The rodeo clown who sparked a national outcry when he impersonated President Obama at the Missouri State Fair earlier this month is speaking out for the first time, and insisting his actions had no racial component to them.
In an interview with Kansas City’s KCTV, Tuffy Gessling said that his performance was never meant to be offensive.
“I didn’t do this to do any hating on anyone,” he said. “I did it to be funny. I did it to be a joke.”
But despite his intentions, his performance sparked a significant backlash, including criticism from politicians on both sides of the aisle. He told KCTV he has received death threats as well, and that one woman spit in his face.
He continued to defend his decision to don the mask during the event, arguing that the rodeo industry has been making a mockery of presidents in similar ways for years.
“This bit, this clown bit, has been around for generations, and I didn’t think anything more of it than what we’ve done 15 years ago, 10 years ago, five years ago, when we’ve done it with Bush, and Clinton and Ronald Reagan,” he said.
And he also insisted that there was no racial inspiration to his performance, even though at least one person in the audience thought the event reminded him of a “Klan rally.”
“I never did anything because of anybody’s race,” he said. “I don’t care what color somebody, if they’re blue, white, green, polka-dotted, striped.”
Gessling said he thinks the response he’s received shows his critics lack humor.
“A lot of people have lost their ability to laugh,” he said.
The performer’s take matches that of some Republicans. Iowa Rep. Steve King’s had urged the president–who never commented on the incident–to “relax” over the issue and said it wasn’t “about race.”








