Matt Damon admits he stopped using a homophobic slur

Matt Damon stopped using the homophobic slur ‘f*****’ only ‘months’ ago… after his daughter told him it was not OK: ‘She wrote a beautiful treatise on how that word is dangerous’

  • Matt Damon made headlines over the weekend when he said he only recently stopped using the homophobic slur f***** recently
  • The actor said the word was ‘commonly used’ when he was a kid although it had ‘a different application’ than is used now
  • He added that he used the word in a joke to her daughters, and one of them wrote ‘a beautiful treatise’ about how the word is ‘dangerous’
  • The Good Will Hunting star admitted he ‘retired’ using the word, though it’s unclear which of his daughters wrote the treatise
  • Damon has three daughters, Isabella, 15, Gia, 12 and Stella, 10, with wife Luciana Barroso

Matt Damon admitted that he used to use a homophobic slur f****t.

But when one of his daughters urged him to stop, explaining it was offensive, he decided to hang it up, the Last Duel shared this weekend.

‘The word that my daughter calls the ‘f-slur for a homosexual’ was commonly used when I was a kid, with a different application,’ the 50-year-old told The Sunday Times.

Done with that word: Matt Damon admitted that he used to use a homophobic slur once in a while. But when one of his daughters urged him to stop, explaining it was offensive, he decided to hang it up, the Last Duel shared this weekend. Seen July 8 in Cannes

Done with that word: Matt Damon admitted that he used to use a homophobic slur once in a while. But when one of his daughters urged him to stop, explaining it was offensive, he decided to hang it up, the Last Duel shared this weekend. Seen July 8 in Cannes

Done with that word: Matt Damon admitted that he used to use a homophobic slur once in a while. But when one of his daughters urged him to stop, explaining it was offensive, he decided to hang it up, the Last Duel shared this weekend. Seen July 8 in Cannes

He made the changed only in recent months.  

‘The word that my daughter calls the ‘f-slur for a homosexual’ was commonly used when I was a kid, with a different application,’ he began as he sat down with the publication to promote his film Stillwater.

When he used the slur in front of his kids, they became upset. 

One of them showed she was mad.

‘She left the table. I said, ‘Come on, that’s a joke! I say it in the movie Stuck on You!’ She went to her room and wrote a very long, beautiful treatise on how that word is dangerous. I said, ‘I retire the f-slur!’ I understood,’ said the Bourne Identity star.

The little ones: Matt and his wife Luciana Barroso, 45, have daughters Isabella, 14, Gia, 12, and Stella, 10. She has daughter Alexia Barroso, 22, from a previous relationship with Arbello Barroso

The little ones: Matt and his wife Luciana Barroso, 45, have daughters Isabella, 14, Gia, 12, and Stella, 10. She has daughter Alexia Barroso, 22, from a previous relationship with Arbello Barroso

The little ones: Matt and his wife Luciana Barroso, 45, have daughters Isabella, 14, Gia, 12, and Stella, 10. She has daughter Alexia Barroso, 22, from a previous relationship with Arbello Barroso

Stuck On You in a 2003 comedy with Greg Kinnear.  

Matt and his wife Luciana Barroso, 45, have daughters Isabella, 14, Gia, 12, and Stella, 10.

She has daughter Alexia Barroso, 22, from a previous relationship with Arbello Barroso.

Damon went on to complain about his words being put under a microscope, saying: ‘Twenty years ago, the best way I can put it is that the journalist listened to the music more than the lyrics [of an interview].’

‘Now your lyrics are getting parsed, to pull them out of context and get the best headline possible. Everyone needs clicks. Before it didn’t really matter what I said, because it didn’t make the news. But maybe this shift is a good thing. So I shut the f– up more.’ 

The family: Damon and Barroso enjoy a beach day with their daughters Isabella, Gia and Stella in Byron Bay, Australia

The family: Damon and Barroso enjoy a beach day with their daughters Isabella, Gia and Stella in Byron Bay, Australia

The family: Damon and Barroso enjoy a beach day with their daughters Isabella, Gia and Stella in Byron Bay, Australia

This comes after he said he tries to land a role in every Steven Soderbergh movie.

The actor – who has worked with the filmmaker on the likes of the ‘Ocean’s Trilogy’, 2009 crime comedy ‘The Informant’ and 2013 drama ‘Behind the Candelabra’ – opened up on how his cameo in ‘No Sudden Move’ came about. He told Collider: ‘I try to do every movie that Steven does, I have to try to play at least some part in it. I think we’re up to 10 now.

‘He called me when I was doing The Last Duel and just said he had another actor for that part, but because the movie moved and it pushed because of COVID and everything, it opened up.’

Damon admitted he’d already looked over the script – which he tries to do for all of Soderbergh’s projects – which made it an ‘easy’ decision.

He added: ‘I had already read the script because I usually read what he’s working on out of interest so I just jumped at the chance to parachute in and play that guy.’

A new movie for this vet: Damon is starring as an oil rig worker in Stillwater

A new movie for this vet: Damon is starring as an oil rig worker in Stillwater

A new movie for this vet: Damon is starring as an oil rig worker in Stillwater

His cast mates: Damon, Abigail Breslin and Tom McCarthy attend the Stillwater"New York Premiere on July 26 in New York City

His cast mates: Damon, Abigail Breslin and Tom McCarthy attend the Stillwater"New York Premiere on July 26 in New York City

His cast mates: Damon, Abigail Breslin and Tom McCarthy attend the Stillwater’New York Premiere on July 26 in New York City

There was also a bonus treat of getting to share the screen with two of his favourite performers.

He said: ‘Plus it’s a scene with two of my favourite actors in the world, Don Cheadle and Benicio del Toro, so that was another easy yes.’

Damon also serves as a production with Project Greenlight alongside Chris Moore, Sean Bailey and Ben Affleck, while he and Affleck also created Pearl Street Films together.

Discussing potential projects, he admitted: ‘I don’t have – there’s a few that I’ve had in the wings, but I dunno. I guess I’m waiting for the next one to come my way.’

Advertisement
Read more:

Loading

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow by Email
Pinterest
LinkedIn
Share