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@sonicbooming

I watched response to The Problem With Apu and wow. I'm blown away by how tone deaf and awful their response was.

*sighs*

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@sonicbooming I don't watch the Simpsons, but now I googled this and seeing all kinds of stuff, including the guy who made the film on the Daily Show.

@Ricardus Yeah, Hari's documentary The Problem with Apu is worth seeking out. It's enlightening and its a conversation about representation and culture that is necessary.

The way the Simpsons writers respond to that documentary is so ugly and disappointing.

I haven't watched the show in more than 15 years or so, but this stuff still matters.

@sonicbooming It matters now more then ever since we're "allowed" to discuss it now, even though fragile white people protest. Despite that popular media is discussing it.

I work at an indie movie house. I'll see if we can get it.

@sonicbooming Let me guess, 'beloved character,' 'tradition,' 'people love him,' etc.? -Alice

@squirrellilly This article should clarify the issue and why I as a visible minority, specifically an Indian-Asian American am so offended.

npr.org/sections/monkeysee/201

@squirrellilly Its offensive even if you're not a visible minority, but it hits home doubly b/c its specifically about my culture/people.

@sonicbooming Sorry if that sounded like a 'well I have it worse,' (which i don't) it was intended to be a 'I understand and empathize from a first person perspective' and I do not always think about how I sound until after I have said/typed it. -Alice

@squirrellilly Not even a worry, I knew what you meant. :)