Sean βDiddyβ Combs is a lot of things: business mogul, entertainer, producer, rapper, haver of many names. But, apparently, members of one San Francisco news team arenβt impressed by Diddy, saying that they couldnβt take the multitalented entrepreneur seriously regarding his offer to buy the Carolina Panthers.
Suggested Reading
The train wreck occurred on a KRON-TV sports segment called βThe World According to Darya,β and it was anchor Henry Wofford (who is black, for the record) who started off the round of insults, claiming that he did not consider Combsβ announcement and offer to buy the NFL team to be a serious offer, βjokingβ that Combs seemed high.
βThe guy looks high right there in this video,β Wofford said. βHe looks like he smoked a blunt and drank a 40. Come on, Iβm not taking him seriously.β
Throughout his comments, co-anchor Darya Folsom continuously laughed. And it was Folsom who insinuated at the beginning of the segment that Diddy could not afford the Panthers.
βThe problem isβI checkedβDiddy is only worth $800 million, and the Panthers are valued at $1 billion,β Folsom said.
Because they donβt want Diddy to shine and step into greatness (insert DJ Khaled voice), Wofford added that Diddy should essentially stay in his comfort zone (yes, as thatβs where so much growth happens) and stay in music.
βI donβt even know what Diddy does right now,β Folsom quipped. βWhat does Diddy do?β
βDiddyβs drinking and smoking right now,β Wofford said. βThe man was in another world.β
Hmm, I donβt know, Darya. Diddy is busy being a mogul and definitely being worth more than you, but hey, what does Diddy do?
Needless to say, the backlash online was swift.
And, of course, soon the apology tour began, with Wofford taking to Twitter to insist that it was all a βmisunderstanding.β
The news station itself then issued a formal state from Wofford, who added that his βjokeβ was not meant to βstereotype.β
Apparently, Wofford and team managed to pull up all of Diddyβs accomplishments for the apology and realized who they were dealing with.
βDozens of Diddyβs Twitter followers have accused me of playing on racial stereotypes. That was not my goal. But I understand my comments had that impact and for that I sincerely apologize,β the statement on behalf of Wofford read in part. βDozens of Diddyβs Twitter followers have accused me of playing on racial stereotypes. That was not my goal. But I understand my comments had that impact and for that I sincerely apologize.β
Although it was Wofford who made a majority of the comments that some found to be inappropriate, it didnβt escape Twitterβs sharp eye that Folsomβs apology or acknowledgment of the incident was acutely missing.
Straight From 
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.

