Every year, a handful of Halloween revelers earn infamy and derision for donning offensive, insensitive or downright racist Halloween costumes. Remember last year, when some people chose to dress up as a Boston Bombing victim? How about the classic “Anna Rexia” outfit that mocks those suffering from eating disorders? Or perhaps the most disturbing, this child molestation costume?
Don’t be those people. Here’s our guide on how to avoid the most offensive topical getups of 2014 — and which costumes might be a better bet.
1. Ray Rice
Former Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice was suspended indefinitely from the NFL this year for knocking his then-fiancée Janay Palmer unconscious in an elevator last February. Leaked surveillance footage exposed the dispute and millions of fans watched in horror as a popular football star violently hurt the woman he’d later marry. But that’s not stopping some couples from dressing up as the infamous couple. Photos have begun to surface of different Ray and Janay Rice costumes: One women dressed as Janay is seen with a big, black eye, while a man is seen dragging a life-size blow-up doll along the floor to represent Janay. Finally, here’s a child in “blackface,” also dragging a baby doll by its hair.
Janay Rice responded to one of the costumes, saying “it’s sad, that my suffering amuses others.”
.@TMZ it's sad, that my suffering amuses others
— Janay Rice (@JanayRice) October 22, 2014
2. Adrian Peterson
Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson was indicted last month for a felony charge of injuring a child — he allegedly used a wooden switch to discipline his four-year-old son earlier this year. A doctor reported Peterson to authorities after treating the child’s injuries, according to TMZ. More than four children die daily from child abuse and 3.6 million cases are reported every year in the U.S.
TMZ found a Los Angeles man dressed up as Peterson, wearing a football jersey and carrying a baby doll and a switch. Don’t be that guy.
3. Ebola anything
Sexy Ebola nurse, anyone? Here’s the reality behind such costumes: The deadly virus has killed nearly 5,000 people in Africa, ravaging three countries and threatening the health care workers who treat it. More than 200 have already died trying to help others. In the U.S., a patient who contracted Ebola in Liberia died in a Dallas hospital and two nurses were infected while caring for him. Last week in New York, a U.S. doctor who had treated Ebola patients in Africa was diagnosed with the disease.
If you must adopt something Ebola-related this Halloween, consider a quarantine and stay home.
4. Malaysia Airlines and its very bad year
One Malaysia Airline flight disappeared into the ocean this year and another was shot down in Ukraine. Scores of passengers died in both incidents and hundreds of families are still mourning their losses. Costumes inspired by those tragedies are about as funny as last year’s bloody Asiana Airlines costumes.
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