Firstly, the fact that he was playing an Australian, I find offensive. I am Australian, so it made us out to be buffoons.
Secondly, there was an incident in Australia one time that America condemned. On a show called "Hey, Hey, It's Saturday" there was a talent quest, where five guys dressed as the Jackson Five. Four of them "blackfaced" while the one playing Michael was "lighter". Anyway, guest judge Harry Connick Jr carried on and acted like he was offended (like he knows anything about black oppression, so I think he was more carrying on to appease his fanbase). It made news in the U.S., and Americans condemned us as "racist".
Firstly, how was this offensive? Michael Jackson's brothers are actually black, so how else were they meant to portray them accurately? Unless they searched the streets for five dark coloured guys, it wouldn't be an accurate portrayal. Secondly, they were singing a Jackson Five hit, so they weren't mocking blacks. The comedy was that the guy playing Michael was "whiteface" to show how his color has changed. Yet it caused offence to some visiting singer who comes from the South, where they burn crosses.
Also, the Americans said that this proves Australians are racist, and look how they treat their indigenous people, the Aborigines. They then tried to show how "progressive" the U.S. is, and how they accept blacks. Except that, the U.S.A.'s indigenous people aren't the African-American, but the Red Indian. America's treatment of the Red Indian is pretty bad, so they need to look in their own backyard first.
I think it is because Robert Downey jr is popular with people, and everyone admires that he got off drugs, means that they turn a blind eye to his cariciture.
BTW, I'm not saying that this role should be condemned. But neither should others who do a similar thing. People need to grow a sense of humor.
reply
share