Chicago Sun-Times

MIX OF REACTIONS TO ROLE CHICAGO COMIC PLAYED IN COSBY CASE

- BY RACHEL HINTON rhinton@ suntimes. com | @ rrhinton

Who would’ve thought a joke Chicago comedian Hannibal Buress made four years ago would help lead to a guilty verdict against Bill Cosby?

Judging from reactions on Twitter that flowed in after Cosby’s conviction Thursday, not many.

“It still boggles my mind that it didn’t take the women coming forward with their allegation­s but it took Hannibal Buress telling some jokes for people to look into Bill Cosby,” user Petty Griffin said. “This is a crazy world we live in right now.”

Jamil Smith, a senior writer at Rolling Stone, tweeted “Give @ hannibalbu­ress credit. He understood that this remains a country where women making accusation­s of sexual assault aren’t believed until a man echoes them. One can only hope that Cosby’s conviction is a tipping point in that regard. We must do better.”

Others on Twitter praised and thanked Buress, though some were hesitant.

User Becky Bracken Wendy Wasserman Schultz tweeted “Crazy to see how many people want to paint @ hannibalbu­ress a hero instead of the women who pursued and finally got justice after begging to be believed for decades. But sure drinks for the comedian who made fun of their rapes for money.”

Buress was unavailabl­e for comment.

Allegation­s were brought against Cosby during the 1980s and 1990s, but it took a Buress standup show in Philadelph­ia in 2014 to bring them back to the forefront.

Buress, at the time, mocked Cosby, for saying “Pull your pants up black people, I was on TV in the ’ 80s.”

Buress then said, “Yeah, but you rape women, Bill Cosby. So turn the crazy down a couple notches.”

The comedian continued to urge the audience to Google “Bill Cosby rape” afterward.

Days later, a clip of the joke went viral and created renewed attention for the allegation­s against Cosby.

In an interview with Howard Stern that year, Buress said the reaction to his joke was unexpected.

“This is the first time it’s happened and it’s very weird,” Buress said. “I got a lot of people writing me and saying things … I didn’t want to do that, ‘ cause if I was going to do it I would have done it on my own. That wasn’t my intention, to make it part of a big discussion. It was just something that I was doing at that venue right then. So then for someone to put it to the media — it’s crazy.”

“It’s a different thing, man,” Buress said. “I said it and I stand on it, but it is an interestin­g situation.”

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/ AP ?? Bill Cosby waves to supporters Thursday after he was convicted of drugging and molesting a woman in 2004.
MATT SLOCUM/ AP Bill Cosby waves to supporters Thursday after he was convicted of drugging and molesting a woman in 2004.
 ??  ?? Hannibal Buress
Hannibal Buress

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States