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In other news, Hermes has announced a huge "Going Out of Business" sale.
The comedian Rosie O'Donnell wrote in her blog:
I cannot wait to hear
all
the
details--
one of the most humiliating moments of her life...
oprah
a poor overweight
sexually
abused
troubled black female child
from a broken home--that
oprah
suffered ONE of the most HUMILIATING moments of HER life
at hermes in paris.
hmmmmm.
Orlando Patterson, Harvard's eminent professor of sociology, later asked in The
New York Times, "Oprah may have been denied a prerogative of elite status in our new
gilded age--being waited on in luxury stores after hours--but had she been the victim of
racism?"
Richard Thompson Ford, a law professor at Stanford, answered the question in his
provocative book The Race Card: How Bluffing About Bias Makes Race Relations
Worse: "If the reason for Oprah's humiliation was that the incident at Hermes triggered
memories of her past experiences with racism, then Oprah's race was the reason she felt
humiliated. In that sense, Oprah was humiliated because of her race."
In the early part of her career Oprah maintained she had never experienced
racism. "I transcend race, really," she said in 1986. Yet the following year she told People
she had been refused entrance to a Manhattan boutique. In 1995 she told The Times
Magazine (London) that she had been barred from "one of Chicago's ritziest department
stores." She laughed as she told the writer, "They didn't recognize me because I was
wearing my hair all kind of [bouffant]. I was with my hairdresser, a black man. They
hummed and they hummed and then they said that they'd been robbed the week before by
two black transvestites. 'And we thought they'd come back.' 'Oh, thank you very much,' I
said. 'I'm changing my hair-do.' Then I turned to my hairdresser and said, 'I think we are
experiencing a racial moment....So this is what it's like. Oh, man!' "
Six years later she retold a similar version of that same story, but by 2001 it was a
Madison Avenue boutique that had kept her out. She said she had seen a sweater in the
window and rang to be buzzed in, but the door was not opened. Then she saw two white
women entering the store. So she rang again, but still was not admitted. "I certainly didn't
think, 'This is a racial moment!' " she said. She called from a pay phone to make sure the
store was open. "We started banging on the windows." Nothing. Back in Chicago she
called the store. "This is Oprah Winfrey. I was trying to get in your store the other day
and..." She quoted the manager as saying, "I know you're going to find this hard to
believe, but we were robbed last week by two black transsexuals--and we thought they'd
come back."
Whether these stories were real or rhetorical, Oprah certainly was accustomed to
celebrity treatment from stores that opened their doors after hours so she could shop. In
Chicago, Bloomingdale's had extended this courtesy and even accommodated her
insistence that all nonessential employees be kept off the floor so they would not gawk or
report what she had purchased. (She was irate when the National Enquirer revealed the
Christmas presents she had bought for her employees at the studio and the magazine-fourteen-karat gold and diamond O initial pendants.)
A few days before her season's opening show in September 2005, billed as
"Oprah's 20th Anniversary Season Premiere," her publicist announced that Robert B.
Chavez, the president and CEO of Hermes USA, would be Oprah's guest, stirring
speculation about a monumental slapdown on national television.