MovieChat Forums > The Magnificent Seven (2016) Discussion > I get this is the "woke" version but...

I get this is the "woke" version but...


why did they kill off the Asian character? I get why they killed off all the whites. Does the woke crowd put Asians in the same category as whites?

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It's not "woke". It just as a more diverse cast than the original. It makes it more interesting.

Billy dies because he's in the bell tower with Goodnight. That's all. It works for the story.

Some live, some die, it's about the story. Don't read too much into it.

After re-watching the original, I realized that the old one is bland. It has good actors, but no anima. No character. I hate to say it, but the new one is better. I liked the original when I was a kid, but I prefer the new. A very rare thing for me.

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It's not "woke". It just as a more diverse cast than the original


That's exactly what being woke means when there was no need to blackwash characters.

It makes it more interesting.


It does just the opposite, especially when the diversity contributed absolutely nothing to the story, and the characters very well still could have been white and nothing would have changed.

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You seem to be upset that "the characters very well still could have been white and nothing would have changed", but by your own admission the diversity changed nothing. So why does it upset you that some people are different races? Is it just because it feels like an unnecessary change?

Men used to play women in Shakespearean plays because women weren't allowed onstage (neither were black actors). Was it woke to let women on stage? I'm sure you have no problem with women in film today; a man from the late 1500s would.

What about blackface? Do you think it's woke that blackface is no longer acceptable? Many american's did when the practice started to decline in the 40s and 50s as the civil rights movement started gaining traction.

White actors have been playing non-white roles for ages. How can you be offended by the race swapping in this movie, but not be up in arms that John Wayne once played Genghis Khan? John Wayne being a white man didn't affect the story. If they had cast an Asian actor for the role "nothing would have changed".

The question is why were all of the characters white in the original? It was made for white audiences, that's why. Representation matters and we live in a more diverse world than 1960. It only makes sense that modern interpretations of older films will be made for modern audiences.

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So why does it upset you that some people are different races? Is it just because it feels like an unnecessary change?


So if it's an unnecessary change, why change it to begin with if it adds nothing of value to the end-product?

Was it woke to let women on stage?


Nope. Women should play women.

What about blackface? Do you think it's woke that blackface is no longer acceptable? Many american's did when the practice started to decline in the 40s and 50s as the civil rights movement started gaining traction.


Justin Trudeau seemed to be fine with it, so what does that tell you?

How can you be offended by the race swapping in this movie, but not be up in arms that John Wayne once played Genghis Khan? John Wayne being a white man didn't affect the story. If they had cast an Asian actor for the role "nothing would have changed".


This is what we call pushing the goal post with a non-sequitur. I never mentioned anything about it being okay to whitewash characters, did I?

The question is why were all of the characters white in the original? It was made for white audiences, that's why.


It was also representative of the demographics in that region where the story took place, the new movie was not.

Representation matters and we live in a more diverse world than 1960. It only makes sense that modern interpretations of older films will be made for modern audiences.


No, it does not matter unless you're an actual racist. The "diversity" of today is vastly overblown.

Blacks make up 14.7% of the population, which means at most we MIGHT see 1.5 out of every 10 characters be black, unless it's a movie that takes place in the ghetto or an inner city.

Asians make up approximately 6% of the population, which means we should only be seeing about 1 out of every 20 characters represented as Asian at most.

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LEARN TO COUNT KIDDO...

BLACKS- 1.5 OUT OF 10 CHARACTERS...CHECK.

ASIANS- 1 OUT OF 20 CHARACTERS...CHECK.


THIS MOVIE PASSES YOUR AUTHENTICITY CHECK.

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LOL I also said that it needs to be representative of the demographics of its time.

There weren't a bunch of Asians and blacks running around that part of the West when the story takes place, so of course it seems jarring.

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ARE YOU SURE?...BECAUSE MY AMERICAN HISTORY COURSE AT SDU SAYS OTHERWISE.

