Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are these basically instruction videos for white people to learn about the black experience?
I love the shows, and I’m happy to see something more diverse on mainstream TV, but the way it’s presented as a history lesson I wonder if it turns off black viewers? Or is it something everyone is watching?
I loved the episode about hair; I had an inkling if what was involved after the press on Chris Rocks movie, but this was another take. Episodes on color (vs race), soul food, etc have all been appreciated.
I definitely don’t think it’s intended to target white viewers only. How many white viewers even recognized the Girlfriends cast reunion a few weeks ago? Not many I imagine.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a black man.
I've only seen the first season, but what I liked about the show was that it represented me and my friends. Not in the "Hey look...black people on TV" way, but (true to its name) "There are people who are black...ish." I'm a black person who was born and raised in all-black, high poverty areas who just so happens to have interests in things that span both stereotypical black and white landscapes. I now find myself raising a child in a predominately white high SES area, and I wrestle with how to instill the "black experience" in her when nothing in her life matches what I experienced growing up.
I think the first season did a great job reflecting what that's like.
Anonymous wrote:Are these basically instruction videos for white people to learn about the black experience?
I love the shows, and I’m happy to see something more diverse on mainstream TV, but the way it’s presented as a history lesson I wonder if it turns off black viewers? Or is it something everyone is watching?
I loved the episode about hair; I had an inkling if what was involved after the press on Chris Rocks movie, but this was another take. Episodes on color (vs race), soul food, etc have all been appreciated.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a black man.
I've only seen the first season, but what I liked about the show was that it represented me and my friends. Not in the "Hey look...black people on TV" way, but (true to its name) "There are people who are black...ish." I'm a black person who was born and raised in all-black, high poverty areas who just so happens to have interests in things that span both stereotypical black and white landscapes. I now find myself raising a child in a predominately white high SES area, and I wrestle with how to instill the "black experience" in her when nothing in her life matches what I experienced growing up.
I think the first season did a great job reflecting what that's like.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like Blackish stopped being funny a while ago. We stopped watching. Maybe we'll go back and give it another shot sometime.
Haven't seen Mixedish.