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Hari Kondabolu a stand-up comic has created a documentary about the consequences of the stereotypes portrayed in the Simpsons' character Apu. There's an article about this in the Guardian.
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-...m-with-apu-simpsons-hari-konabolu-documentary
It's a distressing discussion of how casually and insularly created characters can aid in causing actual harm to actual people.
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-...m-with-apu-simpsons-hari-konabolu-documentary
It's a distressing discussion of how casually and insularly created characters can aid in causing actual harm to actual people.
But by the time Kondabolu was in middle school, Apu became something more sinister: a stereotype that gave school bullies carte blanche to pick on him. In the eyes of classmates, Kondabolu became an Apu. And his parents, who had immigrated to the US from India, became Apus too.
In the film, Kondabolu deftly analyzes what Apu meant then and now, and the ways offensive depictions like these materialize primarily because they’re assumed to be benign. “Apu reflected how America viewed us: servile, devious, goofy,” he says. “A white dude created a stereotypical Indian voice, and a bunch of white writers in the room laughed at said stereotypical Indian voice, and this led to the creation of my childhood bully and a walking insult to my parents.”
This dynamic, in which ethnic stereotypes and homogenous writer’s rooms create a kind of feedback loop of racial insensitivity, explains why Kondabolu, whose routines are incisive and hilariously scornful, saw the appeal of standup, which allows him to bypass Hollywood’s overwhelmingly white bureaucracy.