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Are you referring to the Chinese railroad workers? Well that's fine and dandy... but Lee Byung-hun is Korean.

LOL way to show your racism, bud.

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[–] cyguration (1248) 9 minutes ago
LOL I also said that it needs to be representative of the demographics of its time.

There weren't a bunch of Asians and blacks running around that part of the West when the story takes place, so of course it seems jarring.


YOU SAID ASIAN...KOREAN AND CHINESE ARE BOTH ASIAN...YOU'RE REALLY STRETCHING FOR THAT ONE...BUT YOU KNOW...BEING WRONG DOES WEIRD SHIT TO PEOPLE LIKE YOU.

DEMOGRAPHICS OF THE TIME.
https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/decennial/1880/vol-01-population/1880_v1-13.pdf

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You can read all the history books ever written and you will not find ONE Asian gunslinger in the entire history of the 19th century American West. Plenty of railroad workers, some cooks and laundry workers in the mining towns, but not one hardbitten gunslinger like the guy in this movie. But of course, maybe it's been "suppressed" and there was actually a two-gun Asian who could outdraw Wyatt Earp and Billy the Kid and Jesse James, but the evil white patriarchal historians didn't want us to know, man! LOL!

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PLENTY OF ASIANS AT THE TIME...IT ISN'T BELIEVABLE THAT ONE LEARNED TO SHOOT?...YOU'RE BEING DIFFICULT FOR NO REASON OTHER THAN BEING RIGHT EVEN WHEN YOU'RE WRONG.

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Thanks for proving my point?

Out west there around 75,000 Chinese in the California region, and less than 90 Japanese. I'm assuming about 0 Koreans.

They made up less than 0.25% of the population at the time, so yeah... thanks for proving my point that there likely wouldn't have been any Asians around that area at the time.

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YOU JUST TYPED HOW MANY ASIANS THERE WERE AT THAT TIME...PLENTY FOR THE AMOUNT IN THE FILM...YOUR MATH AND MIND ARE FLAWED.

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Uh, no. There were only 226 Chinese in the San Diego area, mostly concentrated in the urban sprawls. They were not looming around in the deserts or rural areas.

226 during that time would equate to about a neighborhood block's worth of Chinese. Meaning only a small concentration of them were located in a region that spans 372.4 square miles. The average city block is less than 350 feet, or about 17 blocks per mile, which breaks down to San Diego being able to fit up to 6,330 blocks within its city limits, which means that there's less than a 0.03% chance you would ever encounter a block full of Chinese people if you were randomly wandering across San Diego in the late 19th century.

Furthermore, what you wouldn't see are random Asians sporadically across frontier towns. The numbers were too small.

Plus, there were no Koreans in that area, which even furthers my point: even IF the one Asian character was Chinese he wouldn't have been anywhere near there. And two, since the Asian character was Korean, it makes the diversity case even worse because there were no known Koreans in that region, in that city, or even in the state at the time.

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even IF the one Asian character was Chinese he wouldn't have been anywhere near there.


WHAT THE FUCK?...HOW DO YOU KNOW WHERE AND WHEN ONE MAN WAS?...YOU SOUND INSANE.

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Why would a guy who couldn't speak English, wasn't a farmer, wasn't a herder, wasn't a rancher, and wasn't a panhandler be out in the middle of the desert near frontier towns?

Seriously?

That's like a random Nigerian being in Anchorage, Alaska, during the early 19th century for absolutely no reason. Do you not see how ridiculous that sounds?

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PLAUSIBLE AND POSSIBLE...DO YOU NOT SEE HOW RIDICULOUS YOU SOUND?

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Everything in life changes. In regards to the movie, if everything stayed the same there'd be no point of making a new one. I do not think that the costumes, action, dialog, music, or direction can change but characters' races are off limits.

Women not being allowed on stage and the use of blackface are examples of societal norms of the past that are unacceptable today. I'd argue that a lack of diversity is just another example of that.

