BAFTAs sorry about "structural weaknesses" that enabled Tourette's outburst
The BAFTAs have apologized for the “structural weaknesses” that led to a public airing of Tourette’s activist John Davidson’s outburst in February. The weaknesses include seating Davidson next to a microphone during the event and failing to censor his screaming the N-word as Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo presented on stage, despite a tape delay, while cutting homophobic language and calls to “free Palestine” from its broadcast. Per The Hollywood Reporter, the BAFTAs commissioned an independent review by RISE Associates, a consultancy that works to “create the conditions for positive social change,” which found the weaknesses but no evidence of “malicious intent.”