The available facts, beyond the tweets, are scarce. But the biggest difference I see, this early, is Gunn had people stand up for him immediately while Sawyer does not appear to have such support. Meaning? Perhaps nothing. Perhaps a sign there is more than just the tweets.
Fair point, but it also could be as simple as Sawyer not being able to help the actors make money. Let's not pretend Hollywood has a moral high horse--these are the same people that honor rapist Roman Polanski.
Gunn is a director that can make them money. My guess is that they aren't friends--they are co-workers, and there is no loyalty at all. It would also take more guts to stand up for Sawyer and say, "despite those tweets, he's not like that." Of course, maybe he IS like that, but I doubt he lasts that long if that were true.
IMO, some humor should be off limits if they are hurtful or offensive. For example, saying something racist is not bad if it is serious but totally ok if it is a joke. Racism should always be wrong. And I would hope that people would use common sense before making jokes. Yes, joking and humor can be good things but we should still think before we make a joke and ask ourselves if the joke is in good taste or not. For example, I would never make a joke about Hitler being a great guy, not even for shock value, because I understand how such a joke would be in very poor taste and very offensive..
I can't fault you for this opinion. It's your choice. But here's the thing--who decides? What if I find something offensive but you find it funny? Sometimes racist humor actually drives home the point of how stupid racism is. Think about Blazing Saddles. That's one of the funniest movies ever made. The racism in those movies were so outlandish and the racists were made to look so stupid that anyone who gets offended looks more stupid.
Archie Bunker was an amazing TV character. His comments were made out of ignorance, but even black people on the show found him more amusing than bad. Today, he might be vilified, but humor can drive home a point in ways even a protest cannot. Good Times was another example of that.
I don't consider Sawyer's tweets to be like that, but given the length of time, it seems more like a witch hunt/chance to show how "non-racist" they are, rather than a punishment fitting a crime. He was wrong, no doubt. But I don't know if this is fireable.
As far as I can tell, the actor posted the tweets before getting hired as Elongated Man and had actually deleted the tweets. So TPTB probably did not know about the tweets when they hired him. But folks had screenshots of the tweets and that is how TPTB found out. Sawyer claims the tweets were just jokes. If Sawyer really is a nice guy who is not misogynist, then yeah, it sucks that he got fired and yeah, his co-workers should probably defend him. But I think TPTB don't want to risk the bad PR now that the tweets are public. Unfortunately, very poor decisions when you are younger, like tweeting offensive jokes or putting on black face, can have serious consequences even many years later.
What does that say about TPTB's character and the character of their co-workers?
He knows who he is. Sometimes these crusades turn the wrong people into victims. You don't go after a fly with a flamethrower.
Plus, where do you draw the line? If you can't do humor that offends someone, then soon there will be no humor.
They're different shows with different storylines and different creative teams. They're also different categories of character, lead and supporting. It would be illogical to expect the same outcome from two such different situations. Each show's team should make the best decision for its show. Someone else's show is someone else's responsibility, not theirs.
You're quite right. It's illegitimate to say that hurtful comments are somehow not hurtful if the person who says them thinks they're funny. If someone thinks it's funny to cause someone else hurt or to demean them for their identity, that is exactly what they are doing wrong, so it's bizarre to claim that somehow makes it okay.
When I was a kid in school, the bullies thought it was hilarious to torment me, to demean me, to make me feel hated and worthless and afraid. They thought it was a terrific joke. But I was traumatized for life. Thinking it's funny to be hurtful does not make it harmless.
Now, Sawyer has shown signs of understanding. He hasn't used "it was just a joke" as an excuse to say he didn't do anything wrong. He's accepted that it was wrong and harmful, he's apologized, and he literally said "Thank you for holding me accountable." So he understands why they let him go and he agrees with the decision. Still, the fact that he ever thought such jokes were okay to voice in public, where their targets could see them and be hurt by them, is not an easy thing to excuse. It's something he appears willing to work to redeem himself for, but part of redemption is accepting consequences and making amends. Lots of people before Sawyer have resigned from their jobs once inappropriate comments they made in the past have come to light. It's a way of doing penance, and the fact that he accepts it rather than resisting it is a good start.
But does the punishment fit the crime? I think that's the bigger issue here--as opposed to "it was just a joke." This happened years ago. He deleted them, which shows he knew they were wrong.
There's that famous saying, "to err is human, to forgive is divine." The people on their high horse should learn that.
Like I said, Sawyer himself accepts it as justified and
has already apologized, which pretty much settles the debate. No point arguing it's excessive when he has literally thanked them for it.
Lots of other people have resigned from their jobs when past statements like this have come to light. It's not ridiculous, it's a way of taking responsibility and making amends. Too many people in today's society reject the idea of responsibility and just try to dodge and deny and make excuses. That's how we got into the current mess.
There's also the question of the people he'd have to work with if he stayed on the show. Eric Wallace and Grant Gustin have both said in their statements that they were very angry when they learned of Sawyer's tweets. How can you ask Wallace and Jesse L. Martin and Candice Patton and Danielle Nicolet to just quietly accept working with someone who thought it was funny to demean their race? It's unfair to expect that of them, especially with all that's going on in the country right now.
I think that they should be professional enough to look at how he behaved with them, reflect on their own lives and see if they ever made a racial judgement or joke based on another race, see if they are perfect people, and learn to forgive. It was years ago.
Like with James Gunn, I don't think Hartley should be fired for tweets he made 8 years ago. It's a chance to take responsibility, apologize to his fans/audience and learn from it. "Canceling" people doesn't seem like a productive exercise.
And it can happen to anyone.
If they actually have done so. The fact that his colleagues and friends -- including a black showrunner and costars -- had to learn about it this way, that he kept it hidden from them all these years, makes it questionable to claim that he's learned anything other than how to conceal it. Nobody is automatically entitled to be forgiven for bigoted words or actions. They have to prove they've earned it.
Why would something so irrelevant come up in any conversation? Think about that--do you remember your tweets from 8 years ago? Do you remember every goofy joke you made?
It's different.
Lenny was told not to be funny by a dozen boring old white christian men.
These days it's 3 billion women insisting the jokes about rape stop, and a billion black people saying that jokes about water melon will no longer be tolerated, and 5 billion LGBTQ putting a nix on all jokes about sodomy and crossdressing.
It's called democracy.
That's not democracy. That's mob rule and censorship.