Wasn’t that what you were referencing anyway? (Charlie Hebdo)
That was the joke yeah but I didn’t have the energy to type an explanation. Probably in bad taste also.
Wasn’t that what you were referencing anyway? (Charlie Hebdo)
Never ceases to amaze me how people can get so angry about stuff which doesn't matter
This.
There are things worth getting outraged about but this isn't one. Bit surprised at the OP on this occasion
Why would an actor apologise for ACTING?
I know why, because the mob of snowflakes on Twitter have been after him, couldn’t care less if he wants to apologise but it’s obvious why he wants to apologise, I was reading a thread on Twitter yesterday with people complaining about a straight actor playing a gay character on screen, it’s the definition of acting. I just don’t get it, if someone is right for the part they are right for the part
Yes, what happened to the old THPP - he used to be quite good value?
I agree, there is no way he should have apologised just because a bunch of illiberal do-gooders became angry.
I don't think that is fair. It is a slippery slope we are all on at the moment regarding free speech. It is in danger of severe erosion due to populist campaigns by politically motivated groups.
I don't think that is fair. It is a slippery slope we are all on at the moment regarding free speech. It is in danger of severe erosion due to populist campaigns by politically motivated groups.
But he (and we) can just ignore these activist groups so there is no erosion of free speech
But no one stopped Azaria speaking, no one took The Simpsons off the air, no one "banned" Apu. There has been an apology, Nobody's free speech has been in any way impinged. Unlike, say for instance, the government and police having the power to stop any protest that they fancy on account that it might be a bit noisy.
When it started it simply wasn't seen as "bad" that Apu wasn't played by a South Asian actor, just as the Black and White Minstrel show was accepted at its time. Now these things are regarded as somewhere between awkward and outright racist and you can see why.
Apu was a perfectly legitimate character. Many convenience stores are owned by Indians worldwide and many in America get robbed at gunpoint regularly and have patrons like Homer. But who's to say that, with hindsight, had he been played by an actor of the same ethnicity it would have been more authentic, potentially funnier in a much subtler kind of way and kind of self knowing? In fact - better.
As an alternative I give you Chef. Isaac Hayes was perfectly happy to do gags about the size of his own cock but lost the plot when his religion was criticised,
We share a dislike of racism but don't see racism in the same light. I my view, racism stems from a unwarranted view that one race is superior to another and should therefore enjoy benefits or rights not applicable to the other. I do not share the view that voicing an Indian character by a white man of European extraction is in any way racist if it is not displaying the tendencies I suggest amount to racism. I am pretty sure that Indian TV must occasionally cast Indian actors as Caucasian, that is fine by me and is in no way racist.
The black and white minstrels I would agree on though. I think they represented a perpetuation of the black man as a servant or slave to the white, and I am glad they are gone.
That's me done with Line of Duty then.
I'm outraged that a Scottish actor with a Scottish accent is playing the role of an Englishman.
Enough! Goddammit!
When it started it simply wasn't seen as "bad" that Apu wasn't played by a South Asian actor, just as the Black and White Minstrel show was accepted at its time. Now these things are regarded as somewhere between awkward and outright racist and you can see why.
Apu was a perfectly legitimate character. Many convenience stores are owned by Indians worldwide and many in America get robbed at gunpoint regularly and have patrons like Homer. But who's to say that, with hindsight, had he been played by an actor of the same ethnicity it would have been more authentic, potentially funnier in a much subtler kind of way and kind of self knowing? In fact - better.
As an alternative I give you Chef. Isaac Hayes was perfectly happy to do gags about the size of his own cock but lost the plot when his religion was criticised,