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Even Parodies Have Standards.

Cquote1
"Oh no, I'm white — I can't read that word."
Liz Lemon, 30 Rock
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Derogatory slurs are wrong. They are used as a way to imply that a whole group of people is inferior to another group in some way(s). Yet because words gain meaning from context, including the characteristics of the speaker saying those words, slurs are sometimes acceptable if they are spoken by people belonging to the group the slur is about. The most notable is the word "N-WORD/N-WORD." Possibly the most offensive word in the English language, it has become a term of fellowship in American hip-hop culture. Yet that fellowship only extends to those who have been accorded N-Word Privileges. Putting it simply, African Americans call each other this colloquially, generally when they are close friends; but if you address one of them with the word as a white individual, it can be an exceptionally effective method for getting yourself shot.

So who has N-Word Privileges?

Current rules appear to be as follows about most slurs:

  • Those a part of the group to whom the term originally applies usually get a free pass when speaking among themselves. Thus, no one outside of that group has such privileges.

Some of My Best Friends Are X will generally not work here.

Another aspect of this trope is when a person outside the group says a slur, is aware that it is wrong, or will soon accept that it is wrong, then later apologizes for it. Otherwise, it's just plain old prejudice. Thus when Draco Malfoy and Voldemort say "Mudblood" it doesn't count as this, because they never accept that it's wrong. This applies to bigots in Real Life, as well.

Many people (of all backgrounds) find this trope problematic. Those belonging to the non-dominant social group wonder if they can really "reclaim" a word with such a loaded history, or the point in doing so. Those belonging to the dominant social group cite hypocrisy and discrimination when privileges aren't extended to them (not that they'd ever use them, mind, but It's the Principle of the Thing). After all, assigning people different rights and responsibilities based on skin color is what got us into this mess in the first place, wasn't it?

The title of this trope comes from a comedian's explanation of why white people can't say the N word. "Maybe because we haven't always used it properly in the past. Yeah, we got a little bossy with it. Our N-word privileges have been revoked."

Also applies to the related words Negro, Negress and nigra, which are technically not hateful but are now closely associated with the "core" N-word. Sadly, and depending on the speaker / audience, may also apply to completely unrelated words, such as N-WORDrdly or black hole (examples below).

Also see T-Word Euphemism (which this page demonstrates), These Tropes Should Watch Their Language (vulgar words instead of hateful words).

Examples of N-Word Privileges include:


Anime and Manga[]

  • In Naruto the term jinchuriki means "power of the human sacrifice" and refers to people with bijuus sealed in them. The titular character is enraged when people who view jinchuriki as tools use it to dehumanize them but accepts it when used as a technical term.
    • He's also okay with it being used by current/former jinchuriki.


Comic Books[]

  • In an old issue of Uncanny X-Men, where Kitty Pryde is confronting a group of her fellow students who are plotting to kill Professor Xavier during a visit to Columbia University (this was at a time that Kitty was taking college classes). One of the students, who was black, accuses Kitty of being "a mutie," to which Kitty replies: "I dunno, Ray, are you a N-WORD?" (The word was not censored in the original dialogue.) Ray responds predictably, prompting Kitty to call him on his hypocrisy.
  • And in the Uncanny X-Men graphic novel God Loves, Man Kills, Kitty's dance teacher Stevie Hunter attempts to keep Kitty from beating up a boy who'd called her a "mutie lover" (not knowing that Kitty herself was a mutant), by telling Kitty that "they're just words." Kitty immediately throws Stevie's seeming hypocrisy in her face, asking her if she'd be so calm had the boy called Kitty a "N-WORD lover."
    • Both examples got a lot of flak and continue to do so, where a number of readers objected to the use of the word even if it was to make a point about tolerance, some citing the idea that it was wrong to equate the suffering of a fictional minority to the suffering of a real minority.
  • In an issue of Punisher MAX, a member of the IRA visiting the United States goes on a rant to his friend about how he'll be "nobody's N-WORD ever again," forgetting that he isn't in Belfast and the word means something very different in the States. He soon finds himself surrounded by some very... unhappy people.
  • In Y: The Last Man, white Yorick's black bodyguard uses the N word in reference to him, and eventually lets him use it in reference to her... in the "N-WORD Please" sense.
  • The Quantum and Woody issue "Noogie" explicitly refers to this in an intro saying that they've been forbidden to use the "N-word," and will use the word "Noogie" instead. It then subverts it when a poor black character repeatedly calls Quantum "noogie". Quantum, whose full-body costume covers his identity, demands to know how the man knows he's black, only to be told "You're black? S-Word!"
  • Referenced, Fantastic Racism style, in Ultimate X-Men:
Cquote1

 Northstar: Sophomore year I realise I'm gay, and now you're telling me I'm a mutie?

Angel: Um, you may want to live the life for a bit before you start slinging derogatory terms like that, even if you're trying to reappropriate them, or whatever.

Cquote2
  • In one Strontium Dog story, Johnny and Wulf receive some information from a fellow Bounty Hunter, Cecil 'Frog' Parsons. Wulf thanks him for this, referring to him as 'Frog', which causes Frog to fly into a rage about people who refer to him by his mutation instead of his name. Wulf apologizes, and then Johnny gives Frog a payment for the info, also calling him 'Frog'. When Wulf asks why he didn't get angry at Johnny, Frog matter-of-factly points out that Johnny is also a mutant, so it's different.
  • In X-Statix, the black team member Anarchist calls a black applicant a spear-chucker, and tells the Orphan (who is a purple-skinned Caucasian mutant) that he wouldn't be allowed to do the same. The Spike literally throws spears, as it happens. And this is all the more ironic when you consider that the Anarchist is adopted and his parents are white, so the Spike thinks he didn't have the right in the first place.
  • Mocked by Superman villain Manchester Black (who was visually caucasian), who would frequently use this kind of word and immediately after claim it was okay for him to say that, because he was 1/16th (insert relevant minority group).


Fan Fics[]

  • In two episodes of Pretty Cure Heavy Metal, there's a black character whose favorite word just happens to be the N word. Since he's the Token Minority, most uses of the N word in both episodes (the only exception when Shugo parodies the N word privileges of a white Australian in episode 24) go to that character. Since the author doesn't want Unfortunate Implications to arise, all uses of the word are censored like most strong profanity. When explaining the reason for the censorship, he actually invoked this trope by referring to himself as "whitey".
  • In The Last Spartan, "Squidhead" has been adopted as a badge of pride by a Sangheili youth counterculture similar to Otaku, who have developed a fondness for human entertainment and popular culture. Because it's a Fusion Fic crossover with Mass Effect, the team's Sangheili party member, N'tho, also defies his hat by being part of said subculture, and not acting like a Proud Warrior Race Guy like all other Sangheili seen in canon to date.
  • Deconstructed in this Katawa Shoujo fanfic. Lilly's father, a diabetic, refers to Yamaku as a "cripple school", insultingly questions how Hanako got her scars[1] and says Hisao is not suitable for Lilly because of his heart defect. This greatly upsets Hanako, Hisao and especially Lilly, who turns his logic back on him by arguing that he should consider her a "cripple" too.


Film[]

  • Blazing Saddles. The blacks in the movie use the N word toward each other in a friendly manner. All white characters who use it are stupid racists, including the little old lady. Mel Brooks stated that he intentionally wanted to overuse the word in the movie to the point that it became such nonsense that nobody could possibly be offended by it anymore. Most people assume that this was a strong influence from co-writer Richard Pryor, but Brooks has stated that most of the parts you'd assume were written by Pryor probably weren't.
    • On the subject of Mel Brooks, many of his movies will make jokes at expense of Jews. The thing is, Mel Brooks himself is very Jewish.
  • In Rush Hour, Chris Tucker says, "Wassup, mah N-WORD!" to some of his friends at a bar — after having told Jackie Chan's character to follow his lead. When Tucker leaves the room to question an informant, Chan (who's new to the United States) uses the same greeting with the bartender, completely unaware of any Unfortunate Implications. It doesn't go down so well. And when Chan is asked to repeat himself, he says it AGAIN, slowly and clearly...
  • In White Chicks, two black men under cover as white Rich Bitches make the mistake of singing along with a rap song on the radio. When the genuine Rich Bitches in the car with them get shocked, they respond, "No-one's listening, right?" Cut to the whole car singing along with a Cluster N Bomb, grinning and giggling girlishly.
  • Quentin Tarantino is noted for his liberal and unapologetic use of the word, especially in his earlier work. In an interview, Tarantino claimed that he wanted to shout the word from the rooftops until it lost all meaning. Some black filmmakers such as Denzel Washington and Spike Lee have criticized him for it, while others such as Samuel L. Jackson have defended him.
    • In True Romance, Dennis Hopper's character tells a story about how "Sicilians were spawned from N-WORDs" to a mafioso who is about to torture him. Hopper's language is part of his ploy to infuriate the mobster into killing him quickly so that he cannot give up his son's location. In the DVD commentary, Tarantino revealed that he had learned the story of Moors interbreeding with Sicilians from a black friend of his, who had since passed on.
    • Pulp Fiction features black and white characters dropping N-bombs as well as other racial slurs throughout the film. Perhaps most notable was Tarantino's own tirade about his garage being used for "dead N-WORD storage." While defending Tarantino's dialogue, Samuel L. Jackson claimed that he had ad-libbed two or three N-bombs for every one that appeared in the script.
  • Spoofed to hell and back by Clerks II. Randall uses the term "porch monkey," to the horror of his coworkers and the (black) customers. Later, when it is explained to him what the term means (his grandmother used it all the time, and on reflection he realized she was probably pretty racist), he decides to "take it back" - i.e., by using it, make it less offensive. He even goes so far as to make a jacket that says "Porch Monkey 4 Life" on the back using tape. Yeah, he gets the shit beat out of him for it. By a black cop. Who busts him while he's watching a live bestiality show.
    • "I always used Porch Monkey to describe lazy people in general, not lazy black people."
    • "My grandma is not a racist! [reflecting] Though, she did refer to a broken bottle as a "N-WORD Knife"."
    • It's called inter-species erotica, fucko.
  • An in-character discussion of who is actually entitled to N-word privileges occurs in the Damon Wayans movie Bamboozled, and may have been something of a Take That by writer/director Spike Lee at the Tarantino character. Wayans has a conversation with his white boss. The boss contrasts himself with the starch-suited, very carefully spoken, single and uptown-living Wayans, saying "I have a black wife, black children, hell, I even used to live in the ghetto, so I feel I'm entitled to use that word." Wayans says he'd prefer his boss didn't, at which the boss scowls and proceeds to drop a cluster N-bomb, never at any point directing it at Wayans, just saying the word a lot. The scene (without apparent transition) then becomes a fantasy Wayans has of violently assaulting his boss and beating his face in. ... All while screaming "Whitey! Whitey! Whitey!"
    • In fact, N-Word Privileges are a central theme of Bamboozled: Wayans's character, Pierre Delacroix, creates for his TV exec boss, Thomas Dunwitty, a program called Mantan: The New Millennium Minstrel Show, which pretty much recreates joke-for-joke, blackface-for-blackface the minstrel shows of yore. The show is, of course, a runaway hit, leading to (among other things) audience participation: all members of the studio-taping audience - who are of every race and creed under the sun - proudly wear black face and declare "I'm a N-WORD!" One of the catch-phrases of Honeycutt, the show's MC, is "N-WORDs is a beautiful thang," which the audience shouts back with great enthusiasm. Whether this can be construed as a sign that saying a word out of context long enough can make it lose its original harmful meaning, or that taking on the hallmarks of oppression and using it to entertain (or shill, as Lee illustrates with mock-commercials for an "urban" clothing line by Timmi HillN-WORD and for "Da Bomb" malt liquor brand) is no better than minstrelsy, is up for debate.
  • In How High, an Asian side character is a huge rap fan, and listens to NWA, and suggests the white dorm-mate should also say he does, to make friends. When the protagonists come to the dorm and give the Asian props for his music choice, the white guy blurts "I like N-WORDz With Attitude too", and gets smacked.
Cquote1

 "Ain't no-one usin' that word here; that goes for you too."

