Thu Nov 29, 2007 7:07AM10 comments ›
Thu Nov 29, 2007 — by John Ostrander
Medium Rare, by John Ostrander
Tales From The O-zone #42
You can learn the damnedest things in the most unexpected places
I was paging through last week’s Entertainment Weekly, the one where they anoint their entertainers of the year, and came across four women – Glenn Close, Mary Louise Parker, Kyra Sedgewick, and Holly Hunter – all grouped together by the fact that they are over 40, that they are starring in their own TV shows on cable channels, and all had a uniting reason for doing so: the work simply wasn’t out there in movies for them.
Okay, that’s not news. And that’s what wrong. Pop culture is a reflection of our society and the way that it chooses to show certain demographics of people – including sometimes their omission – says a great deal about our society and what and who we value. While the article made me think of older women, the same point can be made for other minorities. We’re talking not only of movies and television but comic books and other entertainments as well. It is not only the portrayal of these groups – to which there is some increased sensitivity – but their omission that reveals how our society sees itself.
A few years ago, I attended a seminar geared specifically to how pop culture dealt with African-Americans – and this included advertising as well as entertainment. We were shown historical examples from black faced minstrel shows to labels on fruit cases. The older examples, especially, were hideously racist. The point that was made was that, especially in the segregated communities of those times, these images were often the only contact some white Americans had with people of color. Furthermore, society seemed bent on making certain those were the only images that were available. As a result, that was the way many whites thought about African-Americans.
Furthermore, the African-Americans had no one outside of their own communities to provide a positive image. That has an effect. None of us were born with guidebooks on how to negotiate life – although society is often all too happy to offer their own, complete with rules. We look elsewhere for role models that give us an idea how to act and then we copy them.
I was watching a rerun of the old Rifleman series recently and came across an episode that starred Sammy Davis Jr. as an embittered gunslinger. Back in the Sixties, when it first aired, I would have found the story “implausible.” Everyone knew there weren’t any black gunslingers or black cowboys. I knew this because – there weren’t any on TV or in the movies or in comic books. It wasn’t until many years later, when I was researching The Kents, that I learned how wrong I – and pop culture – had been. Truth to tell, there were plenty of black cowboys – they were just never depicted in the medium.
When you omit any one group – women or people of a certain age or people of color or different races or different sexual orientation, we say that they don’t matter. They have no stories in which we might be interested and to which we need to listen.
The question is important; indeed, I think it goes to the heart of our problems in the world. Are we who we say we are? Do our enemies hate us because of our freedom, as our president would have us believe? Or is it because of our hypocrisy? We mouth the word “freedom” and it makes a swell bumper sticker but whose freedom, whose rights do we usually mean? Who matters in our society? Everyone – or a certain select group? The evidence, as suggested by our pop culture, is the latter.
So I guess all this means we need to hurry up and change pop culture, right? Nope. If your image in the mirror looks wider than you like, don’t grumble that the mirror is adding a few pounds. The problem is isn’t in the image of you – it’s in you. Pop culture in nothing more than another mirror. “Fixing” it achieves nothing more than cosmetic changes; the real work has to be done in ourselves.
John Ostrander writes GrimJack: The Manx Cat, new installments of which appear every Tuesday here on ComicMix, and much of Munden's Bar, new installments of which will reappear anon here on ComicMix. Both for free. His new Suicide Squad mini-series is out there from DC Comics, and his Star Wars: Legacy is out there from Dark Horse, both at finer comics shops across the galaxy.
Jump to comments (10)
More News from ComicMix
- Drew Struzan Retires35 minutes ago, 0 comments
- Manga Friday: Swords and Psychics2 hours ago, 0 comments
- 'Flash Gordon' #1 Pulped and Reprinted3 hours ago, 1 comment
- 'Ghostbusters' Reunion Eyed by Columbia4 hours ago, 0 comments
- Review: Learn Spanish With Batman6 hours ago, 0 comments
- DeCandido Returns to 'Farscape'7 hours ago, 0 comments
- Country First, by Michael Davis10 hours ago, 26 comments
- New Yorkers get to Experience 'The Hourglass and the Poisoned Pen'17 hours ago, 1 comment
- 'Zits'' Pierce gets the Spotlight19 hours ago, 0 comments
- 'The Lone Ranger' gets 75th Anniversary DVD Set20 hours ago, 4 comments


Comments (10)
Vinnie Bartilucci (8:31 AM on Thu Nov 29, 2007)
There was a black western a few years back (and no, I don't mean Harlem On The Range) featuring a few rap stars, and they were being interviewed on the radio and mentioned that there were a lot of black cowboys - many escaped slaves at first, later emancipated ones moving west for the proverbial chance at the dream. I found it interesting, but I didn't feel ashamed in the entertainment industry for not showing us them before.
