If anything I was mocking my own ineffectiveness.Fair enough. I thought you were mocking the people who find it racist.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
If anything I was mocking my own ineffectiveness.Fair enough. I thought you were mocking the people who find it racist.
I watched it. No, it's not funny and it is very racist. It's based on the old "black man going after the pure lighter-skinned woman" trope, and she's "defending" herself by shoving him away into the washer and "cleaning" him, so he emerges as a socially acceptable light-skinned Chinese man, which makes her visibly happy. It's kind of like Beauty and the Beast, where the black man is supposed to be the "ugly beast" who isn't worthy of the lighter-skinned woman. **** that ad.
(For the record, Beauty and the Beast was the first movie I saw in theaters, and I got upset at the end when the Beast turns back into the Prince. I got up out of my seat and started walking towards the screen, crying and saying "where's the Beast?!". I liked the Beast and never saw the reason why he should have to change back to get the lady. I never changed my opinion on that.)
What planet are you living on? It must be nice!I guess it all depends where your coming from. My friends are multicultural and we used to exchange racist type smack almost all the time just for a good hearty laugh.
Sometimes I understand things can happen in life that gets a person jaded over something that really imv isn't the intent when it's taken out of context and interpreted in another light, although I can see why some folks can interpret something like this commercial as being less than funny if life hasn't provided light hearted and harmless humor like this before.
There's a difference between real ill conceived vile hate, and that of laughing at each other's personal and physical characteristics.
We're collectively too uptight as a society about things these days and had forgotten how to laugh at each other way I see it, yet I know it depends on where you live and the people living around you.
What planet are you living on? It must be nice!
The ad is disgusting. Next time I am in China I plan on boycotting this particular laundry detergent. That should make them reconsider their ad strategy.
You have a "pollock" for a friend?The planet of New York. *grin*
My friend was Puerto Rican, one was a Pollock and the other Mexican when I worked appliance delivery long time ago.
There's a huge difference between friends taking jabs at each other and a commercial "washing the black off."I guess it all depends where your coming from. My friends are multicultural and we used to exchange racist type smack almost all the time just for a good hearty laugh.
Sometimes I understand things can happen in life that gets a person jaded over something that really imv isn't the intent when it's taken out of context and interpreted in another light, although I can see why some folks can interpret something like this commercial as being less than funny if life hasn't provided light hearted and harmless humor like this before.
What about the Italian one which washed the white off?There's a huge difference between friends taking jabs at each other and a commercial "washing the black off."
Just as bad.What about the Italian one which washed the white off?
There's a huge difference between friends taking jabs at each other and a commercial "washing the black off."
How don't you see it? They are literally portraying black skin as something that can be made better, of course the detergent won't actually "wash off blackness," but it is very much so implying that black skin is "dirty" as it is something that is being "washed off." It's hardly any different that the skin lighteners and hair straighteners that are marketed towards black men and women in America (and perhaps other places).There's a huge difference in creating harmless ethnic humor and creating harmful ethnic "humor" which isn't humorous. But times have changed for some . Some people now just can't tell the difference and think every ethnic nuance is unbridled vile hate and the people who do it are hideous hatemongering monsters.
People for a fair part have become sensitive to just about anything now, anything like this becomes unbearably bothersome and an issue, and it's clear had completely lost any and all ability to even laugh at themselves and each other.
It is done for someone's stupid product though, and borderline ignorant, I grant that but I don't see this crossing a threshold of promoting actual hatred.
This isn't a matter of being over sensitive. I make ethnic jokes a lot with my friend, who is mixed white/East Asian (I'm mixed black/white/probably Native American). We make light-hearted jokes about Asians, whites and blacks. But it's clear we're being funny and just joking about cultural stereotypes (like ghetto culture, rednecks, East Asians and "Engrish", etc.). After all, that's our heritage, too. But there's a difference between joking about culture and behavior (which aren't inborn or innate), and demeaning people's physical features like their skin color, as if it's something "dirty" and "wrong".Jabs at each other? We jabbed at everyone around us too!
