Most people wouldn't spit at a policeman, especially not one of the heavily-armed types that roam around airports looking for potential terrorists or potential Brazilin electricians who have outstayed their visas. Most people, having been sentenced by a court to a few hours community service for such an act would keep their head down and their mouth shut. Most people wouldn't keep banging on about being provoked by the copper. Well, Naomi Campbell isn't most people, and we can all thank the Lord for that.
You see, it was all the fault of the police for not showing her enough respect and for failing to realise that Naomi was the only person at Heathrow's newly-opened Terminal 5 whose bags had been misplaced. In fact thinking about it she has been so hard done by that she deserves some award, such as canonisation.
Campbell (who seems to have confused the term 'community service' with 'moaning about how hard the life of a supermodel is') was talking to US news show 'Extra', whose interviewer also deserves some sort of award for managing to keep a straight face in the line of some truly Olympian self-pity.
We all have the right to be upset, but none of us have the right to spit into someone else's face. Unless you're on your way to a funeral obviously; you can take that as read. Let's just hope for the sake of the British Transport Police (and the rest of us within mobile phone-throwing range) that Naomi's relatives and friends remain in the rudest of health for the foreseeable future.
Campbell (who seems to have confused the term 'community service' with 'moaning about how hard the life of a supermodel is') was talking to US news show 'Extra', whose interviewer also deserves some sort of award for managing to keep a straight face in the line of some truly Olympian self-pity.
"If someone calls me a racial slur, I find it very offensive… After paying all that money and you're trying to get to a funeral, which is where I was trying to get to, I thought, 'Well, I think I have the right to be upset right now.'"
We all have the right to be upset, but none of us have the right to spit into someone else's face. Unless you're on your way to a funeral obviously; you can take that as read. Let's just hope for the sake of the British Transport Police (and the rest of us within mobile phone-throwing range) that Naomi's relatives and friends remain in the rudest of health for the foreseeable future.
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