How y’all feel about the problem with Apu?

get these nets

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Burn Hollywood Bollywood Burn

etc_shetty.jpg


 
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Goat poster

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Would you date an Indian woman who doesn't come from a traditional Hindu background?
Don’t matter if they Hindu,Sikh, Muslim, Catholic/Christian ect....

Indian families are just built and operated differently than western families. Especially concerning woman.

No matter how old they are thier parents/elders want and get a say in thier life choices :yeshrug:

Finding a girl not from a family like this is extremely rare.
 

get these nets

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For anybody who catches it when it reairs. In the trailer, there's a segment where the director is talking to Whoopi Goldberg and they show blackface clips from hollywood and he uses the word "minstrel" on camera.
Tell me if he makes ANY reference to Blackface imagery in Bollywood and or negative depictions of Africans in Indian media. If he doesn't mention it and criticize it once, while referencing those things in America's history...he is full of shyt.
 

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For anybody who catches it when it reairs. In the trailer, there's a segment where the director is talking to Whoopi Goldberg and they show blackface clips from hollywood and he uses the word "minstrel" on camera.
Tell me if he makes ANY reference to Blackface imagery in Bollywood and or negative depictions of Africans in Indian media. If he doesn't mention it and criticize it once, while referencing those things in America's history...he is full of shyt.

I'm with you on that.
 

50CentStan

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Indians in america areout of control. if we step back and look at it they're ruining America. can't find a decent doctor cuz 90% are indians, the net neutrality was ruined by an indian, Nickey Haley destroying America in the UN...indian
 

MikeyC

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Brilliant idea for a film.
I doubt that there is any real outrage on the comedian's part, but he's mining THE most popular tv series in American history for this topic.
He might have struck comic gold.


oh....and you knew it was coming ,right
director and his girlfriend
Hari+Kondabolu+WITNESS+25th+Anniversary+Gala+fnv6XuUl4D3l.jpg

He's punching well above his weight
 

Squidward24

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Indians in america areout of control. if we step back and look at it they're ruining America. can't find a decent doctor cuz 90% are indians, the net neutrality was ruined by an indian, Nickey Haley destroying America in the UN...indian
There are literally cacs out there that want black people dead and a cac president that advocates this but you want to worry about Indians in America...
 

The Prince of All Saiyans

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the simpsons addressed outdated racist humor with this one too
giphy.gif


I still don't even understand what 'ah,so' means

bonus:
giphy.gif
 

Mike the Executioner

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This guy named Mike Amato has done reviews of every single Simpsons episode on his blog. I thought his take on the whole thing was nice. :jbhmm:

"I think this entire controversy is exemplary of a large issue, in that The Simpsons as a show is completely anachronistic in our present day. The show was originally created as a response to bland, limp-wristed sitcoms of the 1980s, featuring a classic Americana 1950s-style nuclear family. Its rude and outlandish characters and biting social satire certainly stood out in a sea of “safe” shows like Full House or Home Improvement. But as time went on, as the show entered the 2000s, then the 2010s (and very soon, the 2020s), the television landscape changed. Culture itself is ever evolving, In addition to this off-kilter show becoming widely respected and accepted (counter-culture becoming culture), it had outlived the very shows it was lampooning in the first place. But rather than grow or change to counter this, or redirect focus and progress, the show retreated backwards, handicapping itself to its pre-established world and Flanderizing everyone in the cast with it.



This is a show that hasn’t budged an inch in over a decade; while we see characters using smartphones and the occasional storyline about a current issue or trend, the characters, the setting, the comedy rhythms, the types of jokes, all completely stagnant and unwavering. It’s a show trapped in time, with no desire to change or attempt to reinvent itself, and you just can’t do that when you’re pushing your thirtieth season. Just look at the show’s complete inaction regarding a post-Mrs. Krabappel Springfield Elementary. Marcia Wallace’s final speaking role was in 2014, and Bart still has yet to receive a new fourth grade teacher. This is a bit of an extreme example, but rather than actually create a new character and explore different dynamics within a major setting of the show, the writers decided just not to bother. It’s easier just to not show a teacher in Bart’s class anymore, or if an adult it needed, throw Skinner and Chalmers in there to do their tired old schtick. Growth is hard, and this is a show that has proven time and time again that it just doesn’t want to bother trying new things, let along rethink old ones.



