|
I noticed the mixed-race relationships, but didn't think it was heavy-handed. What I thought it illustrated (without being heavy-handed) was the extent to which bigotry is a luxury. You can indulge your racism when you're confident you'll be okay for it, but not when it might cost you your life. Surviving the zombie apocalypse requires strength in numbers, and when there aren't that many around you have to take who you can get, regardless of how you might have felt about them before. I mean, Rick was a Georgia cop before all this started, we have to consider his views on race were likely not the most enlightened before this started. But on the rooftop, when Merle calls T-Dog the n-word and then beats him senseless, Rick is the one who breaks it up by handcuffing Merle to a pipe, because he knows that T-Dog is an asset to the group and they can't afford to lose him because of someone like Merle. When Siddiq arrived at Alexandria with Carl, there probably were some people who had some less-than-enlightened thoughts cross their minds, and who might have acted on those thoughts pre-apolcalypse, but they needed a doctor and he could fill that role, so they didn't have the luxury of alienating him. Same goes for gay characters like Jesus, Tara Aaron and Denise. As for the mixed-race relationships, if you're seeking out intimate physical and emotional connections with another person and there aren't that many people around, you're going to have hard time if you rule people out based on biases so it forces you to get to know people beyond their race. This goes for close friendships as well. Pre-apocalypse, the white farmer's daughter from Georgia not only probably wouldn't have started a romantic relationship with an Asian man, but also probably wouldn't have found her closest confidant after his death in a gay man.
None of this is to suggest that nothing about TWD's treatment of race has been problematic, just that I think it represents a reasonable approximation of what might happen to race relations when faced with that kind of threat. The reality would probably be messier and longer to develop, but it is a television show and character development does tend to get accelerated for the sake of storyline. |
| The show still sucks. |
| I am going to watch the next few episodes to see what happens with Carole, Daryl and Michonne. Im not invested in any other characters anymore if Maggie is really gone. I also don't want to watch an 8-9yo girl running around with a gun. Its weird. |
Ah, the racism card! I was wondering how long it would be and you didn't disappoint. Nope, I'm not playing that stupid game. The couplings bother me because they don't work. Ezekiel and his "King" act were utterly ridiculous, and I can't take him seriously at all. Carol annoys me because she has only one expression and talks like a baby. The two of them together make no sense at all. I love both Rich and Michonne, but not together. It seemed completely random to throw them together in the first place, since there had been zero romantic chemistry between them at all, and then boom, they were in bed together. Please stop calling racism anytime someone criticizes a POC. Thank you. |
I wondered that too (about the herd actually dying). Maybe the explosion ripped their heads off, or maybe the fire just seriously weakened them. Maybe they didn't actually die, but at least got swept away in the river. And Darryl... oh, Darryl. I love that man. When he cries!! My heart. I wonder if they'll ever find him a love interest. |
Agree completely. It's like the producers are saying, "Look! We're so colorblind, and we're going to make sure our audience knows it!" The couples just didn't make any sense. It's not like there was any real chemistry or attraction - they were just thrown together. |
DP. You're an idiot. That's not what the PP was saying at all, but it's clear you want to play it that way. As for Jessie and Rick - YES, they had the major hots for each other and it would have been great if she had lived and they became a couple. Clearly, they were attracted to each other! But I thought Carol and Tobin was another mismatched couple. Carol never seemed attracted to him (just as she's not to Ezekiel). NOT EVERYTHING IS ABOUT RACE. Stop trying to make it so. |
Not sure who you're talking to, but I thought both Andrea and the Governor and Abraham and Sasha were mismatched. Abraham's walrus mustache and orange hair was such a turnoff to me, and Sasha is so beautiful. Are we all allowed our own opinions, or do you have to approve first? |
+1 I'd happily volunteer!
|
Oh, pleeeeeease. You took note with dismay that there was only one black man in the show years ago, but didn't notice the many races represented in current shows? So virtuous.
|
THIS. I was so turned off by that episode precisely because it was so heavy handed. I don't care if couples are mixed race or same sex. But to make a whole montage wherein every single couple is one of those things, was downright absurd. Back when they were settled in Alexandria, I liked the Denise/Tara couple because they made sense. So did Glenn and Maggie. A couple has to make sense to work. You can't just take two characters and throw them together without any chemistry whatsoever. |
I just want to draw your attention to the bolded. It sounds as if *you* don't have the most enlightened views on race. Because Rick is a cop from Georgia, you're implying he was probably also a racist? Wow. |
| Wait, Jesus is gay? How do we know this? |
| I cringe everytime Maggie speaks. At least Andrew Lincoln does a fairly credible fake American accent. I don’t even know what she is going for other then some cheesey 1940’s Gone with the Wind thing... |
| Someone was posting on Ambien last night... |