December 25, 2024

Ex–Papa Johns CEO John Schnatter Says He’s Been Working to Rid His Vocabulary of the N-Word

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John Schnatter wearing a suit and tie: ) John Schnattner visits "Mornings with Maria" hosted by Maria Bartiromo at Fox Business Network Studios on September 09, 2019 in New York City. © Steven Ferdman/Getty ) John Schnattner visits “Mornings with Maria” hosted by Maria Bartiromo at Fox Business Network Studios on September 09, 2019 in New York City.

John Schnatter, the former CEO of Papa Johns, recently said that he is working on removing the n-word from his vocabulary.

During a recent interview with One America News (OAN), Schnatter spoke about the 2018 incident when he used the racial slur during a conference call.

“We’ve had three goals for the last 20 months,” Schnatter said. “To get rid of this n-word, in my vocabulary and dictionary and everything else.”

In 2018, it was first reported by Forbes that Schnatter used the n-word, which prompted him to resign from his position as chairman of the Papa Johns board.

“Colonel Sanders called Blacks [n-word],” Schnatter said during the conference call while discussing NFL players kneeling for the national anthem.

He issued an apology shortly after saying, “News reports attributing the use of inappropriate and hurtful language to me during a media training session regarding race are true.”

“Regardless of the context, I apologize. Simply stated, racism has no place in our society,” Schnatter said.

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Shortly after his comments during the conference call, Schnatter spoke to KRON 4 news in San Francisco and noted that he did not use the word as a racial slur.

“It wasn’t a slur. It was a session on strategy and media planning and training and I repeated something that somebody else said and said we’re not going to say that,” he said during the interview. “We don’t use that kind of language and vocabulary. And sure it got taken out of context and sure it got twisted, but that doesn’t matter. I hurt people’s feelings. That’s what matters here. And for that I’m sorry.”

In December 2020, Schnatter’s lawyers released an investigate report into the former CEO’s 2018 comments, claiming that he did not “use the word as a racial slur nor was it directed at any person or group.”

“The news media falsely and repeatedly reported allegations of racial bias involving John Schnatter, ignoring and failing to report critical exculpatory facts relating to both incidents,”the report said. “Our investigation determined that Mr. Schnatter was quoting someone else’s use of the word to emphasize that he felt a double standard had been applied against him.”

During his interview with OAN, Schnatter was asked how he felt shortly after seeing news headlines discussing his use of the n-word, to which he responded by saying that he was in a “state of shock.”

“Unbelievable,” he added. “I couldn’t understand it. You have a public board that paints its chairman, complicit, passive or active, they paint the founder as a racist. They know he’s not a racist.”

“It’s just unbelievable, and I used to lay in bed just going, ‘How did they do this,'” Schnatter said.

Newsweek reached out to Papa Johns and Schnatter for comment but did not receive a response in time for publication.

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