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'Work It' Controversy: Actor Amaury Nolasco Tries To Explain ABC Sitcom's Puerto Rican Diss Amid Debate About Island's Drug Scourge

Nolasco

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 01/ 9/2012 8:59 am Updated: 01/12/2012 6:26 pm

Puerto Rican actor Amaury Nolasco says via Twitter that his line suggesting that Puerto Ricans are "great at selling drugs" on the ABC sitcom "Work It" should be seen in a comedic context and that he's always tried to "uphold the positive image of my beautiful island and our people."

"Seems like a few of you felt uncomfortable with a line my character said on #Workit," he wrote Wednesday. "I understand your feelings. The show is a comedy and is meant to be viewed in that context. Soy Boricua de pura sepa. I am proud of our culture and I've always strived to uphold the positive image of my beautiful island and our people in both my career and personal lives. Pa'lante mi gente."

When the much-maligned "Work It" aired its second episode Tuesday night, many people wondered which segment of the show's audience would turn away offended.

In its inauspicious debut a week ago, a character played by Nolasco matter-of-factly uttered the cringe-worthy line, "I'm Puerto Rican... I'd be great at selling drugs."

The supposed joke backfired, setting off a firestorm of criticism on Facebook and Twitter and even a prime-time demonstration by about two dozen people on Wednesday outside ABC studios in Manhattan.

The controversial line has prompted a bit of soul searching for an island devastated by drug-related violence. Puerto Rico's dirty little secret is neither little nor secret any more.

Still, some protesters outside ABC carried signs with the Puerto Rican flag and chanted, "I am Puerto Rican and not a drug dealer."

A pair of Puerto Rican members of Congress, Jose Serrano and Nydia Velasquez, issued statements condemning the show and demanding a network apology.

"Puerto Ricans deserve far more respect than to be portrayed in this light in prime time," Serrano said.

While ABC has not commented on the criticism, this poor attempt at humor at the expense of Puerto Ricans is also unleashing a debate among some entertainers from the island about the ravages of drug trafficking and violence.

"There are more important things to do in this country," Puerto Rican actor Noland Otero wrote on Facebook, according to Spanish-language newspaper Primera Hora. "Rather than asking fellow actor Amaury Nolasco to apologize for something that is a reality for some or many... I believe that no one is in a position to make demands when we do nothing for no one."

It is no secret that Puerto Rico's government has proven ineffective against the drug scourge. Last year was the most violent in the island's recent history with 1,136 murders. Puerto Rico, located on the busy and lucrative drug smuggling corridor from South America to the mainland United States, has a per capita murder rate almost double that of drug-plagued Mexico.

The 3,515-square-mile island has an average of three violent deaths per day. According to U.N. figures for 2008, the island averaged 20.3 murders per 100,000 residents. Mexico, by comparison, had 11.5 murders per 100,000 residents in that same year. And the documented corruption of the island's police force corruption has even lead to fears of it becoming a 'narco state.'

The reality painted by these disturbing figures should be a focus of debate among Puerto Ricans, said Mariana Vicente, Miss Universe Puerto Rico 2010, in defense of Nolasco.

"We are not in a position to demand that the media guard our reputation when in our country we don't even respect ourselves, brutally killing people, firing bullets in the air and so much violence in the home," she told Primera Hora. "Let's start out by caring for ourselves and demonstrating the contrary to the rest of the world."

Vicente added, "It seems hypocritical that we become indignant over things like this when that's exactly the situation that exists in our country."

Initially, Nolasco did not comment on the uproar.

"Trust me, when I say it gets even better," he said on Twitter, referring to the show after the first episode. "I promise!"

Stay tuned. Or maybe not.





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Puerto Rican actor Amaury Nolasco says via Twitter that his line suggesting that Puerto Ricans are "great at selling drugs" on the ABC sitcom "Work It" should be seen in a comedic context and that he'...
Puerto Rican actor Amaury Nolasco says via Twitter that his line suggesting that Puerto Ricans are "great at selling drugs" on the ABC sitcom "Work It" should be seen in a comedic context and that he'...
 
