Showing posts with label Whitewashing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whitewashing. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Ed Skrein: Praised for Dropping Hellboy Role Over Whitewashing Controversy

Ed Skrein isn’t some big A-List actor. He’s best known as the bad guy from Deadpool, or maybe as the first, hotter Daario Naharis from Game of Thrones.


But he just made a major power move that world famous actors like Tilda Swinton and Scarlett Johansson haven’t dared to do, earning serious praise in the process.


To do that, though, Ed had to drop out of a major career opportunity.



For years, millions of fans have been frustrated that studios haven’t allowed Guillermo del Toro to create any more Hellboy films.


The cult favorite film series starring Ron Pearlman had two films, but the third always seemed out of reach.


Finally, it was announced — to everyone’s collective disappointment — that Guillermo del Toro would not get to continue that series.


Fans responded by protesting it online.


Guillermo responded, it seems, by creating The Shape of Water, a film that fans were quick to point out strongly resembles a (legally distinct) origin story for favored Hellboy character, Abe Sapien.


(Did you see the trailer about the mute girl who wnats to bang something that looks like the creature from the Black Lagoon? That’s the one)


However, it was then announced that they were going to reboot the Hellboy trilogy, which — despite a lack of involvement by either Guillermo or Pearlman, was met with excitement for fans of the original films and also of the comics that preceded them.


The first real bit of bad news about these films came when Ed Skrein was cast. He’s great, but … he was cast as a character named Ben Daimio.



Ed Skrein is white.


The character of Ben Daimio is a Japanese-American.


(In fact, if I remember my teenage weeaboo phase correctly, “daimio” phonetically sounds like the word for a feudal-era Japanese lord, though don’t quote me on that)


Whitewashing in Hollywood should be a thing of the past, but recently it has seemed to be out of control.


From Tilda Swinton being cast as the Tibetan character of The Ancient One in Doctor Strange to Scarlett Johansson playing the decidedly Japanese protagonist of Ghost in the Shell (which flopped, at least), there seems to be no end to white actors taking representation from people of color.


(And the less said about that abysmal and whitewashed Death Note movie, the better)


Some of the responses to the “Oscars So White” controversy said that maybe people of color just weren’t as good.


That’s … kind of absurd, but we’d ask those people how exactly actors of color can demonstrate their acting skills when they’re not even given the opportunity to portray people of color on screen.


More importantly, there are the fans who mourn losing major representation on the big screen.


Some people can’t relate, but those are the people who grew up always being able to see someone not unlike themselves on screen. They’ve never faced having their identities erased.


Scarlett Johansson, despite making so much money that she could turn down any job, has never seemed to find a problem taking jobs that could or should have gone to someone else.


Ed Skrein, however, is cut from a different cloth.



Ed Skrein took to social media to publicly step down for the role after the backlash.


For one thing, he says that he wasn’t initially aware of the character’s race.


(Remember, the titular character in this franchise is named “Hellboy,” so if you don’t recognize “Daimio” as a Japanese word or name and you’re not already a fan of the series, you just wouldn’t know. We don’t even recall Ben Daimio making it into either of the two original films)


“It is clear that representing this character in a culturally accurate way holds significance for people, and that to neglect this responsibility would continue a worrying tendency to obscure ethnic minority stories and voices in the Arts.”


It’s so good that he’s calling this out so publicly.


“I feel it is important to honor and respect that.”


He is so right.


And he adds a personal note.


“Representation of ethnic diversity is important, especially to me as I have a mixed heritage family.”


Part of his background is Jewish Austrian.



Ultimately, we hope that this will be a net gain for Ed Skrein.


The money and acclaim that he might have garnered for taking on this role will hopefully pale in comparison to what he gains in positive press coverage.


A friend of mine pointed out last night that every time that someone talks about whitewashing for the next few years, they’ll point to Ed Skrein by name as the perfect counterexample to, say, Scarlett Johansson.


And he’s earned no shortage of praise, from fans to other actors.


(Scarlett, in the mean time, has become something of a joke; Rahul Kohli of iZombie once joked that ScarJo was originally cast to play his role)


Possibly the best part of all of this is that the producers behind the new Hellboy trilogy say that they are taking this seriously. We hope to see them cast more appropriately in the future.


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Friday, February 3, 2017

NBC Accused of "Whitewashing" in Wake of Tamron Hall Departure

Thank goodness for This Is Us, huh?


This must be what executives at NBC are thinking these days, considering the onslaught of bad press that has come the network’s way over the past years or so.


First, there was the backlash against Saturday Night Live after Donald Trump hosted an episode toward the end of 2016.


Then, there was the time Jimmy Kimmel fawned over Trump and treated the delusional narcissist like everyone’s best, most harmless friend.






And then there was the fact that NBC brought back Celebrity Apprentice, keeping Trump on as an executive producer.


Now, however, the network is under fire for a reason unrelated to President Trump.


Earlier this year, Megyn Kelly announced that she was leaving Fox News to sign a deal with NBC.


The only details confirmed at the time by Kelly and network executives was that the journalist would contribute to political coverage and also anchor her own five-days-a-week program.


Since then, however, multiple sources have reported that Kelly will slide into a chair on The Today Show in some capacity; either right next to Matt Lauer… or possibly at 9am or 10am, causing a major programming shift.


Either Hoda Kotb and Kathie Lee Gifford will move up an hour and replace Al Roker and Hall – or Kelly will be the one to replace Roker and Hall.


In response to Kelly’s addition shoving her out of hosting duties alongside Roker, Tamron Hall left NBC on Thursday.


She didn’t even say goodbye on air; nor she did have another deal lined up when she departed.


She was simply angry over the way her future at the company was being handled and decided to peace out of there as quickly as possible.



The National Association of Black Journalists, meanwhile, has now released a rather damning statement in regard to Hall leaving Today and Kelly probably taking her place.


It reads as follows:


The National Association of Black Journalists is saddened by Tamron Hall’s departure from NBC.


She broke ground as the first black female ‘Today Show’ cohost and was enjoying ratings success alongside Al Roker during the show’s third hour of programming.


NBC has been a leader for diversity in broadcasting, but recent reports that Hall and Roker will be replaced by former Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly are being seen by industry professionals as whitewashing.


Whitewashing. That’s a pretty strong word to use.



This isn’t the sort of allegation NBC can just sit back and allow to linger online.


Therefore, on Thursday, a network spokesperson issued a response:


“NBC News has a long and proven history as an industry leader in newsroom diversity.


“We will continue to engage in the running dialogue we’ve had for many years with the National Association of Black Journalists and other advocacy groups to advance those goals.”


Hall joined Today in 2014 and MSNBC in 2007.


As you can see here, Roker wasn’t pretty sad to say goodbye to his close friend.



And the network was pretty magnanimous in how it addressed her decision.


“Tamron Hall will be leaving NBC News and MSNBC when her contract expires this month,” the company said in a statement on Wednesday.


“[January 31] was her last day as an anchor on both networks. Tamron is an exceptional journalist, we valued and enjoyed her work at Today and MSNBC and hoped that she would decide to stay. We are disappointed that she has chosen to leave, but we wish her all the best.”


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