Golden Globes organiser drops former president Phil Berk over Black Lives Matter email

The eight-term Hollywood Foreign Press president shared an anti-Black Lives Matter article that described it as a 'hate movement'

BEVERLY HILLS, CA - DECEMBER 14: Hollywood Foreign Press Association president Philip Berk speaks onstage during the 68th Annual Golden Globe Awards nomination announcement held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on December 14, 2010 in Beverly Hills, California.   Kevin Winter/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by KEVIN WINTER / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)
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A former president of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the organisation that hosts the Golden Globes, has been dropped from the group’s board after sending an email that called Black Lives Matter a “hate movement.”

The board said in an email on Tuesday that Philip Berk is no longer a member of the organisation. The decision came hours after NBC — which telecasts the Globes — had condemned Berk's actions and called for his "immediate expulsion".

The show's producer, Dick Clark Productions, also demanded for Berk’s removal.

Berk, an eight-term association president, was under heavy scrutiny after he sent an email Sunday criticising Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors. The South African-born Berk shared an article that called Black Lives Matter a "racist hate movement" and described Cullors as a "self-proclaimed trained Marxist," according to a report from the Los Angeles Times.

The email was sent to HFPA members, staff and the group’s general counsel and chief operating officer.

Berk had been a member of the organisation for more than 40 years.

Shaun Harper, who was hired as a diversity strategist advisor by the HFPA last month, said in a resignation letter that he was initially optimistic when he joined the organisation, but he felt compelled to step down after learning about the group's "deep systemic and reputational challenges."

“I no longer have confidence in our ability to collaboratively deliver the transformational change that the industry and people in it whom I deeply respect are demanding of you," said Harper, who is a professor of racial, gender and LGBTQ issues at the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business.

“My serious, unwavering commitment to the racial and gender equity issues on which I work every day make it impossible for me to continue serving in a consulting capacity with the HFPA," he continued.

In February, the HFPA was criticised for lacking diversity. At the time, the group had 87 members who are journalists, but none are Black, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The organisation has said that an “action plan” was under development to admit Black members.