was on the show promoting an upcoming game with the Globetrott­ers, an exhibition team known for its combinatio­n of comedy and athleticis­m. He notified the team about the incident, and he says it reached out to the Birmingham news station back in February.

The Harlem Globetrott­ers did not immediatel­y respond to AP’s request for comment.

“Fox’s reaction was to have me call them to receive an apology from the news director, and not from the actual anchors who threw the fruit,” Pearce said.

The director, Isbell, expressed remorse about the incident during an initial call to the team though a conversati­on between her and Pearce never occurred, according to Andrea Price, Pearce’s manager. He also did not receive an apology from the anchors. A few months later in June, Pearce revisited the issue amid the spotlight on racism arising from national protests against police brutality.

“When you see and hear stories like that, you think about your own experience­s,” he said. “We were told a public apology would be issued by the news anchors who threw the fruits.”

The basketball player said that never happened. Instead, he says the news station offered him an interview with Clare Huddleston, the anchor he accuses of throwing the banana at him.

“It would have been an opportunit­y to educate her on why this act was offensive,” he said. Those plans were also abandoned, according to Price.

Pearce went on to have the interview, which aired on Friday, with Isbell.

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