Inserting Diversity
From the comments – which you’re reading, of course – some rumblings on racially incongruous casting in period dramas.
It began with this item, shared by Aelf, on the BBC’s enthusiasm for over-representing minorities in its dramatic programming, including ahistorically, in period dramas, and to a degree one might consider wildly improbable and therefore distracting.
Regarding which, ComputerLabRat noted,
Indeed. The 2008 BBC production of The No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency was dutifully observant in terms of racial casting. Which does rather throw into relief the unilateral nature and casual, practised arrogance of the underlying conceit. The urge to insert diversity, in one direction at least, regardless of incongruity.
As seen, for instance, in the pages of British Vogue, where Ms Hanna Flint, “a mixed-race woman, of British and Tunisian heritage,” expressed her dismay that new adaptations of works by Emily Brontë and Jane Austen have “cast the protagonists as white once again.” As if this were some kind of scandal or transgression, for which apologies and recompense were in order.
Presumably on grounds that it is somehow unfair that the Yorkshire moors of the eighteenth century did not entirely resemble twenty-first century London. Where Ms Flint happens to live.
Ms Flint bemoaned the “factory setting of a white perspective” – in tales about white people – and the lack of “historical inclusivity” in adaptations of novels set in rural England in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Given the racial demographics of rural England at the time of Brontë and Austen, it isn’t at all clear what historical inclusivity might mean. Indeed, what Ms Flint seems to want sounds more like ahistorical inclusivity.
Ms Flint informed us that she is “left somewhat cold” by period-appropriate pallor. A train of thought that terminated before arriving at the possibility that others, perhaps some larger number, might be left somewhat cold by modish anachronism and jarring racial contrivance. Neither of which seems likely to enhance any suspension of disbelief, which one might think a consideration when making television drama.
As I said at the time:
It seems to have escaped Ms Flint that, for many, the appeal of period dramas is, as it were, a holiday in time – a brief respite from modernity, its politics and paraphernalia, and perhaps even from those “diverse, multicultural surroundings” that Ms Flint feels should be the foundation of all drama and period-specific programming.
Indeed, this sentiment of retrospective racial correction can be seen in other spheres, including galleries of landscape paintings. You see, depictions of the British countryside from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, including those by John Constable, are “leaving very little room for representations of people of colour.” And obviously, even the past must be made “inclusive and representative.” Via the medium of pretentious agonising.
Such that gallery visitors must now be warned, thanks to new and ominous signage, that the sight of a Constable landscape may inspire “nationalist feelings” and, worse, “pride towards a homeland,” which is to say, thoughts of historical attachment, continuity, and belonging – thoughts that may be disconcerting or very much frowned upon. If only by the – wait for it – keepers of our heritage.
Though, again, this ostentatious fretting, and the assumption of inserted diversity as some unassailable good, seems somewhat selective in its direction.
And so, we arrive at the idea, common among racial activists, that a country to which you’ve migrated, or to which your parents migrated, should reorganise its history, its cultural memory, in fanciful and jarring ways in order to accommodate you or your racial proxies. Thereby providing the most contrived and overreaching affirmation. As if that were some totally proper and incontestable thing.
With any whiff of hesitation or demurral, any suggestion of factual or dramatic inaccuracy, being hastily denounced as bigotry and wickedness.
In light of which, I’m trying to imagine upping sticks to, say, South Korea and expecting the locals to make their historical dramas flatter and affirm people who look like me.
It’s… odd. A weird thing to demand.





Farther.
No, farther.
Let’s just say, if she stepped on her hem walking, that red carpet would get a whole lot redder.
And to think I used to worry about wearing dangly earrings and getting them caught in a sweater
[shudders]
Irrelevant, Mexican trumps Jew in the hierarchy and you know all the “Latin” actors ululating about the actress not being Mexican wouldn’t give a fat rat’s ass if a Mexican who is zero Jewish had been cast.
