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    • Six times

      • The real F. Lee Bailey studiously used the 90s-appropriate noun “African-American,” whereas the fictional F. Lee Bailey uses the word “black,” but the deployment of the N-word lines up almost identically: six times in real life, and six times—including the one dropped by an incredulous viewer—in the FX series.
      www.vanityfair.com › hollywood › 2016
  1. Jul 19, 2017 · Before the Simpson case, Furhman took part in taped interviews with a screenwriter in which he used the N-word 41 times. Judge Lance Ito determined that in all uses, Furhman was using the...

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  3. F Lee Bailey cross examines Mark Furman about the N-Word. O.J. Simpson murder trial. What abou the N word?

    • 10 min
    • 228.5K
    • Simon Hasselhoff
  4. The Fuhrman tapes are 13 hours of taped interviews given by Mark Fuhrman, former detective of the Los Angeles Police Department, to writer Laura McKinny between 1985 and 1994.

  5. Jul 19, 2017 · In interviews with screenwriter McKinny, Furhman used the N-word 41 times in what Judge Lance Ito determined to be “a disparaging manner.”

  6. Taped comments by former Los Angeles Police Detective Mark Fuhrman, including numerous racial slurs, took center stage at the O.J. Simpson murder trial.

    • 42 min
    • 189.5K
    • CNN
  7. Mar 8, 2016 · As the camera swung wildly back and forth between Fuhrman and Nathan Lane’s F. Lee Bailey the N-word was dropped six times. It seems like an outsize dramatic moment perfectly crafted for the...

  8. Mar 29, 2016 · Between 1985 and 1994, the recordings show Fuhrman used the N-word 41 times and spoke of police brutality against black suspects, suggesting racist motivations regarding the discovery of the...

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