Showtime Picks Up Jamie Foxx sitcom "White Famous"; Jay Pharoah & Megalyn E. to star

Discussion in 'In the Media' started by ColiBreh1, Jan 9, 2017.

  1. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    Hope to see the DVD of that show soon.
     
  2. ColiBreh1

    ColiBreh1 Well-Known Member

  3. meowkittenmeow

    meowkittenmeow Well-Known Member

  4. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    It sure is. It sucks that it was cancelled.
     
  5. meowkittenmeow

    meowkittenmeow Well-Known Member

    Yeah, the feminist critics hated it because of the portrayal of women (as if golddiggers anf groupies don't exist for something), the "whatabouts" hated it because, " if they called it black famous... blah blah blah", and the rest hated it for valid reasons because it was too similar to californication.
     
  6. darkcurry

    darkcurry Well-Known Member

    But will defend slave movies and such.:rolleyes:
     
  7. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    I swear on everything holy if it were a black woman lead and not a black man this shit would have been considered innovative and empowering
     
  8. meowkittenmeow

    meowkittenmeow Well-Known Member

    They have a fetish for black men vulnerable and in chains. I remember reading am article about a black man who was a sex worker (male prostitute), and he got annoyed because a lot of his female clients wanted to peg him.

    Many modern day feminist types want us muscled up, in chains and ready to be dominated in a figuratively and literal sense. They seem to have the same fixation that white men have with our masculinity. Like I said, feminism is the same old white supremacy with a different gender.

    I'd also like to add that this takes money out of the pockets of black actors and actresses. So, they really aren't even about empowering the black community or black women. They just want it to toe the line to their exact beliefs (like any valid white supremacist movement).

    Interesting thing is that on HBO, the writer who wrote that interracial episode of Insecure is a white woman feminist. She is one of the head writers and under issa (a black woman), and the white feminist writer, created the age old fantasy of, "no woman will ever love you unless it's a black woman" narrative.

    I swear they are happiest when a man (especially a black man), is beaten down, broken, and unloved.
     
    Last edited: Dec 31, 2017

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