Controversial Serena Williams cartoon didn\'t breach press standards

Controversial Serena Williams cartoon didn't breach press standards

IANS  |  Canberra 

Australia's watchdog on Monday ruled that a widely criticised cartoon showing legend Williams jumping next to a broken and a which she had spat, did not breach press standards.

The ruled that the drawing, published by the Melbourne-based newspaper, was instead capturing Williams' "on-court tantrum" at final "using satire, caricature, exaggeration and humour", reported.

The cartoon by the daily's award-winning cartoonist, Mark Knight, was published shortly after the bad-tempered final, in which Williams had a dispute with the umpire over his allegedly sexist treatment.

The press watchdog received a number of complaints about the image, which drew international condemnation.

The Press Council said the newspaper "was depicting the moment when, in a highly animated tantrum, Williams smashed a racquet and loudly abused the umpire, calling him a thief, a liar and threatening that he would never umpire her matches again".

"(The Herald Sun) said it wanted to capture the on-court tantrum of Williams using satire, caricature, exaggeration and humour, and the cartoon intended to depict her behaviour as childish by showing her spitting a out while she jumps up and down," it added.

The cartoon showed Williams with large, exaggerated lips and nose, while her opponent, Japan's Naomi Osaka, is depicted as a skinny blonde woman, to whom the umpire is saying: "Can't you just let her win?"

When it was first published, the US-based of Black Journalists said the cartoon was "repugnant on many levels", reported.

At the time, said the cartoon "had nothing to do with gender or race".

--IANS

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First Published: Mon, February 25 2019. 11:54 IST