Netflix Shows Have A Brownwashing Problem - Why Would Black Hitler Do This

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Netflix Shows Have a Brownwashing Problem (Guest Blog)​



Ahmad Rashad Arafa
Sat, July 17, 2021, 12:27 AM·5 min read

When I first watched the trailer for Netflix’s “Bridgerton,” which reimagines 19th-century Regency-era Britain as a racially equitable society in which people of color possess the same upward social mobility as white Englishmen, my eyes shot out of their sockets. I was both confused and angry, my mind suspended in disbelief.

Much to my chagrin, this seems to be a prevailing theme across several Netflix originals. It seems the streamer believes it can help with ethnic representation in the media by forcefully injecting people of color into rigidly Eurocentric worlds. This is not as grave a mistake as M. Night Shyalaman casting white actors in East Asian and Inuit roles for his adaptation of the “Avatar” animated series, or the problematic casting of a white woman, Scarlett Johansson, as a Japanese cyborg in “Ghost in the Shell.” But it’s still a mess.

Contrary to what “Bridgerton” depicts, white British aristocracy was not having fairytale romances and hot, steamy sex with people of color; they were selling them as branded chattel to slave owners to work on British-owned plantations. Between 1662 and 1807, Britain shipped 3.1 million Africans to the Caribbean, North and South America in what historians have called the Transatlantic Slave Trade.


And I am not even going to touch on another Regency era blight — the East India Company.

Glossing over these horrific truths and imagining a parallel universe wherein white Englishmen and people of color were of equal standing in pre-20th century Europe is both insensitive and dangerous. Cinema has always been keen at reminding us of the painful truths of the past, not of contorting them for modern audiences’ self-gratification.

Curiously, few took issue with “Bridgerton’s” glossy reimagining of history in comparison to another Netflix show, “The Witcher,” a medieval fantasy show based on a book series, which caused an outcry over brownwashing (of only one character, mind you) in America that was so deafening it caused the showrunner, Lauren Schmidt Hissrich, to quit Twitter.

(Editor’s note: The “Witcher” role at the center of the outcry, Ciri, did go to a white actress and Schmidt Hissrich returned to Twitter. The role of Fringilla, who is depicted as white in source materials, went to Black actress Mimi Ndiweni.)

Yet “Bridgerton,” which brownwashed half its cast, caused little commotion stateside. The reason being, I suspect, is that the show allows Americans to have their cake and eat it too; it allows them to freely indulge in their insatiable appetite for British royalty and nobility while also not causing them any kind of mental distress over the fact that the reason why they attained that status was as a result of the exploitation and indentured servitude of those they colonized — people of color.

In sharp contrast to “Bridgerton,” “The Witcher,” and “Shadow & Bone” — a fantasy series inspired by Czarist Russia that wants us to believe that the racist czars appointed black courtiers — is the vampire animated show, “Castlevania,” based off of the popular video game series of the same name. Set in 15th century Wallachia (now Romania), and centering around Dracula and his minions’ desire to exterminate the human race, “Castlevania” organically places people of color in an ancient European setting by providing them sturdy, credible backstories, so that their inclusion never feels forced.

One character, Isaac (who was white in the video games), is reimagined in the series as a West African Muslim who develops psychopathic traits and joins Dracula’s quest to eradicate humanity after enduring years of physical torture as the slave of cruel crusaders. Another, Greta, is of Carthaginian (modern-day Tunisia) origin and the formidable chief woman of a village of refugees who came from distant lands seeking better, safer lives. Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? “Castlevania” may not be the first fantasy series to make heartwarming allusions to modern-day humanitarian crises but it’s always a welcome creative addition nonetheless.

Still, the stench of “Bridgerton” — and to a lesser extent “The Witcher” and “Shadow & Bone” — persists and I for one hope that the presenting of counter-narratives rooted not in history but in contemporary Western ideologies will not become common practice.

Yes, it would be really nice if slavery didn’t happen, Netflix. Maybe you should capitalize on “Bridgerton’s” success and create a television show for your next fall lineup that reimagines the past 73 years of Israel and Palestine. In your take, Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank would not be living every single day in, what many perceive to be, an apartheid state and under brutal occupation. My grandparents, along with millions of others, would not have been refugees. In your version of events, Jews and Palestinians would be frolicking in the fields, holding hands while singing the Arabic or Hebrew cover version of “Kumbaya, My Lord.”

If Netflix truly wants more ethnic representation in their productions, they can and should seriously consider exploring the many beautiful worlds created by and dominated by people of color. Surely, the streaming giant has the means to do so on a gargantuan scale, much like Coogler’s “Black Panther,” a gorgeous ode to Pan-Africanism, or Disney’s 1998 animated film “Mulan,” which celebrates the majesty of ancient China. In those worlds, people of color were the story; they weren’t relegated to the most dreaded of Hollywood cliches — the main white character’s sidekick.