"When you omit any one group – women or people of a certain age or people of color or different races or different sexual orientation, we say that they don’t matter. They have no stories in which we might be interested and to which we need to listen."
That's a little more broad a brush than I'd use. It may be a case that the people writing the stories (mostly white males for many years) simply didn't know any good stories about other groups, and didn't feel the need to research any since they had plenty of stories about white males to tell. Or they thought the public they were writing for wouldn't find the stories interesting. Complacent and skittish about change is sometimes just that and no more.
It's always fun when a film that caters to a non-majoirty demographic is a big hit - it's like Hollywood suddenly noticed the pile of money on the table. Wild Hogs was panned by the critics, but it's the most successful film a lot of those actors, including Travolta, have made. Suddenly movies for boomer-age people are getting made. If "The Bucket List" is a hit, watch how many films for older folks get green lighted.
Every time a non-majority writer or director has a "crossover" hit (another phrase that could easily have unsavory connotations attached to it) it's another sign that you really can enjoy the work of people not like you, and that's good news. But just cause only person in 100 did a good thing, it doesn't mean the other 99 are (fill in your favorite label).
Vinnie Bartilucci (1:30 PM on Thu Nov 29, 2007)
"Harlem Rides the Range" of which I spoke earlier (had the title a little wrong) is an example of one of those westerns, and I'm ashamed to say I've forgotten the actor's name as well. (One Wiki later: Herb Jeffries) There were a number of "all negro cast" films done for the cinematic equivalent of the Chitlin' circuit, but only a couple are known of today to the general public. I think TCM would do well to find a few of them and run them in Black History Month.
Light skinned blacks like Lena Horne often got musical numbers in musicals of that era; songs not relevant to the plot, which could easily be cut from the film when it ran in the south.
Hollywood catered to that audence, albeit via the "separate but equal" mandate of the day. Embarassing or not, not in line with today's ideals or not, they were black people on film, which other blacks folks could go see and admire.
John Ostrander (2:48 PM on Fri Nov 30, 2007)
Your note about Lena Horne actually is my point -- her numbers were made to be expendable because you could not play them in certain parts of the country. Hers was not the only case. The statement they made about African-Americans in that age is about the same -- their achievements don't need to be noticed. I'm not saying that pop culture sould do or be more this or that -- I say it's a mirror that, perhaps not even with intension, shows us our society. What black actors today can "open" a movie? Denzel washington and Will Smith and I'd suggest that Will Smith appears in the more "color blind" movies -- his part is usually not written to be played specifically by someone of color. In I AM LEGEND, he's taking the old Chaleston Heston role (back when the same story was shot as THE OMEGA MAN).
Linda Gold (3:51 PM on Sat Dec 1, 2007)
Which is really the old Vincent price role from LAST MAN ON EARTH.
Vinnie Bartilucci (5:49 PM on Sat Dec 1, 2007)
"I'd suggest that Will Smith appears in the more "color blind" movies -- his part is usually not written to be played specifically by someone of color"
That sounds like a GOOD thing to me. The fact that you're referring to Black roles is part of the problem. Ideally any role should be perfectly reasonable to be played by any actor- the fact that Will's roles are color blind sound like progress.
Taking a page from Chris Claremont, any role should be asked the question, "Is there any reason this character can't be black/Asian/fat/etc?"
Rick Taylor (2:46 PM on Thu Nov 29, 2007)
The person I was referring to was Bob Blaek the Bronze Buckaroo.
Glenn Hauman (9:44 AM on Fri Nov 30, 2007)
The phenomenon goes on to this day: note the tremendous success of Tyler Perry and his movies-- and his almost complete lack of coverage in the mainstream press.
Marilee J. Layman (4:28 PM on Fri Nov 30, 2007)
Glenn, I read about them in the WashPost, usually on the front page of the Style section, whenever they come out.