New York Post

Italians: A pretty stupid reaction

- Israel Salas-Rodriguez, Larry Celona and Aaron Feis

Italian-Americans weighed in Tuesday on Chris Cuomo’s claim that “Fredo” is an ethnic slur — and while they said it’s insulting, the agreement was that anyone who likens it to the N-word is stunad.

“If anything, when we call somebody ‘Fredo’ it’s like [to say they’re] stupid,” said a worker at Bensonhurs­t, Brooklyn, bakery Villabate Alba, who gave her name as Angela. “If somebody were to call me Fredo, I would be like, ‘OK, you too.’ . . . Not like the N-word. That’s another level.”

A worker at S.A.S. Italian Records on 18th Avenue said that any insult meant by the “Godfather” reference was tied to Fredo being a turncoat.

“Fredo means a backstabbe­r, a person who went against his own kind. He went against his brother,” said Sergio Conte, 54. “If I was black and somebody called me the N-word, I would flip out. I’d be in anger.”

Sergio’s nephew argued that the angrier Cuomo got over one perceived ethnic stereotype, the more he fell into another.

“Most Italians think they have to have this tough-guy attitude,” said Matthew Conte, 22. “But when you’re like Chris Cuomo, who’s in the public eye, you have to be more careful about things like that.

“You can’t constantly be playing this tough-guy role,” he said. “Not everybody is Tony Soprano.”

Even those who investigat­ed — and participat­ed in — organized crime panned Cuomo for taking the bait.

“It took a page right out of Fredo’s book,” said one retired police source who investigat­ed the mob for years. “If he was more like Michael [Corleone] he would’ve dealt with it quietly later, and there would’ve been no fingerprin­ts.”

One mob associate told The Post, “That sounds like the rant of a 20-year-old hothead, not somebody who’s a profession­al and has his own family . . . It almost sounds like this guy hit a raw nerve.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States