Anonymous wrote:Just finished rewatching Footloose.
Filmed in 1984 when 12% of the American population was Black, yet there are zero Black kids in a movie about dancing.
Remember the big dance scene at the end? They had white guys breakdancing. This was at the height of the breakdancing craze btw. All white cast, and they didn’t even bother to add any Black or brown dancers in the big school dance. Zero.
Pretty shocking.
Anonymous wrote:I thought it was rural Indiana, and yes it is more than possible that there would be no black people in such a town. Black people are only 12% of the population and they are not everywhere and they don’t have to be represented in everything. And they don’t have the market on dancing either. Stupid post that is just intended to stir the pot.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
+1, I grew up in a Footloose-esque town and it really was very white. To be accurate they might have included a handful of black or hispanic kids, but part of the point of the movie is how homogenous and close-minded this tiny town is. The whiteness and the lameness is sort of part of the point.
Now, the way the Chicago is portrayed in John Hughes movies, and his treatment of Asian characters? Yikes.
Excuse me, but not everything white is “lame.” What is wrong with some of you people?
I never said that everything white is lame. I said that part of the point of Footloose is that the town, like my home town, was very homogeneous, close-minded, white, and lame. Like those are distinct descriptors. Calm down.
Would you ever describe a majority black town as “homogeneous, close-minded, and lame?”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
+1, I grew up in a Footloose-esque town and it really was very white. To be accurate they might have included a handful of black or hispanic kids, but part of the point of the movie is how homogenous and close-minded this tiny town is. The whiteness and the lameness is sort of part of the point.
Now, the way the Chicago is portrayed in John Hughes movies, and his treatment of Asian characters? Yikes.
Excuse me, but not everything white is “lame.” What is wrong with some of you people?
I never said that everything white is lame. I said that part of the point of Footloose is that the town, like my home town, was very homogeneous, close-minded, white, and lame. Like those are distinct descriptors. Calm down.
Would you ever describe a majority black town as “homogeneous, close-minded, and lame?”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
+1, I grew up in a Footloose-esque town and it really was very white. To be accurate they might have included a handful of black or hispanic kids, but part of the point of the movie is how homogenous and close-minded this tiny town is. The whiteness and the lameness is sort of part of the point.
Now, the way the Chicago is portrayed in John Hughes movies, and his treatment of Asian characters? Yikes.
Excuse me, but not everything white is “lame.” What is wrong with some of you people?
I never said that everything white is lame. I said that part of the point of Footloose is that the town, like my home town, was very homogeneous, close-minded, white, and lame. Like those are distinct descriptors. Calm down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
+1, I grew up in a Footloose-esque town and it really was very white. To be accurate they might have included a handful of black or hispanic kids, but part of the point of the movie is how homogenous and close-minded this tiny town is. The whiteness and the lameness is sort of part of the point.
Now, the way the Chicago is portrayed in John Hughes movies, and his treatment of Asian characters? Yikes.
Excuse me, but not everything white is “lame.” What is wrong with some of you people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People, Footloose was set in Beaumont, Texas. Not Kansas.
Carry on.
No it wasn’t. The town was BOMONT.
There are no mountains near Beaumont, TX.
Now you can carry on!
Anonymous wrote:https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/73151/18-catchy-facts-about-footloose
I read where it was actually filmed in Utah.
Anonymous wrote:https://amp.theguardian.com/film/2015/may/10/wacky-asians-blacking-up-and-the-libyans-the-worst-of-80s-movie-racism
Wow…this sums it up.
Anonymous wrote: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.
+1, I grew up in a Footloose-esque town and it really was very white. To be accurate they might have included a handful of black or hispanic kids, but part of the point of the movie is how homogenous and close-minded this tiny town is. The whiteness and the lameness is sort of part of the point.
Now, the way the Chicago is portrayed in John Hughes movies, and his treatment of Asian characters? Yikes.
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.