- Joined
- Jan 15, 2006
- Posts
- 122,816
- Reaction score
- 4,046
- Points
- 113
A friend just sent me this:
	
		
	
Comments, please?
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			Comments, please?
To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.

Looks like the same tired old overused played-out stereotypes

USians and their never-ending obsession with race
This video is just lazy 'comedy' really. There's no clever or biting satire in simply presenting a bunch of hackneyed stereotypes. I'm amazed that anybody could be entertained by it. Do people still laugh at Asians eating dogs jokes? Women belonging in the kitchen jokes? Southerners being incestuous jokes? Hasn't everybody heard them all enough times already? Where's the creativity?
I don't think Americans are obsessed with race/racism, just more inclined to talk about it than pretend it doesn't exist the way many other countries do. Then again, even in America where conversations about racial issues are more commonplace, I still see a whole lot of frustration from POC over their issues being hand waved or swept under the rug by people who don't want to acknowledge them.
I don't think Americans are obsessed with race/racism, just more inclined to talk about it than pretend it doesn't exist the way many other countries do.
Looks like the same tired old overused played-out stereotypes
That was the whole point of the song.
This video is just lazy 'comedy' really. There's no clever or biting satire in simply presenting a bunch of hackneyed stereotypes. I'm amazed that anybody could be entertained by it. Do people still laugh at Asians eating dogs jokes? Women belonging in the kitchen jokes? Southerners being incestuous jokes? Hasn't everybody heard them all enough times already? Where's the creativity?
I don't think Americans are obsessed with race/racism, just more inclined to talk about it than pretend it doesn't exist the way many other countries do. Then again, even in America where conversations about racial issues are more commonplace, I still see a whole lot of frustration from POC over their issues being hand waved or swept under the rug by people who don't want to acknowledge them.
