by Nicholas Lemieux
In light of the recent Black Lives Matter protests, an
immense sense of urgency has understandably overtaken much of the entertainment
industry in an effort to improve representation of black and minority ethnic
people. Whilst a strong idea in principle, especially given how recent events
have highlighted the sheer levels of inequality still present within society, I
personally cannot help but question whether the decision of outright erasing
old TV shows and movies from various online services on the basis of their
outdated and offensive content is truly the right way to go about things.
Admittedly, it is fairly understandable as to why
there would be outrage against the offensive content present in programmes such
as Little Britain, prominently featuring white actors playing ethnic people and
exaggerating their perceived attributes to a stereotypical degree. It is a
product of its time after all and series creator Matt Lucas in fact issued an
apology three years ago for its depiction of minority groups, admitting if he
had the chance to remake the show he would avoid making such jokes in light of
the upset caused.
However, I can’t help but feel cynical with the BBC’s
decision to completely remove the programme from all its services. In my
opinion, the decision feels as if it has an element of hiding from their
perceived mistakes instead of outright addressing them. After all, their statement
for removing it for its outdated comedy seems rather bizarre given how just
weeks before they were comfortably advertising new sketches of Little Britain
for its highly publicised Big Night-In event. Shocking how much of a change in
heart the BBC had in such a short amount of time...
Arguably, outright erasing existence has only resulted
in the Streisand effect and drawn more attention to the show, as is evident
from its recent spike in sales from EBay. If the BBC wanted to firmly address
criticisms of the show’s perceived racist content, why not just simply add a
disclaimer or warning to the programme to give people the choice of whether or
not they want to watch it in the first place, as well as make it clear that the
purpose of these shows is not to deliberately raise hate against ethnicities? Other
companies have done so for their own products, such as Warner Bros. with their DVD
releases of old outdated Looney Tunes. Those decisions have raised little
controversy, so why not just do the same here?
Ignoring the context of these TV shows and just
blindly labelling them as racist is also incredibly problematic. Shows such as
Come Fly With Me and Fawlty Towers, which have also come under fire, are intentionally about bigoted and
self-centred people with the entire narrative being that these characters are
so out-of –touch and horrible that we can freely mock them for their
well-deserved humiliation. Sure, these
shows cover racist situations but they do not in any way herald the racist
actions of their characters who themselves are the intended butt of the joke.
The racist immigration officer of Come Fly With Me for example loses his job
for his offensive behaviour by the end of the series and the entire purpose of
the Major’s racist jokes, as summarised by John Cleese himself, is to mock the
character for his outdated, ridiculous views.
The fact that UKTV themselves quickly reinstated the episode of Fawlty
Towers within a matter of days after the uproar, with a warning added for
offensive language, highlights just how poorly thought out their decision was.
If they had just elected to go with the warning in the first place, this entire
controversy wouldn’t have broken out at all.
Perhaps the most frustrating incident for me has been
Netflix’s removal of several select episodes of the sitcom It’s Always Sunny in
Philadelphia from its streaming service which involved scenes of the main
characters wearing blackface and brownface. As with the examples before, it’s
made abundantly clear by the writers that this entire situation is satire with
the main characters being objectively bad people. There are countless moments throughout
the episodes in which these characters are called out for their offensive
actions and humiliated for their bigotry, driving home how this sort of
behaviour is clearly wrong and shouldn’t be glorified. At no point do they try
to make the blackface itself funny as the whole purpose of the show is to
portray the worst of the worst that people can act like, characters we are
meant to feel comfortable rooting against. You’re laughing at these stupid
racists for dressing up in blackface, not at the black people who are being
represented in such a grotesque manner. It’s similar to the recent criticisms
people have had about Robert Downey Jr. in Tropic Thunder. It could be argued
that banning these programmes derails the entire message of Black Lives Matter
as the purpose of these shows and their jokes is to call out those same bigoted
people for their old-fashioned ways. Completely erasing them from the public
eye just defeats their entire purpose in spreading a progressive message.
Ultimately, although with good intentions, I just
don’t think that censoring these shows is truly the right way forward. If
anything, it undermines the entire movement it is supposed to support and
removing these shows, regardless of their context and intentions, makes it come
across as an arbitrary hollow gesture that means these companies don’t have to
put any real work into combating actual instances of racial discrimination. Add
a disclaimer if you want to avoid causing any offence but constantly going around
removing these shows sends across the wrong message, blurs lines and detracts
from the possibility of any actual change coming about from this very real
movement to put an end to racial injustice.
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