Paula Deen says she’s ‘back in the saddle’

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MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Paula Deen continued maneuvering
for a comeback Sunday, turning a beachside cooking demonstration into a
public apology for the racist comments that decimated her career last
year.
The former Food Network star took the stage to prepare
chicken and dumplings at the South Beach Wine and Food Festival, but
before beginning asked the crowd if they minded if she talked about
something serious for a moment. Without ever explicitly discussing the
allegations or comments she has admitted making, she said she was glad
to be back and that, "I am not a quitter."
"We have come off of a
very hard summer my family and I, my team, my partners," she said to a
cheering crowd of several hundred fans. "But you know, I have heard on
more than one occasion … that I’ve never apologized. So if anybody did
not hear me apologize, I would like to apologize to those who did not
hear me."
Deen’s career has been in shambles following a one-two
punch of public relations disasters. In 2012, she was criticized for
announcing she had both diabetes and a lucrative endorsement deal for a
drug to treat the condition she’d until then hidden.
Then last
summer, during a legal dispute with a former employee who accused her of
racial discrimination and sexual harassment, she acknowledged having
used racial slurs in the past. Most of her endorsement, book and TV
deals fell apart within days.
Deen has mostly stayed out of the
spotlight since then, even avoiding the Food Network’s 20th anniversary
party last October. But lately, she has made it clear she wants back.
Earlier this month, she announced that private investment firm Najafi
Companies is investing $75 million to $100 million to help her make a
comeback.
As part of the deal, she’s launching an umbrella
company, Paula Deen Ventures, that will oversee her restaurants,
cookbooks and product endorsements. And Sunday’s crowd seemed primed for
it all, shouting out to her "You don’t need to apologize!" and "We want
you back, Paula!"
"Ya’ll’s cards and letters that I got, helped me get out of bed every day," she replied.
Midway
through the demo, Food Network star Robert Irvine joined Deen onstage.
Irvine survived his own scandal in in 2008 when the Food Network let him
go over discrepancies in claims he’d made over his work experience. He
eventually returned to the Network, seemingly unblemished.
"This
is a warning to you," Irvine told Deen. "You’ve apologized. You’ve eaten
crow. You’re done. Don’t do it anymore. I’ve been there."
Before a
roaring crowd, Irvine then got down on his hands and knees while Deen
straddled his back and rode him across the stage, a reenactment of a
gimmick they’d done during a previous festival.
"I’m back in the saddle!" she yelled to the crowd.
___
AP Food Editor J.M. Hirsch tweets as @JM_Hirsch and can be emailed at [email protected]
Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights
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