Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually noticed there were no obvious POC in the crowd when I first saw the photo.
Me too but I'm not white. Last week I noticed a group of 20+ college boys/girls at a restaurant without a single POC. I don't take note of small groups but I notice large groups along with company photos or big friend outings. Usually it's more "just noticing" reaction without any outrage. If it's higher stakes like a company who cannot employ someone who is not a clone of the owner I'll roll my eyes. If it's a body of people making decisions that affect many including POC, I get upset. This photo just makes me think "oh, they're like that, no surprise" and I take no offense.
+1 Kristen Bell chose to share it with the world on social media. So people are allowed to react and also make their reactions public.
If she doesn't want scrutiny, just enjoy and don't tweet. But of course they DO want the attention.
Anonymous wrote:
The only thing less diverse than that is HuffPost editorial board. That rag is trash.
https://twitter.com/lheron/status/733758898855940098
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. Getting upset about this is basically telling people “please awkwardly invite a certain number of POC to any gathering, no matter how inorganic or token those invites might be, so that your Instagram photos will be diverse.” Like, come on.
Comparing this to workplaces or magazine spreads is insulting— there are lots of qualified POC who could work at HuffPo or who belong on a “Women in Hollywood” magazine cover, do their exclusion in those instances does reflect a lack of diversity and a missed opportunity.
But the idea that every dinner party must include a certain percentage of POC (and agree with other posters that it’s interesting that being an Asian woman is apparently not diverse here) is just weird. It’s not even a question of having diverse friend groups because what if you have a diverse friend group but the POC in your life are randomly all out of town or have a conflict. Do you cancel the dinner party?
Also, it’s just interesting that “diversity” has come to mean exactly one thing, and it’s a thing you can determine by looking at a photo of faces. When a truly diverse society would be diverse along many metrics. This dinner might be diverse in many ways, but we only care about the one. Ok.
Not to mention chef David Chang, WTF.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually noticed there were no obvious POC in the crowd when I first saw the photo.
Me too but I'm not white. Last week I noticed a group of 20+ college boys/girls at a restaurant without a single POC. I don't take note of small groups but I notice large groups along with company photos or big friend outings. Usually it's more "just noticing" reaction without any outrage. If it's higher stakes like a company who cannot employ someone who is not a clone of the owner I'll roll my eyes. If it's a body of people making decisions that affect many including POC, I get upset. This photo just makes me think "oh, they're like that, no surprise" and I take no offense.
Anonymous wrote:Jen looks horrible in those big glasses.
Anonymous wrote:Only comment I have on this photo is why we aren't discussing what all Courtney Cox has done to her face.
Anonymous wrote:Only comment I have on this photo is why we aren't discussing what all Courtney Cox has done to her face.
Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. Getting upset about this is basically telling people “please awkwardly invite a certain number of POC to any gathering, no matter how inorganic or token those invites might be, so that your Instagram photos will be diverse.” Like, come on.
Comparing this to workplaces or magazine spreads is insulting— there are lots of qualified POC who could work at HuffPo or who belong on a “Women in Hollywood” magazine cover, do their exclusion in those instances does reflect a lack of diversity and a missed opportunity.
But the idea that every dinner party must include a certain percentage of POC (and agree with other posters that it’s interesting that being an Asian woman is apparently not diverse here) is just weird. It’s not even a question of having diverse friend groups because what if you have a diverse friend group but the POC in your life are randomly all out of town or have a conflict. Do you cancel the dinner party?
Also, it’s just interesting that “diversity” has come to mean exactly one thing, and it’s a thing you can determine by looking at a photo of faces. When a truly diverse society would be diverse along many metrics. This dinner might be diverse in many ways, but we only care about the one. Ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually noticed there were no obvious POC in the crowd when I first saw the photo.
Me too but I'm not white. Last week I noticed a group of 20+ college boys/girls at a restaurant without a single POC. I don't take note of small groups but I notice large groups along with company photos or big friend outings. Usually it's more "just noticing" reaction without any outrage. If it's higher stakes like a company who cannot employ someone who is not a clone of the owner I'll roll my eyes. If it's a body of people making decisions that affect many including POC, I get upset. This photo just makes me think "oh, they're like that, no surprise" and I take no offense.
Anonymous wrote:I actually noticed there were no obvious POC in the crowd when I first saw the photo.