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Joan Rivers Shocks Audiences by Making Fun of 9-11 Widows

By Jake Easton
 R A D O K N E W S

Posted: May 16, 2003

COMEDIAN JOAN RIVERS, no stranger to controversy, has stunned British audiences by mocking the relatives of firefighters killed in the September 11 terrorist attacks.

During her new stand-up show, Broke and Alone in London, British audiences were shocked to hear Rivers making fun of widows, whose firefighting husbands were killed in the attacks on New York. An audience member says, "She said that they got paid $5 million each, and how disappointed they'd be if they were told, after all, that their husbands had been found alive."

Despite the controversy, Rivers' spokesman says she plans to continue to use the line when she takes her show to America.

Firefighter Association Responds Strongly to Rivers' Tasteless Remarks

HAROLD SCHAITBERGER, General President of the International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF), released this statement to the 252,000 members of the IAFF concerning a "joke" being delivered by comedian Joan Rivers in her new show in London.

International Association of Fire Fighters
IAFF to Joan Rivers: Your Sick Humor is an Insult
by Harold Schaitberger, IAFF General President

May 3, 2002 - Comedian Joan Rivers' attempts to find humor in the catastrophic loss that our members and their loved ones suffered on September 11 is a new low and cannot be tolerated.

For those of you who may have missed the news reports, she has a bit in her current show in England that openly mocks the relatives of our brothers. Her new show, "Broke and Alone in London," makes light of the widows whose husbands were killed in the collapse of the World Trade Center. It's hard to understand, given that she lost 11 friends herself that day.

Despite negative reaction in England, she is vowing to keep the sick joke in her act, and I'm sure she's just waiting for the backlash so she can jump-start her career. Well, here it is.

First, let me be clear to Ms. Rivers that our widows would give anything to have their husbands back. The loss they suffered in an instant was total and profound, and no efforts by anyone can make that pain go away. But, as you have proven, it can be made more painful with a resentful remark or a caustic comment.

Second, these courageous women have received very little in real terms in exchange for what they have lost. The financial burdens of losing a primary breadwinner, feeding, clothing and educating hundreds of fatherless children, and planning for decades of your own life without your loved one are overwhelming. Ms. Rivers should check her facts. The widows and families haven't received anything near $5 million, but even if they had, it would not equal what they have lost.

Third, and last, Ms. Rivers has attacked the very symbols of this proud nation's response to terrorism. If she had been in the Twin Towers on Sept. 11, the New York fire fighters - my members - would have sacrificed anything to get her out alive. They would do the same for her now, even knowing how little she thinks of their devotion to her safety. This is a nation at war, and Ms. Rivers' comments strike at the heart of our unified front against the threats that face us. Maybe it doesn't feel as real in London, but I can tell you it feels real to my 250,000 members protecting North America.

I am sorry that Ms. Rivers has chosen to find humor in our tragic and devastating loss. To the IAFF and to the families of the fire fighters who gave their lives so others might live, it is no joking matter.




Excerpts from the book:
Americans Behaving Badly by Jake Easton

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