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TV host Trevor Noah rebuked for joking 'Africa' not France won World Cup

TV host Trevor Noah rebuked for joking 'Africa' not France won World Cup







Julien Laurens explains why France’s 2018 World Cup title and the resulting celebration feels more special than Les Bleus’ first title in 1998.





Nineteen-year-old Kylian Mbappe etched his name into football lore in Russia. Here’s how the France prodigy won the FIFA World Cup Best Young Player award.





Former France international Robert Pires said his country mirrored the spirit they showed in 1998 during their World Cup winning campaign.





The ESPN FC team answer your tweets on Kylian Mbappe’s stock at PSG, the 2018 France squad vs. the 1998 World Cup winning side and much more.

PARIS — Trevor Noah, the South African host of a popular U.S. TV show, sparred with the French ambassador in Washington after the comedian joked that Africa, not France, won the World Cup.


The victory of a multicultural French team against Croatia in Sunday’s final in Moscow has reverberated across the globe, being celebrated in France and other places as a triumph for diversity, while it has fanned racist abuse in some corners.


“Africa won the World Cup,” Noah, host of The Daily Show, said in a segment on the late-night television programme this week.



“I get it, they have to say it’s the French team. But look at those guys. You don’t get that tan by hanging out in the south of France, my friends.”


Fifteen of the 23-man French World Cup squad have family origins in Africa ranging from Cameroon to Congo and Mali, although only two of them were born in Africa and moved to France when they were still toddlers.


Noah’s comment provoked angry comments in France — where far-right politicians have long criticised the national team for having too many black players — and a rebuke from the French ambassador to the United States, Gerard Araud.


“By calling them an African team, it seems you are denying their Frenchness. This, even in jest, legitimizes the ideology which claims whiteness as the only definition of being French,” Araud wrote in a letter posted on the French embassy’s Twitter account.


On Wednesday night, Noah fired back at the diplomat.


“When I’m saying ‘African’ I’m not saying it to exclude them from their Frenchness, I’m saying it to include them in my African-ness,” he said, after reading the letter on the show.


Former U.S. President Barack Obama had a different take on the French World Cup victory, saying during a tribute to South Africa’s Nelson Mandela that embracing diversity delivered “practical benefits.”


“And if you doubt that, just ask the French football team that just won the World Cup. Because not all of those folks look like Gauls to me. But they’re French, they’re French,” he added.




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World Cup 2018

Julien Laurens explains why France's 2018 World Cup title and the resulting celebration feels more special than Les Bleus' first title in 1998.
Nineteen-year-old Kylian Mbappe etched his name into football lore in Russia. Here's how the France prodigy won the FIFA World Cup Best...


Julien Laurens explains why France's 2018 World Cup title and the resulting celebration feels more special than Les Bleus' first title in 1998.

Nineteen-year-old Kylian Mbappe etched his name into football lore in Russia. Here's how the France prodigy won the FIFA World Cup Best Young Player award.

Former France international Robert Pires said his country mirrored the spirit they showed in 1998 during their World Cup winning campaign.

The ESPN FC team answer your tweets on Kylian Mbappe's stock at PSG, the 2018 France squad vs. the 1998 World Cup winning side and much more.

PARIS -- Trevor Noah, the South African host of a popular U.S. TV show, sparred with the French ambassador in Washington after the comedian joked that Africa, not France, won the World Cup.


The victory of a multicultural French team against Croatia in Sunday's final in Moscow has reverberated across the globe, being celebrated in France and other places as a triumph for diversity, while it has fanned racist abuse in some corners.


"Africa won the World Cup," Noah, host of The Daily Show, said in a segment on the late-night television programme this week.





"I get it, they have to say it's the French team. But look at those guys. You don't get that tan by hanging out in the south of France, my friends."


Fifteen of the 23-man French World Cup squad have family origins in Africa ranging from Cameroon to Congo and Mali, although only two of them were born in Africa and moved to France when they were still toddlers.


Noah's comment provoked angry comments in France -- where far-right politicians have long criticised the national team for having too many black players -- and a rebuke from the French ambassador to the United States, Gerard Araud.


"By calling them an African team, it seems you are denying their Frenchness. This, even in jest, legitimizes the ideology which claims whiteness as the only definition of being French," Araud wrote in a letter posted on the French embassy's Twitter account.



On Wednesday night, Noah fired back at the diplomat.


"When I'm saying 'African' I'm not saying it to exclude them from their Frenchness, I'm saying it to include them in my African-ness," he said, after reading the letter on the show.


Former U.S. President Barack Obama had a different take on the French World Cup victory, saying during a tribute to South Africa's Nelson Mandela that embracing diversity delivered "practical benefits."


"And if you doubt that, just ask the French football team that just won the World Cup. Because not all of those folks look like Gauls to me. But they're French, they're French," he added.


publish_date http://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i/?img=/media/motion/2018/0716/int_180716_INET_FC_LAURENS_ON_WHAT_WC_MEANS_TO_FRA1016/int_180716_INET_FC_LAURENS_ON_WHAT_WC_MEANS_TO_FRA1016.jpg&w=738&site=espnfc

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