Morgan Freeman On Coverage Of Baltimore Protests: “F*ck The Media!”

Morgan Freeman (Credit: AP/Chris Pizzello)
Morgan Freeman (Credit: AP/​Chris Pizzello)

Seventy-sev­en-year-old Hollywood icon Morgan Freeman has been watch­ing cov­er­age of the protests in Baltimore, and he is far from sat­is­fied with what he’s been see­ing. “Look at MSNBC, Fox News, and CNN,” he told the Daily Beast’s Marlow Stern. “Go between those three. There’s a take, there’s a take, and there’s a take. It’s just com­men­tary. CNN wants to be pure news, but the oth­ers are just com­men­tary. They’re just com­ment­ing on things.”

Fuck the media,” he added. He did acknowl­edge, how­ev­er, that the cov­er­age was bet­ter than Ferguson, because at least “some young reporters” are lis­ten­ing to the com­plaints of the pro­test­ers — pro­test­ers who, in an inter­view with Newsweek’s Zach Schonfeld, Freeman said he supported.

I was watch­ing the news last night,” he said, “and [a pro­test­er] said, ‘You know, when we were out here march­ing peace­ful­ly, nobody was here. And now we start burn­ing the place down, every­body is lis­ten­ing. What do you think we’re gonna do to be heard?”

She’s got a point there,” he added. Freeman con­tin­ued, not­ing that tech­nol­o­gy has it made it pos­si­ble to doc­u­ment “the ter­ror­ism [the black com­mu­ni­ty] suf­fers from the police.”

Because of the tech­nol­o­gy — every­body has a smart­phone — now we can see what the police are doing,” he explained. “We can show the world, ‘Look, this is what hap­pened in that sit­u­a­tion.’ So why are so many peo­ple dying in police cus­tody? And why are they all black? And why are all the police killing them white?”

Freeman added that the most com­mon excuse police have used when involved in fatal shoot­ings is they feared for their safe­ty. “Well, now we know — you feared for your safe­ty while a guy was run­ning away from you, right?”

As he told Stern in the Daily Beast inter­view, “now, at least, you can see his hands were up in the air. ‘What part of your safe­ty were you afraid of?’ The guy was run­ning away, ‘What part of your safe­ty was in danger?’”