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  • In Monty Python's Life of Brian, Brian vehemently denies that he's half-Roman (his father was the centurion Naughtius Maximus) and tells his mother, "I'm a kike! A yid! A hebe! A hooknose! I'm kosher, mum! I'm a Red Sea pedestrian, and proud of it!"
  • Leprechaun: In the Hood and Leprechaun: Back 2 tha Hood have pretty much all the black characters regularly using the word to refer to each other, almost exclusively good naturedly. In the latter, when a minor white character cheerfully uses it during a drug deal everyone (including people in the background) just stare at him in disgust, with a record scratch noise even being heard when the guy utters the word. Of note, at one point in the movie one of the main characters tells another that "N-WORD" is actually out and that the new word is "ninja".
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  The Leprechaun: "Whassup, ninjas!?"

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    • One would guess that the movie was written by a Juggalo, since this group also refers to themselves as "Ninja" in the same way.
  • Gran Torino is an interesting example for this. If you walked into the movie not knowing any Asian slurs, you'll be fully stocked upon exiting, as Clint Eastwood's character, Walt, fires everything in the book at his Hmong neighbors. Walt is equal opportunity, however, and enjoys himself when Hmong teenage Sue starts slinging insults back at him. In fact, Walt goes around throwing (to people under the age of forty, rather outdated) white-related slurs (Irish, Italians) at all his friends, and absorbs many jokes about his Polish heritage. At the same time, when instructing Hmong teenager Thao about masculinity, Thao attempts to copy Walt's slur-ridden speech to his Italian friend, which earns him a (comic) gun in the face, suggesting, as elsewhere, that a certain level of familiarity is required for this to be permissible.
    • Also notably, the actual N-word is the only major ethnic stone left unturned here. Walt addresses some troublesome black teens with the (only comparatively, mind you) mild "spooks." Said teens never seem to have heard it before.
      • He also accused the wigger of trying to be a "super spade."
  • In The Jerk, Steve Martin's character "Navin" is raised by a black family, and believes he's actually a born member of it; as a result, the N-word becomes his Berserk Button when used by whites.
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 "You are talking to a N-WORD!"

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  • In The Hebrew Hammer, when Mordecai meets with the head of the Kwanzaa Liberation Front (Muhammad Ali Paula Abdul Rahim), Mordecai and he greet each other as "N-WORD" and "kike." The KLF's white accountant lampshades this.
  • When making Borat, Sacha Baron Cohen (who is an observant Jew) made full use of his J-Word Priveleges.
  • In the 1990 movie Heart Condition, Bob Hoskins is a racist cop who, on arresting a black man (Denzel Washington), uses the N-word. His (black) boss explains to him that that while he (the boss) can say "N-WORD, N-WORD, N-WORD, N-WORD, N-WORD," Hoskins' character, being white, cannot. Hoskins later gets to justifiably refer to Washington's character as a "spook."
  • In the 1950 film The Lawless, fruit pickers Lopo and Paul address each other as "cholo," but when overprivileged white boy Joe uses the term, those are fighting words.
  • Played with in the Russian film Brother 2 by Aleksey Balabanov. The Russian main character Danila gets in trouble with a black bum when he calls him "negr". Upon being explained why he can't say "negr", Danila is completely bewildered; in Russian, ???? is a neutral word to describe a black person: "That's what I was taught in school: the Chinese live in China, the Germans in Germany, the Jews in Israel and Negroes in Africa." Ironically, his brother and prostitute friend's blatantly racist remarks go unnoticed, as they are said in Russian.
  • Die Hard With A Vengeance plays with this trope, by having an openly racist character played by Samuel L Jackson played alongside the clearly non-racist John McClane. There are admittedly no anti-white slurs used, but it is made abundantly clear that McClane doesn't have any N-Word Privileges. McClane even calls him on this:
Cquote1

 Zeus: "Say it! Say it!"

McClane: ?

Zeus: You were gonna call me a N-WORD, weren't you?

McClane No! I was gonna call you an asshole. How's that? Asshole!

Cquote2
    • The interesting thing is, McClane's Curse Cut Short was "Motherf--", and clearly not "Asshole".
    • It should be pointed out that, from Jackson's character's point of view, McClane seemed racist. They first met when the Big Bad forced McClane to go to Harlem wearing a sandwich board that sported a racist message, and that's a situation there's just no explaining out of. The filmmakers knew it, so the N word was digitally edited onto the board in the final cut; the original message, which can be seen in the TV edit, was actually "I hate everybody".
  • One character in the British war film The Dam Busters has a black Labrador dog named... um, yeah. It's also one of the code words for a successful operation. They dubbed "Trigger" in for rereleases, but the original is kept on the British DVD and Blu-ray. Noteworthy, the censorship caused confusion because "Trigger" was the name of Roy Rogers' horse.
    • Pink Floyd's The Wall makes use of audio clips from this movie, with the dog's name, without providing any explanation-- if you haven't seen The Dam Busters, it's very weird.
  • Inverted in Tropic Thunder : when black rapper Alpa Chino uses the word, Kirk Lazarus (a white actor in blackface) gets dead serious and sternly chastises him for it, claiming that "for four hundred years, that word has kept us down". Predictably, this confuses the hell out of Alpa.
  • In Down To Earth (Chris Rock's remake of Heaven Can Wait), the main character tends to forget that he's a black man who's trapped in a white body. The first time he performs his regular comedy routine in his new body, the audience is shocked into silence. He later gets knocked out by a couple of black guys for singing N-word containing lyrics in public.
  • The BET basic-cable channel apparently feels that even African-Americans should not have N Word Privileges. This is clear from their broadcast of Lean On Me, where Joe Clark's description of the poor kids at Eastside High School as "N-WORDs and spicks and poor white trash" gets dubbed so that the first slur is inaudible. (Of course, it's not very sporting that "spicks" and "poor white trash" don't get dubbed at all.)
  • The Blaxploitation film Boss N-WORD concerns two black bounty hunters who set themselves up as sheriffs in a white town. They declare it illegal for the "whiteys" to refer to them as "N-WORDs", but use the word indiscriminately themselves.
  • An example of privileges beings extended (sort of) to a out-group member from Brian's Song: during a workout/physical therapy session for his friend Gale Sayers (played by Billy Dee Williams), Brian Piccolo (played by James Caan) calls him a N-WORD, hoping to motivate Sayers by making him angry enough to forget his despondency over his low chances of recovery. As soon as he says it, Sayers stares at him, shocked, for a few seconds... then busts up laughing.
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  Gale Sayers (to his wife, through tears of laughter): Oh, babe, you won't believe it. Brian tried to call me 'N-WORD'!

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  • The documentary Fagbug is an interesting example: in 2007, a lesbian graduate student named Erin Davies discovered her VW Bug to have been vandalized by someone who spraypainted the words "fag" and "U R Gay," presumably because she had a rainbow sticker in her window. After discover her insurance wouldn't cover the cost to get the paint removed, she decided to just drive around with the car as is, and after getting many interesting reactions to the car decided to drive around the country interviewing people about their reactions to it: some were supportive of her, others were obviously uncomfortable with the word showing up in public, and some people even tried to remove the word from her car (Davies even had to re-paint the word "fag" back onto her window before her trip). She also discovered she couldn't get vanity license plates with the word "Fag Bug" on them, so she had to settle for "FG BUG". After a year she got the paint removed...and got her car detailed so it's now rainbow colored and has the word "Fag Bug" emblazoned on its side. Davies now uses the car as an instructional tool for her talks about homophobia and prejudice


Literature[]

  • Deconstructed in Christopher Paul Curtis's children's book Elijah of Buxton, where the title character (a freeborn black living in a Canadian settlement for former slaves) uses the slur in question and gets severely chewed out by an adult with a speech that is Anvilicious, but with good cause.
  • The white hooligans in Football Factory refer to black people as N-WORDs, including the ones that are on their own Firm. They're "our N-WORDs".
  • Played with a lot by Terry Pratchett in the Discworld novels. The equivalent 'n-word' for Dwarfs is "lawn ornament" which is considered a killing insult for non-dwarfs but is used by one Dwarf boss to his crew in Moving Pictures. In Wyrd Sisters Hwel allows Vitoller to call him that, because they're old friends, but not anyone else.
    • In a footnote in Guards Guards, Captain Quirke is referred to as not being particularly evil, just the sort of person who pronounces "negro" with two Gs.
    • In Jingo, Captain Carrot has entered a crime scene surreptitiously by pretending he's renting the flat, and then let Angua (a werewolf) through the window. When the landlady approaches, Carrot reminds Angua he was told he wasn't allowed women in his room, and Angua replies, "Or pets, so she's got me coming and going. Don't look at me like that, it's only bad taste if somebody else says it."
  • Nonverbal: In The Chemo Kid, the titular kid shows up to the school Halloween party wearing a grotesque mask that parodies someone undergoing chemotherapy. The coach is incensed, until the kid takes the mask off.
  • A Fantastic Racism example can be found in Warhammer 40000 universe, specifically in the Eisenhorn novels. In the Imperium, the word "twist" is used as a derogatory term for mutants; the mutants themselves have reclaimed this word, wearing it as a badge of pride, and Inquisitor Eisenhorn notes that "a slur stops being a slur when you use it to describe yourself."
  • In the Harry Potter series, "mudblood" is a derogatory term used by pure-blood families for Muggle-born witches and wizards. When it's first used in Harry Potter, neither Harry nor Hermione know what it means, but Ron goes ballistic and tries to hex Malfoy for using it on Hermione. In later books, Harry and Ron get upset hearing it from Malfoy, while Hermione is shown to just be mildly angered. Then in Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows, Hermione refers to herself as a "mudblood" when trying to convince Griphook to help them, since Muggle-borns are being treated as second-class citizens(like the goblins are) under Voldemort's regime.
    • And in The Movie, in the aforementioned first use of the word, Hermione somehow knows what it means. And not just 'I read it in a book', she talks about it as though she's grown up knowing about the word.
  • In Artemis Fowl, Foaly notes that it is only acceptable to call a fairy by their species name if the speaker is a close friend.
  • Thoroughly averted in Andrew Vachss's Burke books, where various characters throw ethnic slurs around freely and no one bats an eyelid.
  • The N-Word used to be tossed around pretty casually in England. There was a nursery rhyme, "Ten Little N-WORDs", known in America as "Ten Little Indians". Agatha Christie wrote a novel that was titled first Ten Little N-WORDs, then Ten Little Indians, and finally And Then There Were None.
  • In Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemens Union, the Jews of Sitka have come to use "yid" as a catch-all term for a Jewish person, like "dude" or "guy." (This is because in Yiddish--the language most of the characters are speaking when talking to each other--the word "yid" basically means exactly that.)
  • It's unlikely that Mordecai Richler could have gotten away with a lot of his novels' Jewish characters if he wasn't Jewish himself.
  • Intentionally combined with Have a Gay Old Time in The Dark Tower, thanks to the characters being from different time periods: Odetta (later known as Susannah) is from the 1960s and is offended by Eddie, who is from the 1980s, calling her "black". In her time period, "negro" was the neutral term and "black" was offensive.
  • Comedian and civil rights activist Dick Gregory titled his autobiography N-WORD. The dedication page reads:
Cquote1

  To Mama: Wherever you are, remember, when you hear the word "N-WORD," they are advertising my book.