The character of Apu was created in an entirely different, much, much, much whiter pop culture climate. I mean, The Simpsons premiered a few years following the Short Circuit movies, where no movie producers or executives seemed to have an issue with a white actor donning brownface to play an Indian, while actual Indian actors were extremely hard to come by on mainstream television and film. I feel like Apu has more dimension and nuance to him that elevates him beyond a baseline stereotype, and there are plenty of jokes involving him in the classic seasons that are based in his unique character and not just being a rote stereotype. But, at the end of the day, he’s still a jolly servile Indian convenience store employee voiced by a white guy doing an exaggerated accent; the character is rooted in a seemingly innocent, but still present smidgen of racism. It also certainly didn’t help that over the years, like the rest of the cast, Apu became more of a one-dimensional stock character, and there were plenty of cringe-worthy gags where the only “joke” is him acting like a wacky foreigner, speaking in tongues, dancing a funny Indian dance, and so on and so forth.



The fact of the matter is Apu was always offensive. It certainly wasn’t offensive to the room of white guys who wrote the character, or Hank Azaria who rattled off the thick Indian accent to the guffaws of said writers, or to myself and throngs of other white fans who love the character. But to Hari Kondabalu and multitudes of other Indian-Americans, they don’t agree, and their viewpoints and rationales are valid, and worthy of listening to and understanding. There certainly wasn’t any malice or abusive intent in the creation of Apu, but in a modern context with more unheard voices at the public megaphone being able to speak their piece, he certainly is a character worthy of re-evaluation. Whether or not this storyline was just a stop gap acknowledgement before this gets “dealt with at a later date” as Marge claims, this episode really did feel like the show telling Kondabalu and company to go fukk themselves. His arguments, and the discussions that followed the documentary, all completely dismissed with the reductive rhetoric of saying people nowadays are too overly sensitive and PC. Since the episode aired, Al Jean has retweeted a few reactions from fans applauding their slam on political correctness. “Loved how you guys handled this non-issue,” one viewer complimented. “People just want to cry about everything nowadays b/c it makes them feel like they’re doing something. Don’t ever change!” Well, the show hasn’t changed in over fifteen years, why start now?"

633. No Good Read Goes Unpunished
 

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For anybody who catches it when it reairs. In the trailer, there's a segment where the director is talking to Whoopi Goldberg and they show blackface clips from hollywood and he uses the word "minstrel" on camera.
Tell me if he makes ANY reference to Blackface imagery in Bollywood and or negative depictions of Africans in Indian media. If he doesn't mention it and criticize it once, while referencing those things in America's history...he is full of shyt.
yeah, so i watched it.
seems like an extended skit/sketch from a comedy show...about 4 times as long as it needs to be to get the main points across

Director is a funny guy...even funnier than he is , is the Indian actor who appeared in the last Barbershop film.

Not one reference to blackface or negative depictions of Africans in bollywood or Indian media, so director is indeed full of shyt

I've seen Arab and east Asian documentaries about hollywood stereotyping their people and no mention of anti-African sentiment in Arab literature or Asian media....when both are well documented. Both documentaries made sure to piggyback off of Hollywood and American media caricatures & stereotype of Blacks to make their points though. I knew this Indian American director would dance around the issue as well.

Indians and Indian Americans are WELL represented at the 4-5 universities that all these hollywood comedy writers come from..including Harvard, where most of the Simpsons writers are from. These writers are used to clowning Desis to their faces without being challenged or checked. The director and the people featured in the doc. seem to be more mad at themselves for not checking the bullshyt early in REAL LIFE and "Apu" becomes the target, not the white people who mocked them all these years.
 
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