• DinosaurThussy [they/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    The one character’s older brother is a violent bigot but then he gets reformed as a hot lifeguard the next season so they can do the MILF arc

    It’s very much a whitewashing of the 80’s both literally and figuratively. I don’t think we should expect complete historical accuracy in all depictions of race across all media. I do wish that if they weren’t gonna touch on racism that they should have entirely not touched on it rather than kinda sorta touched on it.

    How does Lucas feel about his girlfriend’s older brother physically threatening him because of his race and then just kind of not addressing him? We’ll never know. And that’s a big part of why it oughta be all or nothing. And preferably with someone who actually knows what the fuck they’re talking about

    • mr_world [they/them]
      ·
      3 years ago

      Then there is the gay stuff. Like hey we want gay characters because the people watching might be gay but let's not talk about the AIDS epidemic and societal attitudes towards LGBTQ people or anything. It's just a quirky personality trait that our main characters are all okay with. Just enough friction to have the gay characters there so the show has identity but no real criticism or exploration of the time. It's a very vapid show.

      • DrHorrible [they/them]
        ·
        3 years ago

        Making Strangers Things about the AIDS epidemic would not make sense at all. Its a small town setting, how in the world would they ham fist it in?

        • mr_world [they/them]
          ·
          3 years ago

          I didn't say make it about the AIDS epidemic. When I said "talk about" I don't mean the characters literally stop and have a conversation about it. I just mean the writers can put little stuff in. Mad Men is a good example of a show that does period cultural attitudes in a non-hamfisted way. If you want to point out that Mad Men is a high-class prestige drama and not some capeshit sci-fi schlock like ST, then consider Umbrella Academy S2. It's also made by Netflix and they did a whole plot about time travel where a black character goes back to the 60s. She joins a Civil Rights movement. They didn't avoid it.