Cquote2
  • Bill Bryson's Notes From A Big Country has no problem making generalizations about America. Bryson himself is legally an American, but had lived half his life (by then) in Great Britain, and more-or-less considers himself a Brit. Of course, it is a collection of columns from a British newspaper. The odd thing is that a)Bryson makes basically the exact same sort of generalizations Dave Barry makes, except Barry uses we, and b)Bryson has been accused by James May of being an American Anglophile with no idea of what Britain is really like. Despite living in it for over twenty years at that point.
  • The novel N-WORD Heaven. Blacks can call themselves the N-Word as a form of self identity, but as soon as a white uses it, it becomes derogatory. And the term "Negress" isn't allowed at ALL.
  • A Running Gag in one of Robert Rankin's Brentford novels is a character using a derogotary word and when called on it, saying "It's not racist if you're <minority group>". Eventually subverted when the police inspector says this after calling Omalley a "mick". A constable points out he's not Irish and gets the response "No lad, I'm a policeman."


Live Action TV[]

  • Little House On the Prairie: The word "N-WORD" was used in at least three episodes, all dealing with racism. These include:
    • "The Wisdom Of Solomon," where a young African American boy named Solomon (played by a young Todd Bridges) remarks to his classmates what he hates about being black: "Being called a N-WORD."
    • "Blind Journey," a two-part episode depicting a journey students and staff of the School of the Blind take from Winoka to Mr. Hanson's old house near Walnut Grove; one major part of the episode focuses on an African American teacher's aide, Hester Sue Tehrune (played by 1950s pop vocalist Ketty Lester), whom Mrs. Oleson thinks before meeting her is an elite society woman. Although Mrs. Oleson is not outright racist and never utters the n-word, Walnut Grove's true racist Judd Larabee (Don Barry, the former title hero in the "Red Ryder" westerns) does.
    • "Barn Burner," where Larabee — after objecting to a farming cooperative because a black farmer named Joe Kagan will get the same benefits as white farmers — is accused of burning down the Garveys' barn ... then is incensed when the farmer he scorned serves on his jury. Larabee uses the n-word several times in the show. (Ironically, it is Joe who is the only one who thinks Larabee is innocent, and stalls long enough for young Andy Garvey to admit he left a lighted lantern too close to the barn ... and Larabee doesn't even thank Joe. This was the last appearance by the Larabee character, as it is implied thereafter that he is shunned by his family and the town and dies soon afterward.)
  • Family Ties: At least two episodes:
    • In the two-part episode from 1988 called "Read it and Weep," Jennifer refuses to review another mundane Yogi Berra book, instead choosing "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," which had been banned for its repeated use of the word "N-WORD." The discussion on the suitability of "Huck Finn" in an educational setting includes Steven, the father, saying the word "N-WORD" (referring to the character "N-WORD Jim") at least once.
    • One of the final episodes was "All in the Neighborhood," which saw an African American family's house heavily vandalized, and the n-word is spray-painted several times on the walls. The Keatons and their neighbors are forced to confront their deep-seated feelings of racism.
  • Family Matters: In "Fight the Good Fight," Laura's locker is spray-painted with the word "N-WORD" (this in response to efforts by Laura and Urkel to begin a Black History Month unit at their school). The original episode was intact in terrestrial syndication prints and ABC Family, but in TVLand/NickAtNite airings the scene quickly fades to a commercial before Laura discovers the offending word.
  • Law and Order: SVU once saw Marcia Gay Harden in a guest role in which she referred to black people (and addressed Ice-T's character directly) by variations of the n-word such as "porch monkey", thereby averting this trope. She was actually an undercover FBI Agent; when forced to reveal this to the cops, she apologised to Ice-T, but he shook it off with a simple "we're cool"; as far as he's concerned, she has implicit porch monkey privileges.
  • The Jeffersons: George got away with using the word "honky" — the derisive word for whites, often used by blacks — many times, but (much like Norman Lear's other comedies) rarely was the n-word uttered. One notable exception was "Sorry, Wrong Meeting," where the Jeffersons, the Willises (a racially mixed couple), Florence and Mr. Bentley have an all-too-close encounter with the Klu Klux Klan. The Supreme Leader, Herbert Purcell (veteran stage and TV actor James Karen) and his son, Dwayne, have organized a meeting that Tom thinks is one to deal with burglaries inside the high-rise, but it isn't until George arrives and the meeting gets underway that George, Tom and Mr. Bentley see that Purcell's meeting is a KKK meeting to run blacks out of Manhattan. Purcell uses the word "N-WORD" several times, incensing the main characters many times. When the elder Purcell suddenly falls ill with a heart attack, he must rely on George — an African American and the very type of person he despises — to save his life ... and when he does, nobody is prepared for Purcell's show of "gratitude."
  • Murder In Coweta County: A 1983 made-for-TV movie starring Andy Griffith as the ruthless, sadistic land baron John Wallace, and Johnny Cash as Lamar Potts, the sheriff who brought him down. Several times, the bad guys use the word "N-WORD," and at one point, Wallace remarks incredulously that "Not one white man has ever gone to the chair on a N-WORD's word, and they're gonna testify against me?" The two "N-WORDs" (two African American farmhands who helped burn the body of a sharecropper Wallace killed) did, and Wallace was convicted and sentenced to death.
  • Donald Trump once fired a guy in the reality show The Apprentice for using the term "White Trash" to describe himself. During a Boardroom session. Yeah, we weren't surprised, either.
  • The introduction to Turk in the first episode of Scrubs featured him and JD having a conversation about whether JD could say the "N word" if it comes up in a rap song to which they're singing along. (For the record, Turk said no.)
  • The UK series of Big Brother 2007 ejected a housemate named Emily Parr because she had used the N-Bomb in conversation with fellow housemate Charley...who had also used it. And yet Emily Parr was ejected, Charley remained. Charley was black, which is probably why she was allowed to get away with it. Of course similar controversies arose because she had also used the word and had used it several times throughout the series. (The incident in question happened early on.)
    • Charley was also a notorious hate figure in the house, and was responsible for generating a certain amount of interest in the show - Endemol, the production company, were constantly being accused in the media of fiddling the nomination process to keep Charley safe, knowing she would be evicted promptly as soon as she was nominated but that the ratings - and votes to the premium numbers - would plummet without her. In addition, she actually didn't use the word again, or if she did, it was in a discussion context, rather than directed towards anyone.
    • The main reason Emily was removed was due to the huge uproar that took place in the UK a few months earlier on the celebrity edition of Big Brother because of an incident of alleged racist bullying.
  • An episode of Boston Public featured a white teacher using the standard slur when teaching a history class of mostly black students in order to start talking about Afrophobia and language, with the subsequent uproar. He was actually teaching them about the cultural impact about it because of two students. One black, one white. The black one referred to the white one as "His N-WORD." and in turn, let the white one refer to him as such. Both were completely comfortable with this situation. Enter third party, skin color black, plot ensues.
    • The old Jewish teacher gets away with it because he's not only very very old (in his 80's) but he has a black son, grandson, and great-grandson.
    • Also played with in an interesting manner when a teacher was speaking to a black student about an old teacher who said a lot of controversial things.
Cquote1

 Teacher: "Aren't you offended when he says things like 'I'm gonna make sure you get your black ass into college'?"

Student: "Not really. Because that's what he'll do. He'll get my black ass into college."

Cquote2
  • Present in Generation Kill, except it's pretty much everyone who has privileges. I believe a southern Marine actually refers to fellow Marine who's black using the N-word. Nobody takes offense.
  • Spoofed in News Radio: Bill is complaining about rap lyrics that include the N-word. When Matthew asks Token Minority Catherine what the N-word is, she whispers in his ear:
Cquote1

 Matthew: Nincompoop?

Catherine: Hey! I'll let it pass this time, but don't let me catch you saying that word again.

Cquote2
  • Played with in ~30 Rock~ when Tracy calls Toofer by the "n" word. The square Toofer didn't know about how the term had been reappropriated.
    • This is made even funnier when Toofer later attempts to use the N-Word in the same way and everyone reacts with offense that he has just "dropped the N-bomb"... the joke being that although black, Toofer is so "whitefied" that it sounds like a slur coming from him.
    • Interestingly, both of the N-words have to be obscured with sound effects. N-Word Privileges don't cut it with the censors.
    • Jack also gives a pretty good summary for why this trope is in play.
Cquote1

 You see Toofer, the African-American community has adopted that word for everyday use, in an attempt to rob it of it's meaning.

Cquote2
    • Jack and Liz are also under the impression that "Puerto Rican" works like this.
  • In an episode of the black sitcom Girlfriends, Joan and Toni are irritated by Lynn's sister (via adoption), a Caucasian so deeply immersed in black culture that she acts "blacker" than the main cast, but Lynn and Maya defend her... until a Jay-Z song comes on the radio and she makes the mistake of singing along. Particularly obnoxious in that it was used to deliver An Aesop about how white people can never use that word, because they'll never understand the pain of a history of slavery and oppression. Gag me.
    • The reason it was important that Lynn (out of all 4 girlfriends) called Tanya out on her use of the "N" word was because it demonstrated that Lynn had finally embraced her blackness (there had been a running theme up until that point that because Lynn was a biracial woman adopted by a white family, she had tried with varying degrees of success to minimize her blackness, if not flat-out erase it). The Aesop that was intended was that no matter how much hip-hop she listens to, at the end of the day Tanya is still a white woman and that word doesn't hold the same meaning to her as it does to someone black.
    • So does that mean they (the main cast) can never use that word, since they never experienced the pain of a history of slavery or oppression
      • The most glaring part is that Lynn and Maya only took issue with her saying the word after she used it in the context of a song but had no problem with her using it as a general term, which dosen't make much sense considering you're more likely to upset someone using the word as a general term rather then singing it in the ocntext of a song that just happens to have the word in the lyrics.
      • Not true. She only used the word that one time. The word that she kept using over and over again throughout the episode that Joan and Toni took issue with (but Lynn and Maya did not) was "sista," a word used almost exclusively between black women.
  • Angel provides a Fantastic Racism example in electric-powered mutant Gwen: "What I don't appreciate, Elliot, is being called a freak. That's my word, and I get cranky when people like you use it."
  • The Daily Show contributor Black Correspondent Senior Black Correspondent Larry Wilmore, discussing Barack Obama's potential choice of running mates, explained that he needed to choose someone who wouldn't turn him into a Sidekick or the Magical Negro.
Cquote1

 Jon Stewart: The magical...?