You’re laughing at my childhood, you monster.
[ Faints. ]
I stopped paying much attention to Crowder when he moved to The Blaze and went paywalled. Has he done something recently to offend his ostensible base?
The medical profession continues to cover itself in glory. Well, no. Not really glory…
Very few pundits are worth paying to read.
“One of the inevitabilities of the triumph of identity politics is that the denial of British indigeneity would eventually crack”.
A ten-second argument against
immigrationinvasion.PEAK CRINGE.
Although, I do rather picture our esteemed host as being somewhat “embarrassingly handsome.”
Remember those fawning magazine profiles of Hitler?
I’ve been saying for some time that treating all white people as a monolithic bloc under constant assault is not going to end well.
Like, for the people who aren’t white.
Swift mass deportations look more attractive with each passing day.
…But don’t forget the leftists.
Related: “anchor rape”
And I think this halted deportation was mentioned here.
How to get shot with this simple trick!
Amelia at the pub
I think I just threw up in my mouth a little.
On balance, I prefer turtles.
Ye gods it’s worse than the one about Beto O’Rourke. Worse than the “sexy Biden” articles.
Newsom a self-made millionaire though – doing what? The guy is nephew of Nancy Pelosi, if I remember right, and she is from or married into Baltimore wealth. “Self-made” is doing a lot of work there, methinks.
Mousse-olini and TTK have that same smarmy smug look about them though. Two of a kind they are.
Whites becoming a “bloc” and the consequences…
I’ve been responding to the frequent queries about how awful ICE is and Trump and etc etc . for some time now, with, “What we are seeing now is the BEST CASE SCENARIO for repairing the country.”
People hate it. Which is fine by me.
Chatty Cathy dolls – circa 2026
Quoth Correia regarding That Dress: “Okay, I’m no fashion expert but I’m gonna go out on a limb and guess that using your pierced nipples like suspenders to hold your clothing up is NOT comfy.”
Notice that the fabric is barely there, not concealing her black undies, which effect is pretty ugly. So by itself that fabric won’t hurt, but as Darleen said, stepping on the hem would hurt a LOT (yet the front hem hits about mid-calf).
Speaking of Mystery Science Theater 3000 (and we were), there have been some interesting goings on what with companies merging and people being bought out of their own franchise.
The Rifftrax guys are fundraising to make four new MST3K episodes, meaning that they’ll be doing the skits and working the puppets and everyjunk.
Awhile back, Joel tried to raise money for Season 14 of the series, using his new cast, and it didn’t hit its goal. OTOH, this KS has surpassed a million, far beyond their modest goal.
Which, JOEL, we wanted the original cast for the reboot, not a bunch of Millennials, cute as they were.
Though all of this is putting aside the udder absurdity (sorry, I had to) and obvious pain (well, I would assume) of piercing them in the first place. Yet we have come to accept this idiocy as somewhat normal. Mostly because it’s so common among certain visible types. My days…nights…of attending gentlemen’s establishments have faded away but I barely recall anyone having them back then. Even then they were on the sluttier/creepier ladies.
Per grok, historically it was mostly a male thing, and rather rare so women having it done is really ridiculous.
Pull the string and hear her babble.
That’s a great metaphor. I’ve been using it for years. But aren’t there some other dolls of that type with well known names that could be reused to make the same point?
Where all are below average.
I think the worse part for me is that they think they’re being clever in how they are pushing their intent to discriminate against straight white men, when it’s just blatantly obvious what they are doing. Yet nothing will be done. No legislators will be arrested or debarred. None of them will be imprisoned and fined for all they have. It’s all so tiresome.
Edit: It’s like when you watch that video of an Indian migrant who thinks he’s a genius because he figured out that he can get free food from a food bank even though he doesn’t need to, or any other way they exploit a high-trust system. Stupid people thinking they’re clever.
I’ve got a comment caught in the Spam filter. Do you mind bashing it with a stick?
Freed.