 
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01:09 PM on 01/25/2012
Really? PR's selling drugs? That's utter nonsense. I've never heard of such a thing! Impossible! PR's would never do such a thing.
Regardless of whether you like or dislike the statement; I know way too many PR's who make jokes about other poeple's race, their country and cultures, food, music, etc. Stop being hypocrites! If you cannot laugh at yourself, or you cannot take a joke, then you have absolutely NO right to laugh or make fun of anybody else, and I know you do!
11:59 AM on 01/14/2012
Nolasco, the almighty dollar can quickly erode the pride mentality you speak of for that beautiful little Island...Borinque. Your comment whether one of comedic as you put it, left a sour taste in my mouth and I am certain, in the mouths of the throngs living here in the mainland and Puerto Rico alike. We have enough problems dealing with the reality of what the drug infusion to the little Island has created without having such comments inflame it even more.
11:09 AM on 01/13/2012
Is everyone really this stupid. This is a TELEVISION show. Its MAKE BELIEVE! This isn't a documentary on Puerto Rico. If you don't like a line in a comedy show then watch something else.
02:18 AM on 01/12/2012
Hi, My name is Ricardo Alvarado...I'm a Puerto Rican performing artist residing in Spanish Harlem New York City and I am NOT a drug dealer, nor do drugs for that matter. As far as Amaury's comments on twitter, not once in his statement did he say sorry for the deliverance of that line...it was inappropriate & uncalled for. Some of us just didn't feel a little uncomfortable about Amaury's character in "Work It"...we felt sold out & portrayed in a negative light; extremely hurtful to many.You can talk about how beautiful your Island is and your people, but your action speaks louder than words. The writer was wrong to work in the line, ABC was wrong to allow it to air and Amaury, was wrong to deliver the line & he needs to man up to that....so should Mr. Lee over at ABC. They need to take full responsibility, stop being so insensitive & step up the damage control. They can start by admitting they were wrong & releasing a public apology, as they should; it's the right thing to do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carmenalex
!Mamá caliente humanista!
11:35 AM on 01/13/2012
I'm sorry, but as a fellow Boricua actually living in Puerto Rico, I am not offended at all. Comedy and Satire reflect the world we are living in. We cannot "tapar el cielo con la mano" and pretend and ONLY say Oh my island is beautiful, the people are beautiful...because that is simply not the full reality of my beloved island. We have a governor that layed off thousands of people, private sector did not absorb them so we have a whopping unemployment problem. There was a record number of murders, I spend new years in my Mother in laws and sleep over because we are afraid of Vista Hermosa thats nearby and all the shots fired in the air. (Lost bullets killed this year..again) A person got shot and killed in the middle of the morning next to a Walgreens I've visited for years, the mall isn't even safe, someone was shot and killed in broad daylight in San Patricio Mall food court (I take my daughter there to go to the movies for Pete's Sake! ) There are very ugly things happening here, and instead of being all offended by a joke, we should examine WHY he made that joke, and fight to do something about it, to make a change in my island, that I dearly love, Don't be offended by the joke, be offended that we kill each other at a rate now thats never been seen before.
01:00 PM on 01/14/2012
Carmen.......jokes of this nature inflame the situation even more. It provides a "Carte Blanche" for those hoods creating the problem in the little Island. It does not help matters at all. One should refrain from degrading our culture even through jokes....my opinion.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PuertoRicanprincess
blah, blah, blah
06:22 PM on 01/11/2012
sorry *truth*
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PuertoRicanprincess
blah, blah, blah
06:22 PM on 01/11/2012
Did some Puerto Ricans feel bad? yes Did he lie? NOT AT ALL. it's the true but in like every country on earth, there are drugs, people kill for drugs, there is Colombia, Mexico, Honduras, Dominican Republic, that was his job, to say that line, he probably wasn't too happy about it, but he didn't write the scripts.
09:07 AM on 01/11/2012
The problem with the remark on the sitcom is that it paints all Puerto Ricans in a certain manner. Additionally, there are as many Puerto Ricans that live off the island that live on it (and the vast majority are not drug dealers). Your article seems to make it okay for these types of stereotypical remarks to be made on Prime Time TV. You back that up by including crime statistics. I guess this exonerates ABC from call us all drug dealers. What's next: "I'm Arab, of course I can build a bomb." Shame on you and the author of this article. ABC should apologize and refrain from such insensitive writing in the future.
09:37 AM on 01/11/2012
Well said.
mira chancleta
No ball-balancing, clapping, belching seals!
04:09 PM on 01/11/2012
...or you can even go so far as to say...

"Look at my Made-in-Korea taparrabo, so that means I'm a Taino"
02:43 PM on 01/10/2012
Well, it seems we have a lot of experts of what is happening in the island, even when they are not living in it.
mira chancleta
No ball-balancing, clapping, belching seals!
04:14 PM on 01/11/2012
Oh really?

Could it be because since MANY of have lived in various parts of the planet (including the US Mainland) this experiential qualifier, gleaned OUTSIDE of the the Insular mentality of the Island, just might have a bit more "insight" into how Hollywood stereo-types and the stupidity that produces them, actually works?
10:49 AM on 01/10/2012
I bet you anything if it would have been a Anti- Semitic joke it would have been a different situation - Double standards..
01:48 PM on 01/10/2012
Crap - if it was an anti-semitic joke to that level it would not be ignored. you know that. If it made light of jews being cheap or other horrible sterotypes it would not be taken lightly.
05:03 PM on 01/10/2012
Guess youve never seen Will & Grace.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nuyorican21
MALDEF Law Clerk
10:22 AM on 01/10/2012
.....no more college football, NFL wild card weekend over...hmm...slow news day
09:44 AM on 01/10/2012
Amaury Nolasco should be ashamed of himself!
mira chancleta
No ball-balancing, clapping, belching seals!
04:16 PM on 01/11/2012
his new name in our house..."A Mau-Mau"
que buscon vendido...
08:44 AM on 01/10/2012
we P.Rican are know for making noise, not for taking action.
mira chancleta
No ball-balancing, clapping, belching seals!
09:40 AM on 01/10/2012
...it depends on how you define noise
08:01 AM on 01/10/2012
I was ready to post my opinion about this article but after read hernan 1333 posting, I concur 100% with his point of view..

"Ray Sanchez...­there is no excuse for this comment, period. Drawing generaliza­tions and somehow trying to defend it because PR has a drug problem is akin to saying that all Mexicans, Colombians­, and Cubans are members of drug cartels. The issue is not whether there are drug problems, that is a no brainer, the issue is whether it is appropriat­e to draw a generaliza­tion i.e. "I'm PR" or for that matter Colombian (like in the movie "Colombian­a") or Mexican or Cuban and "I am good at selling drugs." Perpetuati­ng a stereoypte makes good Hollywood but terrible social policy for members of Hispanic communitie­s who deal with these stereotype­s."
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Angie Daniels
Obama-Biden 2012!
01:02 AM on 01/10/2012
This show sucks. They'll get cancelled mid season and we'll be done with it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nypapajoe
10:26 PM on 01/09/2012
Boycott the alleged comedy show!