Larry Wilmore: You can say it.

Jon Stewart: The magical... I'd rather not.

Larry Wilmore: Good, that was a test.

Cquote2
    • Also spoofed on a segment specifically on the N word, where one of the (white) correspondents dragged Larry around with him on interviews for the sole purpose of saying it. (Members of other minorities made very brief cameo appearances to provide their own examples of slurs.)
    • Despite this, Stewart himself actually used the word N-WORD recently in order to make a point (ie, it was not directed at any persons nor used as a slur). The segment came out very strongly against those who do so casually. Additionally, he's pretty much given the rest of the staff free rein with making Jew jokes (Stewart himself is Jewish).
    • Spoofed in a Running Gag involving a minor controversy over a hunting camp with an unfortunate name regularly used by Rick Perry. Perry keeps avoiding saying its name for obvious reasons, and none of the Daily Show staff want to either, so whenever it comes up they replay a clip of Herman Cain explaining that "the place is called N-WORDhead".
    • A 2012 episode had one of the black correspondents use it twice to a PETA advocate, who was stunned speechless.
  • The Colbert Report did a skit where Colbert talked about people using the word "negro" to a point where any more use would make it acceptable in any context. He then kept repeating the word, soon getting the audience to join in and one of his stage hands. He then asked Morgan Freeman to join in. Freeman slowly shook his head "no", prompting Colbert to end the segment.
    • Colbert has a Running Gag of "I don't see race. My friends tell me I'm white, and I believe them because of (insert reason here)". One of the reasons was him not allowed to say the "N" word.
    • There is also Colbert's interview with Jabari Asim, author of The N-Word: Who Can Say It, Who Shouldn't, and Why:
Cquote1

 Colbert: First question. Did you want to name the book The N-Word and they said, "No, you have to call it The N-Word"? Or, did you say, "I want to name this book The N-Word," and they assumed you meant, you know, The N-Word, when in fact you meant The N-Word?

Asim: I think I suggested calling it The N-Word and they thought it was a good idea to play it safe and call it The N-Word.

Colbert: OK, this actually, this raises another interesting subject to me, is that the N-word has become so anonymous [sic] with the N-word, uh, is saying the N-word pretty much like saying the N-word? Because I would never say the N-word, but I don't want somebody to think I'm saying the N-word by saying the N-word. You know what I mean? Because I would never say that word that begins with the letter after M.

Cquote2
    • Then, on July 26, 2011 Stephen parodied this by using Reagan in place of the n-word, after Obama quoted Reagan in his calls to raise taxes on the rich.
  • There were issues with this word in regard to Executive Meddling over Chappelle's Show, and apparently this is one of the reasons Dave abandoned it. On the show itself, parodied with the "N-WORDr Family" sketch.
  • A running gag of a Mind of Mencia sketch involves Carlos Mencia attempting to get a license plate with some permutation of letters similar to the N-word. (Claiming his family is Indian and their family name is Neega, etc.) Finally, he asks for a plate with the word "wetback" (an equivalent word, but used to attack Mexicans) and is immediately approved.
    • Speaking of which, have you ever watched an episode of Mind of Mencia that didn't have the W-word in it?
  • Spoofed on an episode of Seinfeld where Jerry suspects a dentist converted to Judaism just so he could say Jewish jokes.
Cquote1

 Priest: And this offends you as a Jewish person?

Jerry: No, it offends me as a comedian!

Cquote2
    • In another episode, after Jerry accidentally offended an Asian mailman by asking him directions to a Chinese restaurant (figuring that as a mailman, he would know the neighborhood), he laments, "Since when am I not allowed to ask a Chinese man where a Chinese restaurant is? When someone asks me "Hey Jerry, which way to Israel" I don't fly off the handle about it!"
  • On The Muppet Show, pigs are particularly sensitive to non-pigs who make reference to the meat of pigs, even the mention of Sir Francis Bacon as part of a panel discussion on whether he was the true author of works attributed to William Shakespeare. Pigs, on the other hand, can make such jokes freely.
  • Cold Case is an interesting, uh, case. Even in episodes dealing with Philadelphia's history of racial tension, the N word is never used. Instead, the show has co-opted the word "critter" — which is not actually an ethnic slur in the real world — and treats it in-universe as an equivalent to the N word. Presumably this is a form of Getting Crap Past the Radar.
    • Actually, this may count as Fridge Brilliance, given the sheer number of more... 'colorful' but obscure ethnic slurs in the southern US. "Critter" may very well be one of them.
  • A variation on this appeared on Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip when Matt writes a sketch in which Jesus Christ rises from the dead to become the president of network Standards and Practices. The result is that everyone in the scene ends up saying "Jesus Christ" a bunch of times--something standards would not ordinarily allow--and the ACTUAL standards & practices people would have had a hard time stopping him.
    • There was a similar skit on Conan O'Brien's Late Night. Two priests are berating Conan for question the doctrines of Catholicism (Conan's faith). In the midst of this, Jesus himself walks out onto the stage, causing a shocked Conan to yell, "JESUS CHRIST".
  • Andy Sipowicz of NYPD Blue was a fairly mild - but still straight-up - racist in the shows early years (from a combination of his father's racist attitude influencing him, and his distaste at being placed undercover to infiltrate a left-leaning militant black group just after his return from Vietnam). He began to get over it when he arrested a black man who taunted Sipowicz by saying that he was "dealing with a N-WORD who knows how the system works", causing Sipowicz to respond that he was "dealing with a N-WORD who's too dumb to know when someone's trying to help him." After the man's death, which Andy felt responsible for, Sipowicz apologized to the man's young daughter for referring to her father with "that word". The man's wife coldly told her daughter to remember that Sipowicz was "the man that called your daddy a N-WORD", causing Sipowicz to later emotionally lament the woman "telling that little girl to hate me", and also realize that his attitude was helping perpetuate the cycle.
  • In the Wizards of Waverly Place episode "Third Wheel", Alex and her new wizard friend make fun of media portrayals of wizards by donning pointy hats and beards. When Harper tries to join in the fun by holding her hair in front of her face and pretending it's a beard, both Alex and Justin tell her it's offensive.
  • Sanford and Son used the n-word (in its slightly modified form as "N-WORD" or "N-WORDz") on a few occasions, but these scenes were later edited or redubbed. One such scene, an early allusion to the "Driving While Black" phenomenon (long before that phrase became commonplace), yielded what is said to be the biggest studio audience laugh reaction of the entire series, yet it has routinely been cut in syndication.
  • The N-Word has been used exactly once in all five Star Trek series (making up hundreds of episodes), in the Deep Space Nine episode “Far Beyond the Stars.“ By a black dude. In the 1950s. And you could feel the tension when he said it.
    • There was an episode of The Original Series ("The Savage Curtain," a.k.a. "The Lincoln Episode) where (a recreation of) Abraham Lincoln refers to Lieutenant Uhura as "a charming Negress," then immediately follows it up with "Oh, forgive me, my dear. I know in my time some used that term as a description of property." Uhura's response: "But why should I object to that term, sir? You see, in our century we've learned not to fear words."
  • The original Hard Gay, who was beloved by everyone for his campy leather clad pelvic thrusting performances was immediately considered offensive by fans the moment they found out he wasn't actually gay.
  • This Hour Has 22 Minutes has a sketch parodying the Kramer rant where Gavin Crawford interrupts a co-anchor's report to apologize for saying "the n-word". We then see a clip of him shouting "Newfies!" a couple of times. Search "Gavin Crawford says the n-word" on Youtube to find. This Hour Has 22 Minutes is filmed in Halifax (Nova Scotia) and has had a predominately Atlantic Canadian cast, although Crawford is from the Prairies. He's also been in several sketches as a fish out of water around Newfoundlanders. There's one where he's an military officer doing rescue work in Newfoundland and people keep trying to help him unnecessarily, even when they're ridiculously injured. Then the Newfoundlanders talk behind their backs about him not being a good guest and letting them fuss over him. The other one is a spoof of a crime drama where he has no idea what anyone is saying to him - accidentally letting a suspect go and not realizing a woman is hitting on him as a result.
  • Rescue Me subverts this to hell and back. More specifically the scene where the crew is forced into Sensitivity Training. Damn near every racial slur in the book gets brought up in this five minute scene.
  • Despite his typically free usage of racial slurs, the N-word was left unsaid by Archie Bunker until eight seasons into All in The Family. In the episode "Two's A Crowd," Mike learns the origins of Archie's bigoted ways (his abusive father) while the two are locked in the storage room of Archie Bunker's Place. At one point, Archie relates a story of how a black student in his school beat the hell out of him, after Archie called him a N-WORD - because "that's what they called those people in them days."
    • A few seasons earlier, in the episode "Lionel's Engagement," Archie frowns upon George Jefferson's use of the word.
  • There was a whole episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm that revolved around Larry getting into trouble for telling a story and quoting someone saying "N-WORD" and then avoiding usage of the word when telling people what happened when a black person was present.
  • The second episode of Louie opens with Louie and his comedian friends discussing whether it's okay to say "faggot" (one of these friends being gay) on stage or not. Said gay friend says that he personally is not very affected, but warns that it can potentially stir up bad memories of, say, beatings where the word was used in gay audience members.
  • In the episode of My Name Is Earl where Joy's affair with Darnell comes out in the form of a Chocolate Baby, Earl is (rightly) questioning Joy and how this could have happened. She doesn't want to admit she cheated, so she tells him that he might have "a repressed black genie," going on about how "his great great grandmother must have let a slave get in a few licks of his own." A black nurse in the room looks at her and says, "Excuse me?" to which Joy replies, "Oh, it' OK, I just had a black baby. I can say it." The nurse just rolls her eyes.


