[Apologizes] Videos

Twitter/@missydepino Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson apologized on Saturday night to the two black men arrested in a Philadelphia store. Videos of the arrest, which went viral, were “very hard to watch,” Johnson said. He said the company’s practices and training led to the “reprehensible outcome” and that the incident “should never have escalated as it did.

Fox News host Shannon Bream offered an on-air apology Tuesday to the Philadelphia Eagles.
In a segment Monday, she suggested footage showed players protesting the national anthem.
She admitted the footage was “unrelated.” The players had actually been kneeling in prayer.
“No team members knelt in protest during the national anthem throughout regular or post-season last year.”
According to SFGate, Bream continued, “We sincerely apologize for the error.”

Starbucks says a manager at one of its stores in Philadelphia has left the company after protests erupted stemming from last week’s arrests of two black men.
The coffee giant has been under fire for racial profiling after the manager called police accusing the pair of trespassing.
A woman who shot a video of last Thursday’s incident said the two men were waiting for a friend without making a purchase, which she added was a common occurrence.
Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson issued an apology for what he called the “reprehensible” arrests and will be meeting with the two men soon.

Philadelphia Police Commissioner Richard Ross apologized Thursday over the controversial April 12 arrests of two black men in a Starbucks. Ross said the department will be releasing a new policy on how to deal with similar situations in the future.

Starbucks says a manager at one of its stores in Philadelphia has left the company after protests erupted stemming from last week’s arrests of two black men.
The coffee giant has been under fire for racial profiling after the manager called police accusing the pair of trespassing.
A woman who shot a video of last Thursday’s incident said the two men were waiting for a friend without making a purchase, which she added was a common occurrence.
Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson issued an apology for what he called the “reprehensible” arrests and will be meeting with the two men soon.

Rashon Nelson and his business partner Donte Robinson were arrested for trespassing at a Philadelphia Starbucks on April 12. The arrest sparked furor around the U.S. over racial profiling. Nelson and Robinson were led away in handcuffs in a video recorded on a white customer’s cellphone. In the week since their arrests, the men have met with Starbucks’ apologetic CEO. On Thursday, they also got an apology from Philadelphia Police Commissioner Richard Ross.

The CEO of Starbucks issued an apology and launched an investigation after two black men were arrested while they were waiting in the store for a friend to arrive.