I wasn't trying to use a non-sequitur. Maybe you are offended by John Wayne's portrayal or Genghis Khan. I was under the impression that your issue was with characters being race-swapped in film. John Wayne was a white actor who was cast as a Asian character. You clearly take issue with the diversity in Magnificent Seven because it wasn't in the original. They aren't even the same characters as the 1960 film (inspired by the first of course, but it's a re-imagining).

The demographics of the time that the movie is set in is an interesting point. If historical accuracy is important to you, maybe it doesn't work (but Kowalski buries that argument). There were examples of such inaccuracies in the both films outside of race though (e.g. levi jeans and references to 10 story buildings). I don't understand why it is important to be historically accurate in regards to race (which you already admitted has no change to the story), but not costume or dialog.

It is not at all racist to say that representation matters. The term is not at all exclusive to race. I've lived all over the U.S. and racial diversity is vastly different throughout the country. You may live in an area that reflects those percentages. Many of the places I have lived has not.

I enjoyed both the original and the remake and can appreciate them both for what they are.

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I'd argue that a lack of diversity is just another example of that.


Except that has no bearing on the legitimacy of its pertinence. For instance, women playing women makes sense. Not purposefully going out of the way to denigrate another race makes sense. Throwing in unrelated races for no logical reason makes zero sense.

If historical accuracy is important to you, maybe it doesn't work (but Kowalski buries that argument).


How? By showing that less than 106,000 Asians were in America during the late 19th century? Or that only 75,000 of them presided in California at the time and less than 100 of them were Japanese? What's more is that less than 226 of them were in San Diego, which means even fewer were in the Rose Creek area.

That actually works more in favor of my argument than yours or his, given that during that period they accounted for LESS than 0.25% of the population in the U.S., at the time, so you shouldn't have seen any Asians around there unless you went to one of their communities.

I don't understand why it is important to be historically accurate in regards to race (which you already admitted has no change to the story), but not costume or dialog.


Because jeans were actually around in the late 19th century, which makes sense, and there were a few buildings during that time that were taller than 10 stories. But seeing races run around anachronistically when they wouldn't even have been around in those parts at the time doesn't bother you?

You may live in an area that reflects those percentages. Many of the places I have lived has not.


Which is why I said "diversity" in films should be reflective of the area it takes place in, and it was HIGHLY jarring seeing the pseudo-"diversity" in the Magnificent Seven reboot.

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I'd add another impossibility. It's not only about percentages, it's about distribution too.

Perhaps one director wants to tell the story of a Chinese family in California in the XXth century. Chances are most characters would be Chinese, since family and community had an essential role and they had little relation outside of it.

But that's not the case in the "diversity" movies. They just represent the same repetitive template of characters, often with the same personalities applied as a function of race/gender: the badass white chick, the educated and charming black dude, the self-sacrificed Hispanic, the feeble insecure white male cuck, etcetera. It's not a representation of piece of past. It's just the same racial template applied no matter it's set in the current day, in the XXth century or in the King Arthur mythic age.

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I'd add another impossibility. It's not only about percentages, it's about distribution too.


I knew exactly where you were going with this before I finished reading the rest of your post...

Perhaps one director wants to tell the story of a Chinese family in California in the XXth century. Chances are most characters would be Chinese, since family and community had an essential role and they had little relation outside of it.


And there it is. 1000% agreed.

My comment was cut off so I couldn't finish it, but demographic distribution is a HUGE factor at play in storytelling about "diversity" as well, and you hit the nail on the head. Most Chinese back then -- and even today -- mostly stick to their own in communities. Their numbers were so small back during that epoch that you wouldn't find scattered Asians around and about due to language and culture barriers being a prominent issue.

Some stray Korean wandering about in the West makes zero sense. Most Asians back then weren't cattle herders, no were they scavengers or farmers, because they weren't acclimated to that kind of lifestyle, and were mostly used for physical labor related to industrial tasks.

