Does Serena Williams deserve to be criticized for 'Crip Walking'?

Williams celebrates her first Olympic gold medal with a once-controversial gang dance, eliciting a backlash from certain (arguably racist) quarters of the media

Serena Williams cheers after winning the women's singles gold-medal match
(Image credit: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

This week, Serena Williams became only the second woman to achieve a career Golden Slam, adding an Olympic gold medal to her victories in tennis' four Grand Slam tournaments. After throttling Maria Sharapova, 6-0, 6-1, Williams busted out into a brief jig on Wimbledon's Centre Court, to the delight of her sister Venus in the stands. (See the video below.) When it transpired that Williams had been dancing the "Crip Walk," made famous in the 1970s by the violent Crip gang in Compton, Calif., a backlash kicked in, with many sports writers saying the Crip Walk has no place on Wimbledon's hallowed grounds. But Williams, a native of Compton herself, said the dance had no political or cultural subtext. "I didn't know what else to do," she said. "I was so happy, the next thing I know I started dancing and moving." Does Williams deserve to be criticized?

Yes. Her dance was the height of disrespect: Williams "deserved to be criticized and she should've immediately apologized," says Jason Whitlock at Fox Sports. What she did "was akin to cracking a tasteless, X-rated joke inside a church." As a black woman, Williams "has never been given her proper respect at Wimbledon," and the Crip Walk was her "F-U revenge" to "give the snobs at Wimbledon a taste of the Compton girl they fear." The dance was "immature and classless," and she "deserved to be called out."

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