Music[]

  • In 1969, in the U.K., in the course of being interviewed by a Nova magazine reporter, artist Yoko Ono said, "... woman is the N-WORD of the world"; three years later, her husband, John Lennon, published the song "Woman is the N-WORD of the World" (1972) - about the virtually universal exploitation of woman - proved socially and politically controversial to U.S. sensibilities. It's worth noting, though, that many prominent black entertainers of the day were among the most ardent defenders of the song.
  • Almost subverted by Eminem, who refuses to follow his rap peers and use the N-word in his hits, even though he used the derogatory term on a tape he recorded as a teenager. The rapper has repeatedly apologized for the slip-up, which was recorded when he was 16, and he insists he's far from comfortable about using the N-word in songs these days. He says, "It's just a word I don't feel comfortable with. It wouldn't sound right coming out of my mouth. If a white kid came up to me and said it, I probably would look at him funny. And if given the time to sit down with him I'd say, 'Look, just don't say the word. It's not meant to be used by us.'"
  • Averted then played straight with the reaction to Elvis Costello's song "Oliver's Army", which contained the lines "All it takes is one itchy trigger / One more widow, one less white N-WORD." The song came under fire in the US, as many felt the slur was targeted towards blacks. The song was actually about British imperialism and oppression of the Irish by English loyalists ("Oliver" being Oliver Cromwell), the "white N-WORD" slur referring to the Irish as a common insult (still) used by their oppressors. Elvis's father soon came out in his son's defense, as Elvis is of Irish descent. The song is hardly censored when played on radio stations in the UK.
  • Marilyn Manson is infamous for pushing arbitrary boundaries, and that includes dropping the N-Bomb in his songs. With Manson being very white and wearing makeup to make him seem whiter, one would think this would cause controversy...except the most famous example was probably his cover of Patti Smith's "Rock 'n' Roll N-WORD" on the Smells Like Children album. Smells Like Children was right about when he blew up and became known in the mainstream consciousness, and people were already incensed over his "satanic" imagery and lyrics. (This was the mid-90s, recall.) That being said, it still didn't stop people, even his fans, from occasionally getting pissed at him when he'd sing it on tour. The video Dead to the World covers his Antichrist Superstar tour, where he was threatened with incarceration if he said the dreaded N-word, or did anything else the cops didn't like, so he had a black man cover his cover. During another performance of it, someone managed to bean him on the head with a glass bottle.
  • Demonstrated by the NOFX album White Trash, Two Heebs and a Bean, referring of course to the members of the band.
    • Speaking of the term heeb, that's an in-group reclamation of the anti-Jewish slur "hebe" (from "Hebrew"). Its original and most notable use is in the title of the counter cultural magazine Heeb: The New Jew Review. The founding editor, Jennifer Bleyer, claimed that the staff chose the new spelling for "design purposes," but it seems more likely that they wanted to avoid misplaced protests from Jewish advocacy groups (which they've gotten anyway).
    • The album was originally entitled White Trash, Two Kikes and a Spic, before one of the band member's grandmothers complained.
    • NOFX exhibited this trope during a live show recently. Fat Mike, the Jewish lead singer, told this joke: "Why do German shower heads have eleven holes? Because Jews have ten fingers." Ouch.
    • Similarly, dc Talk had an interlude on their "Free at Last" CD that said they were "just two Honks and a Negro, serving the Lord."
  • Tim Minchin has a song a song about prejudice and words that impart it. The first part of the song gives the letters "a couple of G's, an R and E, an I and an N..." It then averts the "n-word" in favor of the word "ginger" (which Tim is), making this also a T-Word Euphemism song.
  • "One In a Million" by Guns N' Roses. Axl thought he did... he doesn't.
    • Ice T defended the song, saying that he wasn't offended because he didn't think Axl was racist. Guns N Roses were early supporters of Ice's metal band Bodycount.
  • David Allan Coe's come under fire for this. His 1977 single "If That Ain't Country" contains the line "workin' like a N-WORD". Furthermore, he released a pair of underground comedy albums through the back pages of a biker magazine, Nothing Sacred (1979) and Underground Album (1982), containing, in addition to a lot of sexually explicit humor, a couple of songs that have been slammed by critics as being racist, after Coe started selling the albums through his website, particularly the track N-WORD Fucker. It's noteworthy that Coe's drummer on these albums was African American and married to a white woman, and Coe himself also said in defense of the albums that he has long, dreadlocked hair and dresses like "a New York pimp". "N-WORD Fucker" arguably comes across most clearly as satire because of its raunchy sex jokes, but Coe's other controversial underground song, "Rails", is pretty unnerving due to containing the lyrics "N-WORDs made me vote for segregation" and "the Ku Klux Klan is bigger, so take the sheets of of your bed and let's go hang a N-WORD". The fact that Coe had a black drummer on that song doesn't help.
    • There's also instances of Fan Dumb related to these songs, and you can find some idiot fans on YouTube videos of Coe's songs expressing racist viewpoints. Mainstream journalists weren't much help, either, as a New York Times piece was so poorly researched that it incorrectly identifies a lyric from the white supremacist singer Johnny Rebel's song "Some N-WORDs Never Die (They Just Smell That Way)" as being from one of Coe's X-rated albums, even though country biographers had identified Johnny Rebel as a Cajun singer named Clifford Joseph Trahan, and neither this song, nor any other Johnny Rebel song, appear on Coe's albums. (In fact, the Johnny Rebel song in question was featured in Crispin Glover's avant-garde movie What Is It?, if you want to confirm the performing credits.)
    • Coe's collaboration with Pantera, Rebel Meets Rebel, contains a song called "Cherokee Cry", which reeforces Coe's statement that the racially-themed songs from his X-rated albums were satire, as "Cherokee Cry" is very sympathetic to the plight of Native Americans in the United States.
  • Public Enemy's "I Don't Wanna Be Called Yo Niga".
  • In Blaze Ya Dead Homie's "Juggalo Anthem": "N-WORDs kick the anthem like this / Juggalos up in this bitch".
    • Also Twiztid. In Blaze's "Here I Am" (which featured Madrox and Monoxide), they got in on the fun. Here's a piece of the chorus: "Here I Am / I'm right here, dawg. Well here I am / Right here, N-WORD!" And let's not even get into "Old School Pervert".
  • The Dead Kennedys song "Holiday in Cambodia" uses the word, though it's mocking the type of rich, spoiled kids, who would brag that they "know how the N-WORDs feel cold and the slums have so much soul". Also worth noting, that the Dead Kennedys had a black drummer for a period of time.
    • Though when Serj Tankian and the Foo Fighters covered this song live, they opted for the word "Brothers" instead.
  • On the Firesign Theatre album How Can You Be In Two Places At Once When You're Not Anywhere At All?, there is this song "What makes America Great?":
Cquote1

 It's candied apples and ponies with dapples

you can ride all day!

It's girls with pimples

And cripples with dimples

that just won't go away !

It's spics and wops and N-WORDs and kikes

with noses as long as your arm!

It's micks and chinks and gooks and geeks

and honkies (Honk! Honk!)

who never left the farm!

Cquote2
  • Pink Floyd used the word "coon" in "In The Flesh" and "Waiting for the Worms" to represent a stereotypical neo-Nazi viewpoint. No huge controversy ensued, largely because The Wall's second half is a pretty obvious Take That at neo-Nazis.
  • Randy Newman's "Rednecks" and "Christmas in Cape Town", both sung from the viewpoint of racist characters, feature the n-word among other slurs.
  • X used several such slurs to describe the thoughts of the racist protagonist of "Los Angeles".
  • Phil Lynott of Thin Lizzy avoided the trope, but occasionally wrote lines such as "down in Skid Row, where only black men can go", that would be considered inappropriate if sung by a white man.
  • One notable and controversial violation can be found in the Murder Remix version of the Jennifer Lopez song I'm Real, where Jennifer drops an N-bomb completely out of nowhere and unprovoked. Her excuse was the fact that the song itself was written by Ja Rule.
  • The Offspring's song "LAPD" from their album Ignition. It's actually part of the chorus, "Beat all the N-WORDs, beat whoever you see. Don't need a reason. LAPD!" This song while using it in a derogatory sense is supposed to be from the point of view of the Los Angeles Police Department.
  • Wale's song "The Kramer" addresses the issue of rappers saying "N-WORD" in songs they know are being listened to by white kids who repeat it and say it themselves and around their black friends.
  • Japan got away with it in "...Rhodesia", mostly because a line like "Oh, Nazis in full attack/Burning N-WORDs in a cotton field" can't really be construed as endorsing Rhodesia's then-racist government.
  • The Swedish Rap Metal band Clawfinger has a song titled "N-WORD" on their debut album, the song itself has a lot of anti-racist lyrics and anti-racism is a common theme in their music. But due to the fact that the band members are all white this caused a lot of controversy and caused the track to be pulled off of North American releases. The track was replaced by a song titled "Get It" which the lyrics contain a slew of the most vulgar and angry words they could come up with, but none of it could be interpreted as racist so it was okay.
  • Kreayshawn, the (white) rapper who did "Gucci Gucci" is getting in roughly one shitstorm per week over this, thanks to her so-called "White Girl Mob."
  • When Anya Marina (a white singer) covered T.I.'s "Whatever You Like", she changed some of the lyrics from "N-WORDs" to "brothers", presumably because of this trope.
  • Because of Unfortunate Implications, N-WORD, a singer from Panama, is known as Flex in North America.
  • Nas' self-titled/untitled album was originally going to be titled N-WORD.
  • This song takes it Up to Eleven.
  • The song Everyday Normal Crew by Canadian comedian Jon Lajoie features the following exchange:
Cquote1

 "This is my N-WORD K.C.!"

"What the fuck you just call me?"

"Sorry... I'll say friend. This is my friend K.C., the only black friend in the group[...]"

Cquote2
  • When all-white rock group Dynamite Hack had a novelty hit with their calm, acoustic-guitar-based cover of N.W.A.'s "Boyz N The Hood", they kept the line "young N-WORDs on the path throwin' up gang signs", although the version played on radio of course blanked it out along with other potentially offensive language. This didn't go without controversy, but the band defended it as an effort to not tone down the content of the original.


Newspaper Comics[]

  • Real life subversion: One early Pearls Before Swine strip had a joke about a ridiculously unhygienic Greek restaurant. A lot of people missed the memo that Stephan Pastis is Greek and complained.
    • This is fairly common, when one considers that Borat has been labeled anti-semitic (Sacha Baron Cohen is Jewish), and so has Family Guy (which has a number of Jewish writers).


Standup Comedy[]

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 There's a different group to get pissed off at you in this country for everything your not supposed to say. Can't say N-WORD, Boogie, Jig, Jigaboo, Skinhead, Moolimoolinyon, Schvatzit, Junglebunny. Greaser, Greaseball, Dago, Guinea, Wop, Ginzo, Kike, Zebe, Heed, Yid, Mocky, Himie, Mick, Donkey, Turkey, Limey, Frog. Zip, Zipperhead, Squarehead, Kraut, Hiney, Jerry, Hun, Slope, Slopehead, Chink, Gook. There is absolutely nothing wrong with any of those words in and of themselves. They're only words. It's the context that counts. It's the user. It's the intention behind the words that makes them good or bad. The words are completely neutral. The words are innocent. I get tired of people talking about bad words and bad language. Bullshit! It's the context that makes them good or bad. The context. That makes them good or bad. For instance, you take the word "N-WORD." There is absolutely nothing wrong with the word "N-WORD" in and of itself. It's the racist asshole who's using it that you ought to be concerned about. We don't mind when Richard Pryer or Eddie Murphy say it. Why? Because we know they're not racist. They're N-WORDs! Context. Context. We don't mind their context because we know they're black. Hey, I know I'm whitey, the blue-eyed devil, paddy-o, fay gray boy, honkey, mother-fucker myself. Don't bother my ass. They're only words. You can't be afraid of words that speak the truth, even if it's an unpleasant truth, like the fact that there's a bigot and a racist in every living room on every street corner in this country.

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  • Richard Pryor also deconstructed the trope a lot in his act.
  • Reginald D. Hunter likes to include the word in the titles of his standup tours.
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 The actual, real name of the show is "Trophy N-WORD". Apparently some places had a problem with the word "trophy".

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  • Rich Vos, following a tasteful joke about Obama's black heritage to an audience filled with black people enjoying the show, only to be called out by one black audience member. Naturally, he chose to question it:
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 They're all upset about the white guy talking about black people. Loosen up. Turn on any black comedy and watch black comics trash white people for an hour. "White people crazy! They pay taxes! Crazy ass crackers!".

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  • Brazilian group Casseta & Planeta had a Black and a few Jews on their squad, so they used this as a justification for any politically incorrect humor with slurs. A skit had said the black member doing a soliquoly and being interrupted:
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-Shut up, N-WORD!

-N-WORD like those who built Brazil...

