Prov Bar Owner and Head of NAACP Spar Over "Racist" Facebook Post

Kate Nagle, GoLocalProv News Editor

Prov Bar Owner and Head of NAACP Spar Over "Racist" Facebook Post

The head of the NAACP Providence Branch is calling an ad posted on Facebook by Point Street Dueling Pianos racist -- and the business owner is defending the ad and his actions. 

The ad, which ran Thursday on Facebook, depicts a woman, Kimberly "Sweet Brown" Wilkins, who had been interviewed back in 2012 by Oklahoma City NBC affiliate KFOR-TV, where she escaped a fire in an apartment complex.  Brown, and the incident, became a viral meme on the internet for what she said.

"It's racist, clearly offensive and not even funny," said Providence NAACP President Jim Vincent of Point Street Dueling Piano's use in the ad. "This ad shows poor judgement, a complete lack of sensitivity and should be discontinued."

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Point Street Dueling Pianos co-owner Michael Mourachian said that calling it racist was a "very strong statement."

"My question would be what did [Vincent] say when other people have used that same meme?  I hear him and I respect his point of view," said Mourachian. "I'm Armenian, I'm not black, I can't pretend to see the world in his way, but I will say this.  No matter who had said that, a white person, a Latino, and Asian, no matter who said it, what was said, it was funny to us, and that's why the meme blew up. We didn't view it as a person of color

therefore this funny.  We looked at this and said, 'This woman's awesome."

Dueling Vantage Points

"Any defense of this sounds like something from another planet," said Vincent. "I can't even.  That's a racist image -- ebonics, broken English-- a stereotype we are trying to eliminate. He should known the difference. This is no different that Amos and Andy being pulled from the air." 

"I've been around 60 years, and it's one of the most racist thing I've seen in a while," said Vincent. "It plays to the worst in people who want to believe blacks are ignorant. It's not something we're proud of."
Mourachian said he would have never posted the ad had he thought it was racist, and said he would be willing to invite Vincent to the club to talk about the matter.


"No matter who had said that, a white person, a Latino, an Asian, no matter who said it, what was said was funny to us, that's why the meme blew up," said Mourachian. "We didn't view it as, 'It's a person of color therefore this is funny.' We looked at this and said this woman's awesome.  It's like the 'hide your wife, hide your kids' one. We'd do the same for Jim O'Malley.  It had nothing to do with the ethnic background of who said it, it's the manner of which its said. It was the veracity, confidence, and this interview and she just came out of a fire and she's speaking her mind -- it's awesome."

Point Street Dueling Pianos
National Context

"Many laugh when they watch the Charles Ramsey and Sweet Brown interviews, but the joke is really quite sad," wrote Reverend Charles E. Williams for the Huffington Post in 2013." It is unfortunate that people laugh because of what they perceive as ignorance that may become their amusement, while overlooking the detail and precision used to make sure the audience they are speaking to understand them on the most elementary level..."


Legacy of Racism in New England

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