Good Day People of the Coli,
Often in this forum we see people talk about the lack of black people in tv shows, movies etc. Well one young man decided to take a different approach.
So show your support guys put your mouse with your mouth is and watch it
Often in this forum we see people talk about the lack of black people in tv shows, movies etc. Well one young man decided to take a different approach.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/codeswitch...es-there-were-black-people-in-60s-advertisingWhen Mad Men first premiered on AMC in 2007, Xavier Ruffin — a young, African-American graphic designer from Milwaukee, Wisc. — really wanted to like it.
"I wanted to be a fan of it when it first came out," Ruffin tells NPR's Arun Rath. "I just had my own personal differences. Not liking the way blacks were represented in their universe. I just couldn't get over it."
Matt Weiner, the creator of Mad Men, has been criticized for not having more black people on the show. In defense, he's said repeatedly, that's because there were no black people in the advertising business in that era. Last year, he took it further, saying there were still no black people in advertising. Ruffin disagrees.
"There are black people in advertising," he says. "There have been black people in advertising. There isn't a great amount of representation, but we do exist and we are here."
Indeed, some of Ruffin's idols are African-American designers from the 1960s. Like art director Georg Olden, for example. "He actually designed the Clio award [statuette] that Don wins," Ruffin says. "And he won way more than Don ever won."
So show your support guys put your mouse with your mouth is and watch it


I won't even bother arguing with you, but if you are white yeah no kidding you can empathize with the characters if they resemble you. I never watched Mad Men, it doesn't really appeal to me, but for you to try and deride a show because it has too many uppity negros is ridiculous.