(x)
 
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When I first watched the trailer for Netflix’s “Bridgerton,” which reimagines 19th-century Regency-era Britain as a racially equitable society in which people of color possess the same upward social mobility as white Englishmen,
Yeah, I'm going to stop the author right there - they know that the vast majority of WHITE Englishmen didn't have upward social mobility? You didn't have the vote, you didn't own land (in the vast majority of cases) and basically worked for a landed upper class. There were non-White people in Regency England, but they were in the company of many times that White people in the same boat.

But if you were a rich foreigner, some African prince - they would treat you as such. A curiosity to be sure, but the lines in Regency England were not ones of skin colour but of class.

The entire premise of this is bullshit.

EDIT: If you want a wry smile, read this little book review where the Guardian journalist is openly disconcerted at not finding enough evidence for racism towards Black people in Tudor England (yes, there were Black people in Tudor England):
 
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black Anne Boleyn
I looked into it a bit and the showrunners said it's about "reframing Anne's story", which kind of makes it all worse.
Think about it. If they're trying to make a mini-series to look at "her story" and they want to highlight the contrast between her perception and internal life, then is it not in fact quite fucked up that their solution to "How do we portray a woman seen as a foreign temptress?" was "Oh, we'll make her black."?
 
Most hilarious recent example of this shit is a canon-breaking retcon in the Netflix masters of the universe series thats supposed to be a sequel to the original yet several characters that were white in the original are now black for some reason, although that's not exactly the same as the historical brownwashing shit.
For a series that has unironically green and blue skinned humanoids, it's pretty strange to see the insertion of brown people for no real reason. It's not like niggers were ever into Master of the Universe.
 
The writer sounds crazy but I do have to agree with the overall points made. if you want diversity in the shows you are making, then make projects that make sense for it to be diverse and if it's something that is based on something that already exists then something which already is diverse. Also could say fuck having a show be diverse by its self, but have diversity with the overall content you make.

It's all just lazy and the laziness from this can be felt all thru out the show/movies.
I completely agree. I love historical settings and would love to see more cultures and time periods, not just medieval/Tudor/Victorian England all the time.
 
Pirate all your TV, keep it on media you own and maintain, ignore all niggerized entertainment.
 
For a series that has unironically green and blue skinned humanoids, it's pretty strange to see the insertion of brown people for no real reason. It's not like niggers were ever into Master of the Universe.
The funniest part is they blackwashed he-man's genetic grandfather. So you have 2 white guys and then BLACK MAN WITH DREADS. They're reasoning for blackwashing the characters is literally bullshit like "oh 2 buff white blonde men is too many and ultimately boring!" There's actually already minor black characters in masters of the universe but instead of trying to make them more prominent or flesh them out they insulted one of them in the thing they made the statement about white men because he's "just the king's personal bodyguard". The redesign isn't bad because the animation studio being told to make this shit has actual talent but the writers are filled with hacks and frauds that apparently despise the source material because there's "too many white people".
 
A black man servant was somwhat common for the wealthy, a shortcut to exotic grandeur.
Still is.

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I've heard netflix is casting a black guy as wesker in a live action resident evil... now that particular show seems to have all sorts of problems (And seems to be set to continue the tradition of live action RE sucking all sorts of ass.)

But this one in particular stands out, because i'm pretty sure wesker's status as a blonde haired, white, literal superman that was the product of a eugenics program... combined with his status as an attempted omnicider and long history of horrific crimes against humanity, was supposed to make allusions to a certain part of recent history... without just blatantly screaming them in our face like most modern shit does.
 
I cannot remember the last time I saw a new tv show or film that wasn't full of blacks and browns even if it made no sense for them to be there. Netflix somehow manages to be significantly worse than the rest of Hollywood in general about it though.

After a certain point it's not even about being historically accurate or being not-woke, it's about making some modicum of sense and not looking fucking dumb. I don't know how people can see shit like this and not think it looks completely pants-on-head retarded:

blackwash.jpg
 
Ahmad Rashad Arafa
You sure you want to go down the gains by bloodshed road Ahmad? I do not think you will like the pedophile-theif-warlord to which that leads.

How did the Palestinians come to inhabit the land that is now Israel, Ahmad? I think Netflix should do a show about that but I think it would make you...ah mad.
How could one have been a pedophile if there was no concept of age of consent?

And it were the Romans who kicked the jews out of jerusalem
 
This sort of shit happened in live theater all the time, ostensibly because of the increased diversity in theater districts. (Gotta give black actors a chance as not every play has black characters.) I remember as a kid reading a review of a local production of King Lear, critical of the fact that Cordelia was played by a black woman so heavy that the guy playing Lear had to fireman's carry her across the stage. And now I'm thinking that that would be a hilarious premise for a movie - a director stuntcasts a sassy black deathfat in a major role and the rest of the cast has to act around her without getting killed or injured by her bulk.
 
This sort of shit happened in live theater all the time, ostensibly because of the increased diversity in theater districts.
Maybe am biased because i have worked on some theater productions, but that shit is much easier to do in stage performances because they by default require a higher degree of suspension of disbelief than a historical tv show. You don't get retakes in theater, so the good actors tend to be really good, and with a good director who isnt trying to kowtow to an agenda casting a black dude in the role of a king in shakespear really does become about merit based casting.
Not always the case, but....
 
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