kthulhu wrote:UncleMilo wrote:Also: Imagine you're from Japan and you listen to popular music from America and you hear the "n" word over and over in some hip-hop or rap song... you don't know what the "n" word is... and so the person from Japan starts using the word to mimic the musicians he likes to listen to. He has no idea about the history of that word or why it would offend someone...
In the case of "Tokyo Breakfast", I think the director knew full well what they were doing with the n-word. When it's the Japanese family doing it to one another, they show the reaction.
At the end, though, when the black delivery man shows up, they don't show the reaction he has. Why? Because the director (and the audience, most likely) knows that the reaction will be the black man getting offended. It's supposed to be making fun of the Japanese ignorance of racial politics, but at the same time, it provides an excuse for cheap racist humor.
That said, the sheer racist surrealism of "Tokyo Breakfast" is what makes it interesting.
It also works this way in many american shows themselfs for example,
In boston Public a show many of you know as a show about a school (in boston no less
),
There was an episode where the coach of the basketball team got fired for using the N word even though the players said it was cool.
Networks/companies like to play off of the publics attention to racial sterotypes, and therefore make people hate more than the already did.
Because in the long run, all we're doing is introducing racism to a new generation that otherwise, would not get it from anywhere else (basicly).
Congrads.
While I understand they're just shows, and I also (from what my step father told me who had lived there for considerable amounts of time) understand that the japanese have a particular sort of eltisim in their own country (for example, if you have a business, a japanese man has to own 51% of the company or more).
It has alot to do with protecting their econemy, which there-fore makes alot of sense.
I don't even think it's about racism anymore, maybe just more about business?
"hey... no"