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African-Americans in Modern Media
Lauren GarrenSocial Media
The earliest of films historically cast whites in non-white roles
Elizabeth Taylor in “Cleopatra”
One of the earliest films, Birth of the Nation (1915) employed blackface on white actors for African-American actors.
While these casting decision might have been expected during
an era of racial segregation and oppression, Hollywood has
continued to make casting decisions that prefer white actors
over minority actors.
In 2000's Pay it Forward, Spacey plays a character
named Eugene Simonet, the teacher who inspires
main character Trevor McKinney to change the world.
In the book on which the movie is based, Simonet’s
name is actually Reuben S. Claire, and he's a black
man.
In Oliver Stone’s World Trade Center film (2006), both of the two characters who rescued the protagonist, Sgt. Jason Thomas and Sgt. Dave Karnes, were cast as white actors. Sergeant Thomas is played by William Mapother, a white actor, however, in real life, he is an African-American man.
The real Sgt. Thomas
And in the few roles that blacks manage to receive, most of them reinforce the stereotypical view of blacks.
According to the Entman-Rojecki Index of Race and Media, 89% of Black female movie characters are shown using vulgar language, while only 17% of White woman are. Black women are shown as being violent in movies 56% of the time compared to the 11% of white women.
People begin to associate being black with poverty, the “ghetto,” cruelty, crime, and jail, etc.
And even with “quality” movie with black portrayal, Hollywood producers seem fixated on telling the “Ghetto” story, the “sports story”, the “slavery” story, and the “racism” story in their movies.
And yes, while these movies do allow for great artistic ability to shine through, what about the other stories?
At what age can their skin color not become a plot device, but just a part of their character?
The recent casting of black actor, Michael B. Jordan as Johnny Torch created controversy.
Black actress, Quvenzhané Wallis, was cast into the iconic role of “Annie”
Basically
And it’s not just movies, either.
There has been much controversy regarding magazines lightening the skin of blacks who appear on the cover.
Many of these magazines have put this color change up to the lighting used for the shoot.
Now, it’s no secret that these pictures are edited. So if it was the lighting that caused this, why didn’t they just edit the skin color to fit the person and avoid all of this conflict?
These magazines are used by many young black people to look up to their idols. If they see that even their hero’s skin was lightened, why should they believe that their own dark skin is beautiful?
In Conclusion
Black portrayal in media could seriously use some improvement, black Annie is awesome, and magazines need to stop with their nonsense.
Cred, yo• http://dancingwiththelight.com/2013/04/01/the-problem-that-must-be-solved/• http://voices.yahoo.com/racial-stereotypes-media-38872.html• http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/08/05/1107128/-The-battle-against-whitewashing-and-racebending• http://
www.policymic.com/articles/83309/what-if-people-reacted-to-these-10-roles-like-they-have-to-michael-b-jordan• http://the-artifice.com/hollywood-white-washing/• http://www.pbs.org/wnet/tavissmiley/features/blacks-in-hollywood-shut-out-or-missing-in-action/• Photos from Google