-Shut up, darky!

-Darky like Pelé, who even screwed Xuxa...

-Shut up, spook!
—Spook my ass, motherfucker!
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Video Games[]

  • Fire Emblem Path of Radiance employs this. The Beorc (humanlike folk) refer to themselves as "human" and the Laguz (beastmen) as "sub-humans", with the latter being an ethnic slur. The Laguz have turned that on its head towards the Beorc. Thanks to the racist member of the party giving him the wrong impression, Ike thinks that "sub-human" is the correct term for Laguz but after realising its real connotations he stops using it and starts addressing both races by their proper terms.
  • Arguably in Fallout 3, the term Ghoul referring to anyone whose flesh has been flaked away by radiation. They've also been called zombies due to their appearance, not to mention many ghouls refer to normal looking people as smoothskins.
  • In Psychonauts, the term spoon-bender, an offensive term for psychics, is used by the psychics themselves. In their community, it implies the use of psychic powers in petty ways.
  • In Zettai Hero Project, after repeatedly referring to himself as a "loser underdog", Bizarro Frank gets very mad at Etranger when she does the same (because, unlike him, she isn't a loser underdog herself).


Web Comics[]

  • This strip from VG Cats (relevant panels used as page pic).
  • Parodied in Sinfest when Squigley, an anthropomorphic pig, berates the human Slick for calling him "pigga" as a term of endearment. He says that only pigs can call each other that (see the previous page).
    • Then, played more straight when it's revealed that, no, Slick does not have N-word privileges.
  • Parodied in Keychain of Creation, with "'nathema." Nathema is a shortened form of Anathema, a rather unkind way of referring to Celestial Exalts (unkind in much the same way as referring to someone as a "witch" in Salem in the late Seventeenth Century is unkind).
  • Polkster from PolkOut makes Jewish jokes and can get away with it because he's Jewish.
  • Any guesses on the sexual preferences you would need to get away with writing I Was Kidnapped by Lesbian Pirates from Outer Space?
  • Leslie of Shortpacked only lets people call her "the lesbian" if they sleep with her. This backfires the one time she invokes it against a woman she did just have a sexual encounter with.
  • Apparently, 'herbivore' was Domain's version of the N-word in Kevin and Kell.
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 Rudy: Kevin, in these old magazines and texts I keep seeing references to "the H-word". What is that?

Kevin: "Herbivore".

Rudy: "Herbivore" used to be a slur?!

Kevin: We took it back as our own.

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Web Original[]

  • When Tatsudoshi hosts his Spam Plays, he and his guests usually leave their humour completely uncensored...except for "N-WORD", which only The Khold One is allowed to use because he's Southern. Hilariously inverted during the Spam Play of Mirror's Edge, where Khold becomes a bit too trigger-happy with his Cluster N Bombs and Tatsudoshi takes away his "N-WORD privileges" for a few episodes, and later imposes a limit on the number of N-bombs per episode.
    • But apparently, the constant flow of Asian jokes were just fine, except when Khold said 'Rice N*** er', that counted as two. (Ding)
  • The image board 4 Chan defies this trope, using the word "fag" to refer to everyone. Anonymous who draw are "drawfags", writers are "writefags", and there are even a few Christians on the board[2] who refer to themselves as "Christfags". They also like to use the word "N-WORD" to refer to certain black people, much like the Chris Rock routine mentioned above. Interestingly, some Anons have forsaken the "-fag" suffix in favor of "-friend".
    • Most likely those people are newfags.
      • Or moralfags.
    • The term's use as a suffix meaning "person" is also taken to its logical conclusion, and in threads about sexuality, you'll see "straightfags," and yes-- "gayfag."
  • "Now it's time for the ultimate cartoon showdown: Japanese animation versus American animation-"
    • "Hey! You can't use that word! It belongs to America! Only Americans are allowed to-"
      • "Shut the **** up."
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  "... In America..."

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  • "Limey!? How dare you!"
  • Taken literally on Immersion where one of the insults shouted in Online Gaming Distractions actually is "N-Word!" (by a white man to a white man)
  • "Ninjaology" concerns the privileges of a different N-Word altogether.
  • Averted in Snoop meets Parappa, a mashup of Snoop Dogg and Parappa the Rapper, by having the player "miss" the lyric instead of causing Parappa to successfully repeat Snoop's N-word.
  • Diamanda Hagan, despite being portrayed as (almost) utterly evil, still doesn't have these privileges, as she found out when trying to review a film with the n-word in the title.
  • Beached Az had the koalas that refer to everyone as "bear" but that's their word and the whale is not allowed to use it.
  • This trope is a recurring theme on the blog Yo, Is This Racist?. It mostly consists of the creator, Andrew Ti, mocking white people's supposed obsession with finding excuses to use the N-word.


Western Animation[]

  • Spoofed in South Park in quite a few episodes.
    • Although one episode has an aversion, Butters is confronted by the ghost of Biggie Smalls. Smalls threatens to shoot Butters unless he takes him to a party Satan is throwing. When Biggie tells him what to do, Butters just repeats what Biggie says, including the N word.
    • It's getting this way with "fag". South Park spoofed this in the episode "It Hits The Fan" (also known as the "shit" episode because they say shit 162 times), with Mr. Garrison explaining that even though they could all say "shit" without getting bleeped, he was the only one who could say "fag", since he is gay. Uncle Jimbo then inadvertently outed himself by saying "fag" without getting bleeped.
    • On With Apologies to Jesse Jackson, Stan's dad was a contestant on Wheel of Fortune and, in the bonus round had the clue "People who annoy you" and the letters on the board read "N_GGERS". Obviously nervous about what the fallout will be, he dropped the only word he could think of, "N-WORDs", without realizing that the answer was "NAGGERS".
    • There was also a recent episode where the (straight) kids (written by straight people) reappropriated that F-word to mean "people who make an ass out of themselves on motorcycles"; the gay characters (also written by straight people) were totally fine with this after a few minutes of protest. Opinion is... mixed on the episode, even among gay community; some, think it's a fun take on deflating a word's power, while others view is as another tale on that old weak-ass excuse, "Oh, when I use 'gay' in the sense of 'That's so gay,' I obviously don't mean 'homosexual'..."
    • South Park creators get a somewhat free pass to make fun of Jewish community, as Matt Stone has Jewish ancestry (doesn't care for religion though). Undermined by Stone being agnostic, but reinforced by main target of this slur (Kyle Broflovski) being based on Matt; shows how ambiguous this "rule" can be.
  • A whole episode of The Boondocks was devoted to this subject when a white teacher called Riley a 'N-WORD', with the excuse that Riley himself used it so much it lost all meaning. Riley and Grandad celebrate what they see as a chance to sue the school district, but nothing comes of it and nothing is resolved.
    • Subverted when Ed and Rumy, who are white, address each other as the n-word, and no one seems to think that is odd. Of course it helps when your dad 'owns the police'.
    • Of course, Ed and Rumy are voiced by Samuel L. Jackson and Charlie Murphy, so it doesn't have any more questions to raise about privilege there.
    • The infamous "Return of the King" episode takes place in an Alternate Universe where Martin Luther King, Jr. was only rendered comatose by his assassin, and woke up in 2000. Long story short, while he is pleased in some ways he's aghast at many others. At the end, he delivers a scathing speech, starting with "WILL ALL YOU IGNORANT N-WORDS PLEASE SHUT THE HELL UP?!" after failing to call the audience's attention more diplomatically. (He then almost immediately apologizes after using the word again, calling it the ugliest word in the English language, but proceeds to use it for emphasis several times during the speech.) He attacks many aspects of the prevailing culture, including Black Entertainment Television, certain aspects of rap music, and the movie Soul Plane, and lists a number of negative qualities of "N-WORDs," and concludes by telling them:
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 "I've seen what's around the corner. I have seen what is over the horizon, and I promise you, you N-WORDs have nothin' to celebrate! And no, I won't get there with you! I'm going to Canada."

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      • The episode attracted considerable controversy, including demands from Al Sharpton for a public apology for having King use the phrase "N-WORDs."
      • Of course the creator of The Boondocks is an African American who feels he has N Word Privileges.
      • The entire series makes good use of this trope, every episode. In DVD Commentaries, Aaron Mc Gruder defends it as something black people hear and say on a daily basis, so to leave it out is a disservice.
  • Inverted on The Simpsons, Homer complains about a gay character using "queer." "That's our word for making fun of you. We need it!"
    • Also parodied in the "The Haw-Hawed Couple" with the word bully, which only bullies are allowed to use.
  • An episode of Family Guy briefly parodies The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn with Peter reminiscing about his ancestor "Huck Griffin". We then see (you guessed it) N-WORD Jim — which, despite common belief, he was never called in the book — shouting at Huck for using "their word" when referring to him ("I thought that was your name!"), followed by Huck tentatively asking "N-Word Jim" to pass him the oar. The punchline is that Jim finds this substitute completely acceptable and thanks Huck for his sensitivity.
    • Also parodied in Family Guy Presents Laugh It Up Fuzzball where Lois and Peter's recreation of Leia and Han's sniping from the start of The Empire Strikes Back ends with Lois calling Peter a "nerf herder"... at which point Peter punches her in the face and yells, "You can't use that word! Only we can use that word!"
    • In one more recent episode, everyone thinks the world is ending so they're living for the moment. Peter tells Lois that he's going to go to a majority black neighborhood and shout "that word" to see what happens. He returns wearing Requisite Royal Regalia and a sash that reads "King of the Black People", informing Lois "They respected me for it."
  • A lot of Ralph Bakshi's early work had copious amounts of ethnic slurs thrown about, from guinea to N-WORD, along with some heavy swearing, most infamously in the film Coonskin. Al Sharpton called him a racist, while Spike Lee, Barry White, and many other prominent blacks strongly disagreed with Sharpton.
  • Amazingly not abused on Drawn Together, despite the show sometimes careening into episodes full of Refuge in Vulgarity. In fact the only outright racist things said are all said by resident Cloudcuckoolander Wooldoor Sockbat when he's in scientist mode and the satirically naive and gated Clara. Neither one of them use slurs either, just use old 'white' justifications and reasoning in their rants/research. They do, however, work stereotypes into show canon, like the one episode with Minstrel Foxxy. Possibly because they couldn't come close to topping the South Park examples without being canned. (Unfortunately, they did anyway!)
    • That may be true with regard to black slurs, but there are other examples of the trope in evidence. Both creators are Jewish, and the show is filled to the brim with jokes about Jews and Judaism. (This is also an example of Self-Deprecation.)
  • Referenced in a The Cleveland Show episode: When Rollo accuses Cleveland of breaking his leg, eating all his fish sticks and tater tots, sitting in his chair, and calling him the N-word, Cleveland shrugs and says "I'm allowed to, right?" In another episode Lester, mistaking every black person he sees in New York as Cleveland, uses "that word you call Rollo all the time" off screen. He is going to be killed until Cleveland turns up to rescue him and invokes an apparently well-known rule to the crowd that he gets one free pass on use of the word if he has one black friend.
    • WARNING: Results may vary.
    • The show has to tread somewhat lightly in this department, largely because Cleveland himself is voiced by a white guy. It even drew flak before the first episode aired for referencing his "happy black-guy" face in the theme song.
  • Averted on The PJs, when Thurgood and several others happen upon the building's old radio station, including a copy of Richard Pryor's "Bicentennial N-WORD."
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 Juicy: Can we play it?

