New York governor Andrew Cuomo says the n-word during live radio interview
New York governor Andrew Cuomo used the n-word during a live radio interview while discussing discrimination against people of Italian origin.
Referring to an article in the New York Times, the Democrat told WAMC host Alan Chartrock: “Going back to the Italian Americans because now you have me.
"They used an expression that southern Italians, Sicilians – I’m half Sicilian - were called quote-unquote, and pardon my language, but I’m just quoting The Times, n****r wops.
“N-word wops as a derogatory comment.
“When I said that ‘wop’ was a derogatory comment, that was when the Times Union told me, no, you should look in Wikipedia, ‘wop’ really meant a dandy.”
Laughing, he added: “I'm sure that's what they were saying to me back in Queens - ‘You're a dandy’, when they looked at me with scorn and gave me a hand gesture and called me wop. So that's the New York Times."
In August the governor’s younger brother, CNN anchor Chris Cuomo, was filmed threatening a man who had called him Fredo – a reference to a weak and incompetent character in The Godfather films.
In the video Cuomo claims that ‘Fredo’ is “like the n-word” for people of Italian descent.