At least you can say the Roseanne reboot lasted longer than most members of the Trump administration. Only a couple of months after the premiere aired to one of the biggest TV audiences in years, the revived sitcom has been cancelled, following racist tweets by its eponymous star.

Roseanne cancelled: ABC scraps sitcom after star's 'abhorrent' tweets Read more

When the reboot of Roseanne was announced, most wrote it off as 90s nostalgia by a TV industry out of fresh ideas. But it was quickly claimed as a political victory by conservatives who saw the show’s portrayal of white working-class Trump-supporting America as a form of mainstream validation. Roseanne is far more than just a sitcom for a lot of Trump supporters – the show, along with its controversial star, is a symbol of what they stand for. Its cancellation comes as a blow to conservatives who had felt vindicated by the show’s huge viewing figures.

Some conservatives acknowledged that Roseanne’s tweets were indefensible. Tomi Lahren, a high-profile commentator who has previously compared the Black Lives Matter movement to the KKK, tweeted that: “What Roseanne said was wrong. I’m sure she knows that. She made a mistake. I don’t know why fellow conservatives are playing mental gymnastics trying to justify it. Come on. Wrong is wrong.”

But many vocal rightwing personalities were quick to rush to Roseanne’s defense, often employing, as Lahren acknowledged, a variety of mental gymnastics to argue that the comedian’s tweets weren’t racist.

Singer Ted Nugent, said: “So Roseanne referencing a movie title is racist. Lying dishonest soulless freaks from Planet of the Apes.”

Barr’s tweet had said the former Obama White House adviser Valerie Jarrett was the “baby” of “Muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes”.

Nugent’s denial of the racist connotations of comparing an African American woman to an ape was common among avowed Trump supporters. Bill Mitchell, one of Trump’s most prolific supporters on social media, tweeted that, in the Planet of the Apes, the apes were superior and so comparing Jarrett to an ape was not racist. Mitchell deleted the tweet shortly after posting it.

The assertion that Roseanne’s tweets were not racist were also accompanied by cries of political correctness gone mad. Mark Dice, a rightwing conspiracy theorist with 317,000 Twitter followers snarked: “Time to ban monkey bars from all school playgrounds, because they’re ‘racist’ too, I guess. RE: Roseanne fired by ABC.”

During a Fox News panel, Noelle Nikpour, a Republican strategist, said the comedian was fired because “we live in a politically correct world right now”. And Alex Jones, who is currently being sued for spreading a conspiracy theory that Sandy Hook was a hoax, railed against the “THOUGHT POLICE”.

Alex Jones (@RealAlexJones) Hi @therealroseanne, it’s time for you to strike back against these THOUGHT POLICE and really shake them up! You’ve been on the show before and it’s time for you to come back on! #Roseanne

In the past 24 hours Barr had also tweeted the false rumour that Chelsea Clinton is married to a relative of George Soros. Soros has become a favourite villain of the alt-right, and one that often inspires antisemitic dogwhistle tactics. “This is what happens when you speak out against the mainstream media and George Soros. They attack you from every corner trying to destroy your life,” tweeted Peter Imanuelsen, a Swedish commentator. Imanuelsen previously said of the shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando: “Sinning gay people at a gay club got killed ‘For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life’, according to a thread on his Twitter timeline, and denied that the Holocaust happened.

Lauren Rose, a self-proclaimed white nationalist with a large following, insinuated that Roseanne was only called a racist after her tweet about George Soros because of “an obvious smear job for challenging the authority of the media”.



PeterSweden (@PeterSweden7) BREAKING: ABC has said that they are cancelling @therealroseanne show.



This is what happens when you speak out against the mainstream media and George Soros.



They attack you from every corner trying to destroy your life.

Ali Alexander, who has a large following among the right, charged the media with hypocrisy. Referring to Wanda Sykes’ 2016 stand-up show in which she said “we elected an orangutan to run the country”, he tweeted that Sykes had “literally called Donald Trump a ‘orange orangutan.’ No media are asking questions. No statements from ABC.”

The rise and fall of Roseanne: how TV's biggest show fell apart Read more

Sykes, who was a writer on the show, announced she would not be returning for another season after Roseanne posted her tweet but before ABC had announced the show was being cancelled.

A picture of Bill Maher comparing Trump to an orange orangutan was also widely circulated, and a cry of “double standards” was repeated more than any other – despite the long history of using rhetoric around apes to dehumanise black people.

PeterSweden (@PeterSweden7) So I assume that @HBO is going to fire Bill Maher now, or is there double standards in the media industry🤔 pic.twitter.com/JknLS8iX0z

Ali Alexander (@ali) .@iamwandasykes literally called Donald Trump a “orange orangutan.”



No media are asking questions.



No statements from ABC.



Roseanne did not call VJ an “ape” as the media is misreporting.



I’m so disgusted. https://t.co/Oz0hFFoBWR

Trump himself is a big fan of Roseanne, and called the comedian to personally congratulate her on the show’s “huge ratings” after the first episode aired.

• This article was amended on 3 June 2018 following a complaint from Peter Imanuelsen regarding a claim made about him.