Thurgood: Play it? We can't even say the name of it anymore!

Juicy: Why not?

Thurgood: African-American please.

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  • Played with in American Dad, episode "White Rice." Francine has a budding stand-up comic career based on her experiences growing up... as a white girl adopted by a Chinese family (she performs under her unmarried name, "Francine Ling"). Her catchphrase is "I can say it; you can't!". Her privileges are later revoked, however, as as her sitcom is pulled after one Asian joke.
  • Subverted on King of the Hill. Khan, a Laotian, attempts to make a good first impression on some of his Asian friends by making jokes about his heritage. Turns out they're not amused.
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 Khan: (showing off his pool) My redneck neighbors built it for me! Maybe I'll make them build a railroad next- how's that for revenge?

Ted: Khan, the railroads were built by the Chinese, not Laotians.

Khan: Same difference.

(The other Laotians gasp)

Khan: I-It's a joke! (beat) Maybe too far?

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 Toph: [regarding a drawing] It looks just like him to me.

Sokka: Thank you. I worked really... [[[Beat]]]... Why do you feel the need to do that?

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Other[]

  • The video where the white kid in the Scripps National Spelling Bee has to spell "negus"... only problem is, "negus" sounds a bit too much like "N-WORDz"...
    • Parodied in this Derrick Comedy video wherein the word the white students need to spell to the black judge is "N-WORDfaggot."
  • Flex, the Panamanian reggaetoner, is known in Mexico as N-WORD. Since racism against blacks was not nearly half as bad in Latin America, people just don't give a damn. Black stereotypes were generally Played for Laughs (and occassionally they still show up), with much lesser discrimination.
    • Plus, "N-WORD" itself means nothing in Spanish. Kind of like that segment on The Daily Show where they showed world leaders congratulating President-elect Obama, and a South American leader used the word "negro" and Jon Stewart started freaking out, saying things like "Not cool!"...until he got word in his ear that the way it was ("neggro") was the Spanish word meaning the color black.
  • What the name of the rap group NWA (Dr. Dre's old group) stands for.
  • A Doonesbury storyline revolved around a white kid trying to insult a black kid, and ending up calling him "honky" since he didn't remember the right slur. Hilarity Ensues.


Real Life[]

  • Unfortunate real life inversion. A black teacher in New York read a book to her students (of multiple races) about a black girl who learns that it's OK to have a different hair cut from her other friends (metaphor for racial tolerance). The teacher was fired because the parents got upset over the title of the book: Nappy Hair.
  • Michael Richards is a notable Real Life example. Perhaps he should've looked to the cookie...
  • Don Imus got in a lot of hot water for saying "nappy headed hos" live on the radio.
    • It wasn't just that he used that phrase, it was that he directed it at a specific college basketball team, making it a personal insult.
  • Black was a racial slur when the term Negro was in use--which was the neutral term you're looking for, and the trope-naming term was simply a degraded form of it; "black" got co-opted hard during the 1960s; most notably, James Brown had a hit titled "Say It Loud, I'm Black And I'm Proud".
    • This is in line with the Portuguese etymology of the word "Negro", which is to date a neutral term to refer to black people. The word "Black" is just as derogatory as the English "N-WORD", except for not being such a taboo.
    • Romanians are not allowed to refer to black people as Negrii (which literally means black, was adopted independently from the N word, and was never used as a racial slur). They are on the other hand allowed and even encouraged to use Cioroi which literally means Crows, and is a quite intentional racial slur.
  • A more successful example of this is American use of the phrase 'Otaku', or 'Nerd', where even the INSULT version doesn't offend.
  • A certain Italian restaurant in the Denver area had a "WOP-burger" on the menu. A fellow Italian (who grew up in New York with the Italian and Irish conflicts of the 50's and 60's and actually experienced how racist the word really was) took offense to the term and eventually it got pulled off the menu.
    • On the other hand, the president of an Italian-American group wanted the license plate "TOP WOP," but California refused his request.
  • It's only partly real life since it's Professional Wrestling, but does this speech from Booker T count? I would tend to think so, look at the way he buries his face in his hands when he realises what he just said...
  • Dennis Rodman, probably from his years in NBA locker rooms, wrote that in his opinion, "If a white guy is around a black guy enough, he can call the black guy a N-WORD and everyone understands its playful. But once you put it out in society, it becomes a whole other situation."
  • Indian Sociologist Sudhir Venkatesh was famously put in charge of a Chicago drug gang for a day. In his book, Gang Leader For A Day, he describes how his attempt to talk the part became awkward when he asked a man to "talk to me, N-WORD" who had just been perfectly okay with the real gang leader saying the exact same thing seconds previously. Needless to say everyone else involved was black. In fact the real leader drew a class distinction between Black, African American and N-WORD and had earlier refused to identify as black.
  • An incident of this effectively ended the Monday Night Football career of Howard Cosell. During the season opening game in 1983, there was a shot of Alvin Garrett, a black receiver for the Washington Redskins, running up and down the field. Cosell infamously quipped, "Look at that little monkey run!" The outrage that stemmed resulted in his being run out of the booth after that season ended. What was forgotten/ignored was that Cosell was far from a racist (he was a close friend of Muhammad Ali) and that he had used a similar comment with some white players with no complaints.
    • Parodied in one of the first season South Park episodes, where one of the announcers states (one of several offensive phrases) "I haven't seen a Jew run like that since Poland, 1938!" when Kyle is running with the football.
  • Lest we forget Wayne "Dog" Chapman. A bounty hunter and minor celebrity out of Hawaii. He was recorded as calling his eldest son's girlfriend that word. It was spontaneously sold for mass profit and nearly destroyed his career. He defended himself saying in essence that he thought he was in the black community enough to get away with it. He then went out of his way to try and make amends for what he said.
    • Though it should be noted that Chapman was almost certainly trying to cover his ass after the fact. The way he used the word and the context in which it was used made it exceptionally clear that he was using it as a slur towards his son's girlfriend... specifically because he thought she might hear him using said slur regularly and get him in trouble. Worked out real well, huh?
  • Notice how, around the wiki, whenever people quote Boondocks or some similar show or person who does have N-Word Privileges, they tend to be very careful to write it as "N-WORD" instead of "N-WORD"? This almost seems to be a technical adherence to the belief they don't even have quoting privileges (though as George Carlin once said of dirty words, they still mean the same thing).
    • Because, as Tupac Shakur said, "'N-WORDs' are blacks with iron chains hanging from a pole; 'N-WORDz' are blacks with gold chains hanging at the club."
      • Note that this colloquial distinction between "N-WORD" and "N-WORD" is has passed into popular vocabulary, and can be seen frequently on certain parts of the Internet: "N-WORD" is increasingly coming to be seen as a fundamentally different word from "N-WORD", with a meaning (akin to "buddy", "pal", "bro", "man", etc.) that has nothing in and of itself to do with race.
    • Also because it's pronounced that way on the show. One particular episode uses several pronunciations of the word, very few of which involved an R. Most interesting pronunciation? "Nyuhgga!"
    • Riley himself spells it this way in his letter to Santa, (though he isn't otherwise the greatest speller...)
  • In Chris Rock's most recent HBO special, he outlined the only instance in which a white person could have temporary N-word Privileges (for exactly one month). It's a very long drawn out scenario, involving a popular Christmas toy on Christmas Eve, being beaten up and peed on by a black man with a brick, within a certain time frame in the wee hours of the morning. Riverdance is also involved... let's just say it's never going to happen to you. But if it does, you get privileges for a month. But you must carry the police report with you, to prove it happened.
    • Not to mention the original "Black people vs N-WORDz" routine... Note that in recent years Rock himself has become uncomfortable with that routine, due to the number of truly racist whites who use this argument as justification for saying the n-word.
  • David Howard, a white aide to Anthony Williams, then Mayor of Washington D.C. used the word "N-WORDrdly", a word of Scandinavian etymology meaning "stingy" or "miserly" in reference to the budget. One of his black colleagues present at the meeting took offense, and Howard resigned 10 days later.
    • This comes up a disturbingly often in D.C. politics. There was a school board recently where one member mentioned the current situation was a "financial black hole". One of his counterparts went on a five minute rant about how it should be a "white hole".
  • The Other Wiki has a whole list of controversies about the word "N-WORDrdly".
  • Ivan Stang of the Church Of The Sub Genius coined the term "po'bucker" to describe ignorant, usually southern, white trash. He's used it at times to describe himself, in spite of being a university-educated Jew, someone legitimizing his "P-word" privileges.
    • If he's Southern, he counts — parts of the US have not realized that not all Southerners are white trash and/or rednecks.
  • George Carlin actually got away with using the word N-WORD during one of his HBO specials, while mocking the founding fathers. "This country was founded by white slave owners who wanted to be free. 'All men are created equal' - yeah, except Indians and women and N-WORDs, right?" Note that despite being white, the context of this quote resulted in a lot of black audience members clapping and/or nodding along with what he was saying.
    • Also used in another routine, where he stated that "N-WORD" or any other derogatory word, wasn't an inherently bad word, and that it all depends on the context the word is used in.
    • An earlier routine had him lamenting how he was never able to do "black" voices, citing this trope as the reason why.
    • Context is the key here, as he's not directing the word at a person, but expressing that this is the attitude of a third, racist person. So he's actually subverting the word, using it to claim unity with the oppressed while mocking the oppressor. Nice trick, but don't try it at home.
  • Comedian Mike Birbiglia inverts this with a small skit on Two Drink Mike. "This black guy came up to me after a show and he says, 'My cracker.' 'Actually, you can't call me a cracker. You can say 'cracka ', but not 'cracker '.
  • On the other hand, comedian Louis CK argues that white people have no business being offended by any racial slur. "Cracker! Oh, ruined my day. Bringing me back to when we owned land and people."
      • Technically, cracker back then was not used to describe all white people, or even all white Southerners, but poor white Georgians (from the U.S. state of Georgia, that is, not the country). These folks often didn't own land, and they certainly didn't own people.
    • Incidentally Louis CK is one of very few white comedians who get away with saying "N-WORD" in their performance. However, he states that it's "terrible" and "cowardly" to find the word amusing. However, he also hates the specific term "The N Word," because it's just white people's loophole for saying "N-WORD" and getting away with it.
    • Another comedian said the same thing, although he followed it up with "The only thing 'cracker' and 'honky' do for me is remind me of the time when I fed a box of Wheat Thins to a flock of geese.....and that was the greatest day of my life."
  • Another comedian to have gotten away with it was Bill Hicks, whose "Officer N-WORD Hater" routine from Arizona Bay is a big Take That at the LAPD (it's the last in a series of three tracks dealing with the LA riots of 1992). Much like Carlin above, no controversy ensued due to the context (specifically, mocking the acquittal of the officers who beat Rodney King).
  • The word was used by Terry Jones in the song "Never Be Rude To An Arab", which was sung on some live shows and can be heard on some Monty Python albums. He also says racial epithets for Hispanics, Italians, and Germans in the same line before being blown up and dragged off stage by a man in a frog suit.
  • Apparently John Mayer thought he had this.
  • Bitch Magazine: "Provides commentary on our media-driven world from a feminist perspective." Apparently there's supposed to be some kind of "reclaiming" going on, much like the trope namer.
    • There is a movement for women to reclaim "cunt" as a term of empowerment.
    • There's also the ultra-feminist website Heartless Bitches International and the Riot Grrrl (feminist Punk Rock) bands 7 Year Bitch and Bitch Alert. The former has a list of red flag issues in a relationship, and it includes the man using the word "bitch" as a term of endearment, or using that term or similar terms to refer to his ex-wife.
      • It also includes liking comics or action figures and other "juvenile hobbies" as a red-flag. "Having no hobbies outside of watching TV" is ALSO a red-flag. Um. ... Chess, gardening and Philosophy. Neither manchildlike, nor related to TV.
  • "Only a ginger can call another ginger ginger."
  • Comedian Lisa Lampanelli, a white woman, has this. Pretty much all of her material revolves around it, though. Gays, mexicans, asians...pretty much any separable group aren't safe either. This is mostly because she's an equal-opportunity insult comic in the vein of Don Rickles; she's a regular at Roasts and is nicknamed "The {{[[[Mean Character, Nice Actor]] Lovable}}] Queen of Mean."
    • She does not have those privileges.
  • Richard Pryor ended up renouncing his n-word privileges.
  • Dr. Laura thought she had this, and used the n-word 11 times in an infamous rant. She's now quitting her radio show to "regain her First Amendment rights," even though she was never in legal trouble in the first place.
    • There is a particular segment of extremists, some of whom frequently cry "censorship" not because their opinions were silenced; they act as if they should have a Constitutionally-protected right not to be publicly criticized.
    • The long and short of it is, as Jon Stewart pointed out, is that the first amendment protects her right to say it; it does not, however, give her a radio show, money from sponsors or protection from criticism she may receive as a result. He did this all while using the word himself as an educational tool to drive the point home.
  • Middle Eastern-origin comedians Ahmed Ahmed, Aron Kader and Maz Jobrani formed the Axis of Evil Comedy Tour, the very name of which invokes this trope. Their acts frequently revolve around the Middle Eastern/Muslim equivalent of N-Word Privileges. Jobrani has a joke about how "we're making progress! Because I'm starting to see Asian Drivers in car commercials. But you'll still never see a Middle Eastern pilot in an airline commercial."
    • Interestingly, Jobrani has claimed that when he doesn't tease other racial/ethnic groups (as in the Asian Drivers reference above), he gets complaints after his shows. As in, "hey, why did you ignore us Pakistanis?"
  • Many, many Westerners cheerfully adopt derogatory nicknames they are called in Asian countries, like Japanese "gaijin" ("foreigner") or Chinese "laowai" ("old other/foreigner") and "gweilo" ("ghost man") and use them as an identity sign. Most of them fully know of their disparaging meaning.
    • Similarly, white people living in parts of the united states with heavy hispanic influence often use the word gringo to refer to themselves.
    • Likewise in the states "Whitey" "Cracker" and "Honkey" generally raise no ire from caucasians who will gleefully use the terms themselves knowing full well what they mean. This often causes other racial groups great frustration.
      • Well, considering that WAS Ps invented the term, Cracker, as a classist term for lower-class "loud" whites, it makes sense.
    • In New Zealand, terms such as "Pakeha" and "Palagi" are practically the official terms for New Zealand Europeans.
  • It is common for people in Polish-American households to use the derogatory term (or the Polish term which sounds exactly like the derogatory term), rather than the awkward "Pole" to refer to their (former) compatriots. Which makes sense, as referred to earlier, it sounds exactly like the term they would often use anyway when speaking Polish to refer to male Poles (though spelled Polak).
    • Actually, the slur's ripped straight from Polish; it was used neutrally for quite some time before it became derogatory.
  • According to the late actor Carroll O'Connor, as far as Irish-Americans are concerned, everyone has N-Word Privileges when it comes to the slur "mick." Yes, go ahead and say it. Irish folks don't mind. In fact, they find the word funny. (This is somewhat ironic when one remembers what enormous Berserk Buttons the Irish are reputed to have, particularly when they're drunk.)
  • There is some debate around ableist slurs like "retard", and what level of mental problems one needs to have in order to use them.
  • The usage of "the R-word" by people with mental disabilities is an interesting one to discuss. Unlike race, being neurologically disabled doesn't have such high recognition as a marginalized identity and it is only in recent years that speaking out against using the word "retarded" and its derivatives as a pejorative has gained an image as a genuinely activist thing to do rather than the actions of an oversensitive Moral Guardian. Because of this, many people understandably feel uncomfortable with the idea of neurologically disabled people using them in an N-Word Privileges context. Yet for people with certain mental disabilities such as autism/Asperger's syndrome, AD(H)D, Tourette's syndrome, etc., they've been targeted with it for so long that you can certainly understand why they would want to use it in this kind of context. On the other hand, though, people with these disabilities are often closeted about them and if they are especially good at passing as neurotypical, then using the R-word gets further away from N-word privileges and closer to being an ableist asshole, especially when the person is genuinely using it as a pejorative. However, it is pretty awesome when you see or you are someone with a mental disability using the word in an N-word privileges context to effectively call someone out who is being a Jerkass.
Cquote1

