Australia’s NRL fan cardboard cut-out scheme turns sour after use of Hitler and mass murderer Harold Shipman
What started out as a fun and
inclusive initiative has turned sour after the NRL’s scheme to put cardboard
cut-outs of fans in stadiums was hijacked.
Over the weekend a photograph of
mass murderer Harold Shipman made an appearance in the stands, then a TV sketch
featured an image of Adolf Hitler, prompting furious criticism from Australia’s
Jewish community.
The broadcaster and the show’s host
subsequently apologised, while the NRL said it would review its screening
process.
The Fan in the Stand scheme, an
effort to keep fans involved in the game while not allowed to watch their teams
live, was rolled out for the first time as the 2020 season resumed last week in
empty stadiums after a 10-week break due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Most of the approximately 4,000
supporters who took part in the scheme did so in good faith, uploading images
of themselves for a fee of $22 plus GST, which were then printed out on 100%
recyclable material and placed in the stands.
But other likenesses have appeared
alongside genuine fans, including an image of Shipman, Britain’s most prolific
serial killer, which was spotted during the Panthers’ clash with the Knights in
Campbelltown on Sunday afternoon.
Shipman was found guilty in 2000 of
murdering 15 of his patients by lethal injection, and while he may not be as
infamous in Australia as he is in the UK, the inclusion of his likeness raised
questions over the screening procedure used by the NRL in its scheme.
We are reviewing the vetting process
for Fan in the Stand,” an NRL spokesman said. “The weekend was a trial run and
trials are designed to iron out issues.”
The sighting of Shipman followed
that of a cut-out of Dominic Cummings, the under-fire advisor to British prime
minister Boris Johnson, which was seen at the competition’s first game since
the shutdown on Thursday night.
Some fans have uploaded photos of
themselves in fancy dress, or sporting an array of headgear to go with the
jerseys of their team. Several dogs have even made appearances over the course
of the third round.
Matty Johns, on his eponymous Fox
Sports show that aired on Sunday night, sought to join the fun but the
ill-judged insertion of an image of Hitler into a cardboard crowd scene caused
widespread offence before the former player and his employer issued apologies.
“The segment on my Fox League show
on Sunday in which we showed an image of Hitler in crowd cut-outs was in poor
taste and completely inappropriate,” Johns said.
“I know Fox Sports has apologised
but I need to personally step up to this. I know how raw and devastating those
events remain for so many people and families.
“I acknowledge it was wrong and I
apologise to our viewers and to everyone in the community who is rightly
concerned and offended by the segment. I’ve reached out and spoken directly to
Vic Alhadeff at the Jewish Board of Deputies this morning to apologise to the
Jewish community and I’ll be apologising on air to all our viewers on Thursday
night’s show.”
The sketch was widely criticised for
using Hitler to normalise Nazism and desensitise the public to their crimes.
“I appreciate the show is meant to entertain
and that no offence was intended but it is important to understand that such
stunts have a very real impact,” the co-CEO of the Executive Council of
Australian Jewry, Alex Ryvchin, told Guardian Australia.
“Broadcasters and public figures set
trends of humour and behaviour and I would hope Fox Sports and the hosts come
to realise that what they no doubt thought was a harmless joke has the
potential to do real harm.”
The Anti Defamation Commission,
Australia’s leading civil rights organisation, confirmed it had received
numerous complaints about the sketch, which “simply went too far”.
“This is bad taste and
trivialisation of mass murder taken to the extreme,” said the organisation’s
chairman, Dvir Abramovich. “Using Hitler to elicit a laugh is inexcusable,
degrades the memory of those who perished in the Holocaust, and is hurtful to
survivors and their children.
“This was a disturbing abdication of
judgment and a troubling lack of sensitivity.”
Fox Sports said it was reviewing the
circumstances of the segment and “examining the action we need to ensure those
involved understand it is not acceptable”.
“Fox Sports is very concerned by an incident
involving an inappropriate image shown as part of a segment discussing NRL
crowd cut-outs,” a spokesperson said. “We sincerely apologise for the offence
the image has caused.”
The cardboard-fan scheme was
tentatively rolled out for last week’s third round of the season, with plans to
ramp up marketing planned ahead of this week’s round four, at which point the
activation will be available at all grounds.
At the time of the launch, the NRL
said the initiative was “designed to ensure NRL members and fans’ presence are
still felt inside the stadium, on-screen and online until the crowds can
return”.




