The SAG Awards Are Being Called Out For Having Mark Wahlberg Present An Award To The Cast Of “Everything Everywhere All At Once” Despite The Fact He Once Went To Prison For Assaulting Two Vietnamese Men

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The SAG Awards are facing backlash for the decision to have Mark Wahlberg present an award to the predominantly Asian cast of Everything Everywhere All at Once.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

In case you’ve not caught up yet, last night’s SAG Awards were an incredible success for the cast and creators of Everything Everywhere All at Once, which broke records by becoming the biggest film winner in the ceremony’s 29-year history.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Some of the most notable wins were for the film’s lead stars, including Best Actress for Michelle Yeoh, Best Supporting Actress for Jamie Lee Curits, as well as Best Supporting Actor for Ke Huy Quan — making him the first Asian actor ever to win a SAG Award for an individual performance in a film.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

As was expected, the movie also took home the award for an Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, which was presented on the night by Mark Wahlberg.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

If you’re familiar with the actor, you might already know why viewers were a little confused to see that he, of all people, had been selected to present the award to a predominantly Asian cast.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

For context, Wahlberg has a history of racially motivated attacks, including one instance when he pleaded guilty to felony assault after being charged for attacking two Vietnamese men in Boston.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

On April 8, 1988, a man named Thanh Lam was left unconscious after Wahlberg — who was apparently high on the drug PCP at the time of the incident — approached him on the street and used a 5-foot-long stick to knock him down, calling him a “Vietnam fucking shit,” according to legal filings.

  Scott Eisen / Getty Images For Sony
Scott Eisen / Getty Images For Sony

The same night, Wahlberg approached another Vietnamese man named Hoa Trinh and punched him in the face.

  Gregg Deguire / FilmMagic
Gregg Deguire / FilmMagic

After he was placed under arrest, Wahlberg apparently used racial slurs to describe the two men, purportedly making “unsolicited racial statements about ‘gooks’ and ‘slant-eyed gooks.’”

  Rodin Eckenroth / WireImage
Rodin Eckenroth / WireImage

He was charged with attempted murder, but ultimately pleaded guilty to assault, claiming that he was intoxicated at the time and that the attacks weren’t racially motivated.

  Jon Kopaloff / FilmMagic
Jon Kopaloff / FilmMagic

However, due to a previous civil rights injunction prohibiting him from threatening, assaulting, or intimidating anyone over their race or national origin — which was put in place about after he was charged for harassing, verbally abusing, and throwing rocks at Black children two years prior — he was found to be in contempt of court and, as a result, was sentenced to two years in prison.

  Allen Berezovsky / Getty Images
Allen Berezovsky / Getty Images

Wahlberg only wound up serving 45 days in jail, and in 2014, he applied to seek pardon for the April 1988 attack and have it wiped from his criminal record, saying he has dedicated himself “to becoming a better person and citizen” in the years since.

  Gregg Deguire / FilmMagic
Gregg Deguire / FilmMagic

The appeal was dropped in 2016, and four years later, Wahlberg said in an interview with the Guardian that he has turned his “life around.”

  Robin L Marshall / WireImage
Robin L Marshall / WireImage

“I took it upon myself to own up to my mistakes and go against the grain and not be a part of the gang any more — to say that I was going to go and do my own thing,” he told the outlet, later adding: “I would hope that people would be able to get a second chance in life.”

  Leon Bennett / Getty Images
Leon Bennett / Getty Images

In spite of all this, viewers of the SAG Awards couldn’t help but feel it was a questionable decision to have Wahlberg present the award, with many fans expressing their confusion on Twitter.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

“I gotta say, having Mark Wahlberg, who literally went to jail as a teen for committing a hate crime against a Vietnamese man, present an award to the cast of Everything Everywhere All At Once was certainly a choice,” one person tweeted.

“I feel like if Mark Wahlberg (or his management) wanted his checkered racist past to fade into obscurity, presenting the SAG award to EEEAAO would not have been on the list of gigs to take,” another wrote.

“Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't Mark Wahlberg, the man who presented a SAG Award to the cast of Everything Everywhere All At Once, once go to jail for committing a hate crime against a Vietnamese man. An interesting choice, no?” someone else echoed.

One person described “irony” of the decision, while someone else said it was “extremely sinister.”

Elsewhere, another viewer said that having Wahlberg present the award was “arguably a worse awards show fuck up” than the La La Land/Moonlight Best Picture mix-up at the Oscars in 2017.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

And if people weren’t already mad enough that he was there, it didn’t help that he also fumbled the name of one of the nominated films — mistakenly saying “Women Are Talking” instead of Women Talking.

  Michael Buckner / Variety via Getty Images
Michael Buckner / Variety via Getty Images

Evidently unimpressed with the whole thing, one person tweeted: “not mark wahlberg of all people presenting an award to Everything Everywhere All At Once, a predominantly Asian cast, and saying ‘women are talking’ in the space of 30 seconds.”

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