trickybeck wrote:
Frontman wrote:
And you know what? My two examples I mentioned (Obama and Woods) are yes, as far from the street as you can get. But they are still black/mixed heritage. But just as you dismiss them as not being examples of all black men; I'm saying the same. Two talking robots do not represent an entire culture.
Nor should it. We want in our society to get to the point of judging a man by his actions and his deeds; not by the color of his skin. So I'm saying; two talking robots in a movie?
They have no skin to begin with.
The point is somewhere in there, but you have it so completely backwards, it's baffling.
Yes two robots do not represent an entire culture, which is exactly WHY having your two "black" robots be illiterate idiots who can't speak correctly may be seen as racist by a non-trivial number of people.
And I don't really attribute it to deliberate ill will on the part of the director or actors, it may simply have been a subconcious decision that can be used as an example of something to avoid.
Then if we are to avoid it, we should never ever ever ever show anyone who is slightly perceived as dumb at any time ever; because not only should it not be used as a stereotype of the urban black, but of anyone who isn't intelligent. Not every person from the South for example is married to his sister, uses "Did ya'll jeet yet?" as a sentence if I can revisit the stereotype of stupid whites from the South.
And if you keep avoiding anything slightly offensive to anyone, you'd eventually get films were everyone talks exactly the same, no matter if they are black, white, asian, hispanic, etc. And if you do that, then you'd have something that is completely unrealistic. All of us talk different. I'm a kid who grew up in Bridgeport for half my childhood, the other half in the suburbs. In my everyday language, you hear a bit of my Irish heritage, a bit of my Lithuanian heritage, and a bit of suburban life. I work in a very culturally mixed workplace, where I hear Spanish (which at one point I used everyday, not so much now) and I hear ebonics. At no time do I think that if someone uses a bit of dialect from their background do I think "that guy has to be a stupid black/latino."
Granted, most comedians would be out of a gig; as humor comes at the expense of someone, and to avoid hurting anyone's feelings, there would be no humor. Not every white man sounds "uptight" either like David Chappelle (and going back further, Eddie Murphy) would do in stand up/skits. As someone who is white, I can look at it and go "The performer is having a bit of fun at a white guy's expense, and we don't all sound that way," and think nothing of it.
Back to the movie at hand, Reno Wilson voiced one of the robots, and he's a black actor. So, does he hate being black, or is he a sell out? Or was he just playing a character?
And again, you can find racism anywhere you look, if you get right down to it.
I forget whichever bank has the "no fine print" commercial on both WSCR/ESPN recently, but the whole, "That's fine, it's cool, whatever" while sounding like a black woman could be construed as racist as well, as not every black woman talks like that. Is that offensive? Did it set out to be racist? Or was it just an example of (possibly) a white ad agent trying to market; without understanding how that comes across?