With all the talk about MCU and diversity, it's interesting to see how much of an anomaly Black Panther in terms of "representation", especially since niggers love saying that they're not the same. Also, something praised by the African-American community may not be translate to others in the African diaspora. Almost like many do not care about being "represented" 24/7.
1. Captain Marvel was supposed to be their Wonder Woman, but women don't give a fuck about her. Both of her movies have been male-dominated. Both of her movies had
roughly 65% of their audience being male. And the latter put extra emphasis on diverse girl power lol. The first Wonder Woman movie is one of the only superhero films to ever achieve a notably majority female turnout, but that's because she's been a feminist icon in American pop culture for 80+ years. At least releasing a Black Widow movie back in 2015 or 2016 would've been better.
2. Shang Chi was supposed to be about "Asian representation", and they were hoping for a Black Panther-like effect, but that didn't pan out. China once said Awkwafina was ugly and not a real Chinese, just a foreigner (regardless of Chinese ancestry). They had similar feelings about Shang Chi. Americans might lump all Azns together as one "race", but Azns do not see themselves as a singular "race". Just look at the
race riots in Singapore. A Chink/Chink-American means nothing to a Jap or other Orientals. Same goes for the other/darker Asiatics, like the Pajeets, Pakis, Filipinos, Afghans, Persians, Central Asians, etc. Many of whom, unlike the East Asians, are "Brown" to Westerners. And this isn't getting into the (((media))) combining "Asia-Pacific" together.
3. Speaking of which, the Brown superheroes they also tried introducing did not go that well. Kamala was seen as a plus for Paki/Muzzie "representation", but even they pissed off some Pakis because much of her family was played by Pajeets. Then in 2022, we got American Chavez, who was supposed to be represent beaner lesbians but ironically, wasn't even an actual Beaner. Her character was a humanid alien from an alternate dimension. The Wiki indicates they have since retconned her origins, and now she's actually from New York and presumably born to an actual spic family.
And this isn't dwelling into the Eternals and all the other girl boss characters that were made in an attempt to get women into what has historically been, and may always will be, a male-dominated audience.
These are old posts from the ResetEra (?) forums, but Shang Chi was likely not profitable during its BO run. It had a budget of 150-200M (which could be higher and we don't know how much marketing costs) and made only 430M, and I don't see any Chinese box office numbers on BOM (not that it would've mattered). Also, the GA doesn't care about the diverse characters, and bringing back the "non-diverse" OG Avengers in a decent film would probably be a lot more successful that a "decent" Kamala Khan film.