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Australian paper defends Serena Williams cartoon: ‘Welcome to PC World’

An Australian newspaper accused of racism for a cartoon that mocked tennis star Serena Williams is defending the artist, releasing a Wednesday cover that reads “Welcome to the PC World.”

Melbourne’s Herald Sun faced backlash after it published a cartoon featuring Williams stomping on her tennis racket after she lost the U.S. Open final to Naomi Osaka over the weekend. 

{mosads}Chair umpire Carlos Ramos issued a code violation to Williams during the march, saying she had received coaching during the match — a point Williams strongly denied.

Williams later broke her racket and shouted at Ramos, which led to a penalty point and a game penalty, two costly penalties as Osaka went on to win the match and the championship. 

Ramos is seen in the background of the comic, asking Williams’s opponent if she can “just let her win.”

“It had nothing to do with gender or race.”

Herald Sun backs Mark Knight’s cartoon on Serena Williams: https://t.co/i1NBGO8xJw pic.twitter.com/BTFONVWHh8

— Herald Sun (@theheraldsun) September 10, 2018

The newspaper defended the cartoonist, Mark Knight, on Tuesday.

“A champion tennis player had a mega tantrum on the world stage, and Mark’s cartoon depicted that,” editor Damon Johnston said. “It had nothing to do with gender or race. this was about a bad sport being mocked.”

Johnston also took to Twitter to release the cover of publication’s Wednesday front page. 

“Welcome to PC World,” the cover reads. “Satire free zone.”

Tomorrow’s @theheraldsun front page tonight #auspol #springst pic.twitter.com/2nuLbKppku

— damon johnston (@damonheraldsun) September 11, 2018

“If the self-appointed censors of Mark Knight get their way on his Serena William cartoon, our new politically correct life will be very dull indeed,” the cover reads.

The front page depicts several comics, including the illustration of Williams, and commentary on other drawings.

“Vetoed: Large hair and lips, too angry,” it reads below the image of Williams.

President Trump is depicted in a red bathrobe, holding an orange cat with a caption that reads, “Suppressed: Stupid hair, nasty eyes, mouth and chins.”

Knight told the newspaper that his cartoon was a reference to Williams’s behavior.

“The cartoon about Serena is about her poor [behavior] on the day, not about race. The world has just gone crazy.”

Several of his colleagues and members of the Australian media have also defended him on Twitter. 

Criticism of Mark Knight’s Serena Williams cartoon shows the world has gone too PC & misunderstands the role of news media cartoons and satire. Poor behaviour in any sport needs to be called out. #media #cartoons #markknight @Knightcartoons @theheraldsun https://t.co/KQFuvIJp0Q pic.twitter.com/sRo3AQ1cJW

— Michael Miller (@mm_newscorpaus) September 10, 2018

World’s gone mad when cartoonist is targeted for saying tennis player spat the dummy-so sick of PC BS as too many confect an issue to be outraged about-that’s what this is about with @Knightcartoons,Mark Knight’s a man of the greatest character-proud he’s in our paper https://t.co/LkvlTejoC9

— Nick Papps (@SundayHSEditor) September 11, 2018