 Jerkass: Oh my god, you are such a retard!

Disabled person: I may be a retard, but I know an asshole when I see one.

Cquote2
  • Sex columnist Dan Savage was called on using the word "retarded" to mean people being stupid by one of his readers, and decided to replace the word with "leotarded," because people who wear leotards on a regular basis are stupid, without him having to offend anyone.
    • It should also be remarked that Savage's original name for his column was "Hey, Faggot!", partially because at the beginning he was mostly interested in giving straight people shitty dating/sex advice (much like how straight advice columnists gave gay people shitty dating advice), and partially to show his allegiance in a debate raging at the time in the LGBT community about whether or not to reclaim the words "faggot" and "fag" (Savage being on the reclaiming side of the argument) He eventually changed it to "Savage Love" when he got more serious about the advice giving game
    • Savage has also recently gotten flack for being transphobic, even getting glitterbombed over it. In one of the occasions he was glitterbombed, he was attempting to explain the difficulties with the word "tranny." Savage himself has offered the opinion that if he's a transphobic bigot, the world needs more transphobic bigots like him
    • Similarly, Savage has chewed out organizations like GLAAD for giving a hard time to straight comedians/talking heads like Howard Stern, who have in the past made jokes about their instinctive discomfort around gay people but who are largely very supportive of gay people
  • Incidental case: when The New Yorker had a deeply insulting cartoon of the hillbilly madness that would hypothetically ensue from the Olypmics being held in Georgia, they got a ton of angry letters. When Jeff Foxworthy did a whole routine along the same lines in his stand-up nobody apparently gave any outcry. Why? Because Foxworthy is from Georgia. Being a southern redneck he's allowed to knock rednecks and the south: it's his main schtick.
  • It would appear the privileges can be abused as well. Many members of the Hungarian socialist party claim to be jewish (and technically have jewish heritage). Then one of them made a particularly mean spirited antisemitic joke on a holocaust commemoration event.
  • There is a comedy troupe called Asperger's Are Us, made up of four young men who all have an Asperger's diagnosis. They put on comedy acts where sometimes the joke is about autism traits such as this one, where a designated autistic guy tackles another guy he just met and perseverates to him about how awesome Ralph Nader is. But it's not really mean-spirited fun at the expense of autistic people because the people making the joke are autistic themselves.
  • Sarah Silverman apparently has this after she openly used the word "chinks" on Late Night On Conan O'Brien. Silverman even refused to apologize, forcing O'Brien to do so.
    • She's going to invoke this as well in an upcoming NAACP fundraiser event that also doubles as a Take That against Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry.
      • "The title refers to the controversy over Perry's West Texas hunting campground where the candidate has entertained friends and supporters. The campground's former name, "N-WORDhead," was painted on a rock at the entrance for many years."
  • The word "queer" amongst people who are LGBT and their allies. This word has a long and ugly history as a homophobic slur, especially against male homosexuals and some people still use it in this context. However, some people use it as a non-pejorative umbrella term for those who identify as non-heterosexual and some within the LGBT community will actually use the word "queer" as their label. Understandably, some people feel uncomfortable when they hear someone using the word "queer" in an N-Word Privileges way because they have grown so familiar with it as a slur.
    • This also extends to the word "fag", a derogatory term which, despite having homophobic roots, is also infamous for its modern usage as a common yet versatile derogatory term (which has been notably deconstructed on a few comedians). [3]
Cquote1

 Louis CK: I would never call a gay guy a faggot unless he was being a faggot, but not because he was gay. [...] If I stumbled upon a couple of fellows blowing one another's respective [penises], I'd be respectful. But if one of them took the dick out of his mouth and said something faggy like "People from phoenix are Phoenicians", I'd say "Shut up faggot!".

Cquote2
  • And there's been the recent controversy over the censorship of Mark Twain's most famous work, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, in which every instance of the word "N-WORD" is replaced with the word "slave". The intent was simply to make the book itself less controversial, so more classrooms would be willing to use it as part of the study material without Unfortunate Implications, or students getting distracted by the epithet. To say there was Internet Backdraft would be an understatement.
    • And then the Internet went and released a "ROBOTIC edition", where the offensive 'N-WORD' was replaced with 'robot'.
  • This got a teacher suspended because he thought he had this. Even being careful to say it "niggah" didn't work.
  • An interesting aversion of the trope: The term "Suffragette" was coined as a derogatory term by the Daily Mail. The Suffragist movement reclaimed it so successfully it stopped being seen as a derogatory term, no matter who was using it.
  • This extends to attitudes towards one's city as well. For example, people from Rust Belt cities like Cleveland and Pittsburgh constantly joke among each other about how their hometown is a hellhole, but it's a different story when an outsider does it. This can possibly be explained by the fact that people from the city in question take the good with the bad. They know what parts of town to avoid, and where to go to have a good time, own a home, etc. Meanwhile, those from elsewhere just repeat what the media says and don't really know what they're talking about.
  • While it is generally considered politically incorrect to call East Asians "yellow people" in the West, Chinese people will sometimes refer to themselves as huang zhong ren (黄種人/黄种人, "Mongoloid", or literally "yellow race person"). For example, in Andy Lau's patriotic Mandopop song "中國人" (zhong guo ren, "Chinese People"), he describes the Chinese as having "黃色的臉黑色的眼" ("faces of yellow, eyes of black"). The reappropriation of the term might have been helped by the fact that yellow is considered the most beautiful colour in Chinese culture.
    • Similarly, Chinaman was derived from a calque of the aforementioned Chinese term "中國人" (zhong guo ren), which is the most common name the Chinese use to describe themselves. When literally translated, it becomes "China person" or "China man". It became a slur when it was used to mock Chinese Pidgin English.
  • When making a report on Knicks player Jeremy Lin's poor performance in a game, the headline of 'A Chink in the armor' (Which, coincidentally, ESPN has used numerous times on players of all ethnic backgrounds) resulted in the reporter getting fire along with a massive media backlash.
  1. If you've played her route and know about how she got them, it's a borderline Moral Event Horizon for him
  2. Don't ask how someone can use 4chan and still be a Christian. Just don't.
  3. As pointed out by South Park, it can mean "bundle of sticks", "poor person", "military rank filler", "undesirable old woman" and now "Harley Motorcycle owner".
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