DoubleTake
Member
Oh look a microagression.
Isn't Sanskrit still used in households of Indian heritage then? It's not unusual for young British born Indians here to be multilingual. Some schools certainly teach it is part of the curriculum.
.. Do you know anything about spelling bees? You need to know the latin, greek, sanskrit , french and english roots and rules of words. For example recently a 5 yr old girl won the American Spelling Bee competition with the word "Jnana" which is.. sanskrit.
This. Jesus man do people run around searching for shit to get offended about?
Outrage culture strikes again
Ah, the start of a good 'ole witch hunt.
The circus acts are here with their hoopsSo is the aim of this thread to make this viral so that the anchor would either be forced to feel shame or to lose her job?
It's not as if this joke was supposed to be derogatory or anything like that.
Oh look a microagression.
Alisyn Camerota, former Fox News talking head so no one should be surprised by this moron's comment
Oh look a microagression.
The perpetually offended is at it again. I'm sure Camerota meant no harm by saying this.
The circus acts are here with their hoops
Fuck that shitty anchor. CNN has turned into trash.
Has turned? CNN has been trash for almost 15 years, especially when they hopped on the Fox News Jr. Train. And really, 24/7 news has always been trash because they have so much time to fill.
You are overrating . It's a silly attempt at a joke but nothing too offensive . I'm Indian.Someone mentioned this on my Facebook feed and I couldn't find anything here:
Ananya Vinay, an American of Indian heritage, just won the US national spelling bee. CNN had her spell covfefe, which seemed to be Ananya's first time coming across the word and she misspelled it, at which point, one of the anchors remarked:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQpQWHLTdJQ&t=1m20s
Covfefe my roots if old
Am I overreacting 🤔
If your argument is "outrage culture" and ignoring what actually happens in the video, maybe you should join themExcellent counterargument. You can be the clown!
Based on just a cursory glance, I'm of two minds about this.
On one hand, I have no reason to believe that the comment was meant as "you're probably more used to speaking Sanskrit than English" rather than "you're probably more used to spelling words that come from ancient languages rather than gibberish tweets". Based on that, I'd be inclined to view this as a totally innocent joke that just came across poorly.
On the other hand, Sanskrit's a weird language to use for this joke. As I understand it, the majority of English words come from Latin via French, Norse, or from the English language's West Germanic roots. Sanskrit has a relatively tiny footprint. And I'm pretty sure that the Germanic stuff figures much less in the popular view of the language. From what I've seen, native English speakers tend to assume that the language is descended from Latin.
Eh ok watched the full video...this is a good point I guess.
For context: the word they ask her to spell is some made up bs word, and they're asking it as part of a fluff interview, not as part of a real spelling bee. It's not like the girl misspelled the word because she guessed (wrongly) that the word originated from Sanskrit, which is what I assumed.
It's revolving door around here what news outlet makes you idiot today.
The CNN is appealing to the girl knowing sanskrit down to her race cause she's indian, so I don't think this is that innocent.
I'm guessing the reporter was trying to make a reference to how a lot of the spelling bee words have Sanskrit etymology, but damn that's not a good look
Isn't Sanskrit still used in households of Indian heritage then?
It was not racist, but a joke that (given the winner) fell very off key. As other have said, Sanskrit has both an intense part of the etymology of the English language as well as being a pop culture meme. However it would be like casually making a statement about Africa, for something that is VERY African, to a black American. No ill intent at all, but that won't stop some jaws from dropping.
Based on just a cursory glance, I'm of two minds about this.
On one hand, I have no reason to believe that the comment was meant as "you're probably more used to speaking Sanskrit than English" rather than "you're probably more used to spelling words that come from ancient languages rather than gibberish tweets". Based on that, I'd be inclined to view this as a totally innocent joke that just came across poorly because she wasn't thinking of who she was talking to.
On the other hand, Sanskrit's a weird language to use for this joke. As I understand it, the majority of English words come from Latin via French, Norse, or from the English language's West Germanic roots. Sanskrit has a relatively tiny footprint. And I'm pretty sure that the Germanic stuff figures much less in the popular view of the language. From what I've seen, native English speakers tend to assume that the language is descended from Latin.
Isn't Sanskrit still used in households of Indian heritage then? It's not unusual for young British born Indians here to be multilingual. Some schools certainly teach it is part of the curriculum.
ITT: Nobody watches CNN and all claim the anchor is the antichrist
GAF is my favorite hyperbole comment site tbhLuckily no one has said anything about the later position at all.
I think most people that have any conception of languages changing over time are aware that English is Germanic.
GAF is my favorite hyperbole comment site tbh
Have you ever actually talked to anyone about this?
I've heard multiple people claim that Latin is the origin of English, never anyone claiming that it's Germanic unless they have a degree in a related subject. Hell, I used to hear a myth that all languages are derived from either Latin and Sanskrit, and that you could put them on a scale with Latin on one side and Sanskrit on the other.
And so you registered to post hyperboles?
The girl didn't seem offended. More like, "Hey.... Whatever.".
It's already viral. And it's racist. Racist actions aren't always super insulting or violent.So is the aim of this thread to make this viral so that the anchor would either be forced to feel shame or to lose her job?
It's not as if this joke was supposed to be derogatory or anything like that.
24hr news channel and u are still surprised in the year 20xx?That whole clip was a waste of fucking time. Does CNN literally have nothing useful to show or talk about?
She should apologize now and it's much less of a story. Compare this to Bill Maher and it's a non starter. And as a disclaimer, all racism is bad but not treated equallyIt's already viral. And it's racist. Racist actions aren't always super insulting or violent.
https://twitter.com/JeremyMcLellan/status/871042165698416640
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GAF is my favorite hyperbole comment site tbh
Ruh rohClearly since you peddled in it far more than anyone else in this thread.
The girl didn't seem offended. More like, "Hey.... Whatever.".
INTENT ISN'T MAGICIt was not racist, but a joke that (given the winner) fell very off key. As other have said, Sanskrit has both an intense part of the etymology of the English language as well as being a pop culture meme. However it would be like casually making a statement about Africa, for something that is VERY African, to a black American. No ill intent at all, but that won't stop some jaws from dropping.