Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a bible thinking Midwest town with ZERO minorities. This could have been my town.
I grew up in the Midwest in a town of about 10,000. There was one Black kid, two Asians and one Latino in our high school.
I felt like I grew up in Footloose, just in northern Ohio, population 3000. We had exactly one black family in town. It would have been weird to have added minorities to that movie.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What percentage of rural Kansas was Black in 1984?
6%
But does it matter?
Movies are made for a national and ultimately global audience.
America was 12% black in 1984.
And they opted to only have white kids in the big dance scene. Probably 100 kids, and all are white. They feature dancers, including a blue eyed blonde hair guy doing MJ-esque breakdancing moves, and it didn’t occur to anyone on the set to add any diversity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What percentage of rural Kansas was Black in 1984?
6%
But does it matter?
Movies are made for a national and ultimately global audience.
America was 12% black in 1984.
And they opted to only have white kids in the big dance scene. Probably 100 kids, and all are white. They feature dancers, including a blue eyed blonde hair guy doing MJ-esque breakdancing moves, and it didn’t occur to anyone on the set to add any diversity?
No, the current population of all of Kansas is 6% black, the vast majority of which is in the urban areas. It’s pretty safe to assume that the population of the average rural Kansas town in the 1980s was well well below 1% so the casting was certainly realistic/accurate for the setting, and was kind of the point of the movie.
Anonymous wrote:There were black people in Kansas in the 80s.
Regardless: go back and watch movies from the 1980s, and you’ll notice a total lack of any diversity. The lack of *any* representation—even a token amount—is glaring.
Anonymous wrote:People, Footloose was set in Beaumont, Texas. Not Kansas.
Carry on.
Anonymous wrote:As someone alive in the 1980s people of different races and religions and income levels really only interacted at work.
And even white people the Jews, Italians, Catholics, Wasps, Rich or Poor all lived in different neighborhoods.
My 1,000 person HS had 8-9 black kids. Meanwhile a HS around 7 miles away had only 8-9 white kids.
Bars I went to were often 100 percent white. There were black bars, gay bars, heck Greek bars. Divorcée bars, college bars. We did not interact
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I take your point OP. But I don’t think footloose is the best example — a film about an insular backwards conservative town afraid of change and modernity—integrating that group would have been difficult for the narrative.
But talk about any of the John Hughes movies, or Fast Times’s, or Bill and Teds, or clerks (I guess that’s 90s).
This. Footloose is a bad example of what you are trying to say, OP.
And Kansas was ~5.5% Black in 1984. So likely less in rural areas. You can look it up!