{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "For some reason the 10 white people in this bar have been watching BET for the last hour\n(Martin episodes)\nWhen they have a...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/190322707433/", "html": "<p>For some reason the 10 white people in this bar have been watching BET for the last hour</p><p>(Martin episodes)</p><p>When they have a crowd of girls fawning over him it&rsquo;s very much 1 darkskin girls, 2 lightskin girls, a white girl and an asian girl</p><p>Specifically, a Japanese girl. A reminder that as recently as the 90s they were a bigger part of our impression of &ldquo;Asian-American&rdquo; </p><p>Then, as recently as the 90s Japan was a bigger part of our impression of Asia</p><p>Anyway, the real culture clash comes in the commercials</p><p>The showy diversity of some commercials resonates different when they&rsquo;re set against ones that are just all-black</p><p>Such that you start thinking about the mixed ones as the black characters constituting the main through-line and you&rsquo;re like wait is the emotional payload of this one really a mother&rsquo;s satisfaction that the white boys want to get close to her daughter</p><p>Also saw an anti-diarrheal commercial with, actually, a white lead, but was surprised how startled I was that it directly mentioned &ldquo;diarrhea&rdquo;. Then remembered that some of the biggest black representation in 90s commercials was this campaign for\u2026 Immodium? Where this black guy was euphemistically talking around like &ldquo;digestion problems&rdquo; and then his loud black wife was like &ldquo;HE&rsquo;S TALKING ABOUT DIARRHEA&rdquo;</p>"}