There's a huge difference in creating harmless ethnic humor and creating harmful ethnic "humor" which isn't humorous. But times have changed for some . Some people now just can't tell the difference and think every ethnic nuance is unbridled vile hate and the people who do it are hideous hatemongering monsters.
People for a fair part have become sensitive to just about anything now, anything like this becomes unbearably bothersome and an issue, and it's clear had completely lost any and all ability to even laugh at themselves and each other.
It is done for someone's stupid product though, and borderline ignorant, I grant that but I don't see this crossing a threshold of promoting actual hatred.
It's not like it represents a level conducent towards kkk or nazi ideology.
Incidently do you think the black dude in the commercial was forced against his will to do it?
How don't you see it? They are literally portraying black skin as something that can be made better, of course the detergent won't actually "wash off blackness," but it is very much so implying that black skin is "dirty" as it is something that is being "washed off." It's hardly any different that the skin lighteners and hair straighteners that are marketed towards black men and women in America (and perhaps other places).
This isn't a matter of being over sensitive. I make ethnic jokes a lot with my friend, who is mixed white/East Asian (I'm mixed black/white/probably Native American). We make light-hearted jokes about Asians, whites and blacks. But it's clear we're being funny and just joking about cultural stereotypes (like ghetto culture, rednecks, East Asians and "Engrish", etc.). After all, that's our heritage, too. But there's a difference between joking about culture and behavior (which aren't inborn or innate), and demeaning people's physical features like their skin color, as if it's something "dirty" and "wrong".
What does that have to do with anything? There's many examples of minorities being used in media that promotes stigmas and stereotypes of their groups.Shadow Wolf didn't directly answer yet but so you think this commercial was a forced production against the black actors will?
I'm sorry, but I fail to the see the humor in making fun of someone's skin color, especially in a social context where darker skin is vicariously maligned and exoticized/fetished. A white girl in high school tried to make a joke about me being a slave and I was confused. I wondered what she meant and she put her arm next to mine, meaning that because I have brown skin, I'm a slave. I was not amused.To explain ....
I see the inference that can be taken from the commercial, I get on how it could be construed by some in a humorless light, I do understand but at the same time it does still look like a harmless prod at someone's color by which the detergent cleans a bit too well.
I suppose I would have changed the woman's charactor so that she would have reacted with surprise rather than pleasure at her "new" man. I think that's where the main contention here lies.
That's why I viewed it as being borderline ignorant rather than racist in it's intent. This certainly can relay multiple meanings depending upon who you ask.
I see both sides here, I really do, but I don't want to see our ability to laugh at each other's differences villified and swept under the rug under a banner of ethnic neutrality.
That can make things worse in the long run I think.
There isn't any humor behind. A "dirty" black man goes in and comes out a "clean and attractive" Chinese man.There's a huge difference in creating harmless ethnic humor and creating harmful ethnic "humor" which isn't humorous. But times have changed for some . Some people now just can't tell the difference and think every ethnic nuance is unbridled vile hate and the people who do it are hideous hatemongering monsters.
Arguably the Italian one is not as bad as it takes a oppressed minority and makes him more desirable, while the chi.nese add takes an oppressed minority and portrays him as inferior. In the chi.nese add, the black guy is "bad" because he is black and the chi.nese man is "good" simply because he is chi.nese.Just as bad.
The black dude was depicted as dirty. Not "dirty".There isn't any humor behind. A "dirty" black man goes in and comes out a "clean and attractive" Chinese man.
It's still the the same principle of putting someone into a cleaning machine and them coming out a different ethnicity.Arguably the Italian one is not as bad as it takes a oppressed minority and makes him more desirable, while the chi.nese add takes an oppressed minority and portrays him as inferior. In the chi.nese add, the black guy is "bad" because he is black and the chi.nese man is "good" simply because he is chi.nese.
Yes, he was depicted as dirty and unappealing, she threw him in the washer, and out he came a clean (it is a cleaning detergent afterall) and appealing Chinese man.The black dude was depicted as dirty. Not "dirty".
Yes, he was depicted as dirty and unappealing, she threw him in the washer, and out he came a clean (it is a cleaning detergent afterall) and appealing Chinese man.