LeBron James apologises for 'Jewish money' Instagram post
- Published
Basketball star LeBron James has apologised after sharing a lyric about "Jewish money" on social media - saying he thought it was a compliment.
James was called out over the lyric - which comes from a song by US rapper 21 Savage - after he shared it with his 45.8m followers on Instagram.
US journalist Darren Rovell was among those drawing attention to the post, saying it was "offensive".
But James said it was not his intent "to hurt anyone" with Saturday's post.
"Apologies, for sure, if I offended anyone," he told sports channel ESPN, external on Sunday. "That's not why I chose to share that lyric. I always [post lyrics]. That's what I do. I ride in my car, I listen to great music, and that was the byproduct of it.
"So I actually thought it was a compliment, and obviously it wasn't through the lens of a lot of people."
Many of his fans had come out in support of James, who joined the Los Angeles Lakers in July on a four-year deal worth $154m (£116m).
But Rovell took to Instagram himself to detail exactly why it was offensive.
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However, he did praise the star for apologising.
"One of the reasons he's the off-the-court star he is is because he has an impressive emotional intelligence who, considering his time in social media age, has made so few mistakes," Rovell tweeted, external.
But this was not the only controversial comment the 33-year-old sportsman has made in recent days.
He described the owners of American football's NFL as "a bunch of old white men" who "got that slave mentality" during his HBO show The Shop on Friday.
- Published2 July 2018
- Published27 July 2018
- Attribution
- Published2 July 2018