It's not a representation of piece of past. It's just the same racial template applied no matter it's set in the current day, in the XXth century or in the King Arthur mythic age.


Precisely. That's a well-articulated way of explaining it; SJWs simply love the racial elision as a template for "diversity" even when it makes zero sense, oftentimes resulting in blatant anachronisms.

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There were plenty of blacks out West and most cowboy slang is derived from Spanish. In fact there were notable black gunfighters such as Bass Reeves and Willie Kinnard and the Mexican American Elfego Baca was one of the toughest customers of his era. Where wokeness comes in is that while there were plenty of Asian immigrants out there they were mostly miners and railroad workers with Tong members in the big cities. None were gunfighters as we understand the term. And a Native American gunfighter was likely to be from modern day Oklahoma...a Comanche warrior would have been shot on sight even by the black and Latino members of this particular Magnificent Seven.

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Thanks for the added info.

I think that's part of what takes audience members out of a movie, when they can very easily see the anachronisms and know that it's a misrepresentation of the era.

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I think that "blackface" is a stupid concept.

So, as an example, for halloween a white guy cannot dress up and "play" the Black Panther character or Blade?

How is that even offensive?

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I rule Not Woke on this one.

They weren't "blackwashing." They were "casting Denzel." It's a different thing.

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It is DEFINITELY woke and worse than the original.

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This pile of garbage does not compare to the original.

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Yup.
Should be white saviors vs evil Mexicans. You got it.

Just so you know, "Woke" isn't an insult. No one thinks it is. Just you.

Cake eater.

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LMAO...HIGH FIVE...πŸ‘‹

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No. Woke is DEFINITELY an insult. In movies it refers to a picture that is intended to push an agenda, at the expense of mood and story. "Woke" is casting an African actress as Anne Boelyn. "Woke" is also throwing a shit-fit if a white actor plays an Arab or a Native American. "Woke" is hypocrisy and attempting to right perceived wrongs by inflicting the same wrongs on the group you perceive has "oppressed" you. "Woke" means that the movie is attempting to indoctrinate you first, entertain you second, if at all.

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LMAO...PUT YOUR WEIRD LITTLE BONER AWAY.πŸ™„

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Only a bonafide, gender-fluid Wokester like you would be thinking about my boner right now.

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LMAO...HIGH FIVE...πŸ‘‹

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THAT WASN'T FUNNY AND I WOULDN'T BE TOUCHING THAT DUDE'S HAND.🀨

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πŸ†

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So you're saying that The Magnificent Seven was explicitly made to indoctrinate the masses under the guise of entertainment?

I have a bridge to sell you.

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Gee. You're absolutely right. I'm sure the choice of director and the casting of over half the Magnificent Seven and the choice of villains was all purely coincidental. No agenda to subvert the Western genre was in anyone's mind whatsoever. They all just showed up randomly and each one was the best for the job or role.

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Subvert the western genre? What do you even mean by that?
How do you feel about foreign westerns like The Good the Bad the Weird?
Do you hate spaghetti westerns like Django?
What about Tarantino's Django?

The Original Magnificent Seven was an adaptation of a Japanese samurai movie (Seven Samurai). Does that make it a subversion of Samurai cinema?

This same director and some of the same cast members were also responsible for Training Day, a movie with a black villain and a white protagonist. The villain was a corrupt and murderous cop who tries to have his white trainee killed to save himself. In the end the white cop wins and the black cop dies, brutally. What agenda is this group of artists pushing exactly?

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"What agenda is this group of artists pushing exactly?"

Lol, says the person who questions the messaging of Disney portraying female villains as "misunderstood".

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I don't see your point, and you didn't answer the question.

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I don't see your point either by mentioning all kinds of other movies and situations that have nothing to do with this particular movie.

I didn't answer the question, because it wasn't directed at me. I just find it hypocritical to dismiss the criticism and possibility of an agenda behind the diverse casting in this movie, while you yourself complain about the messaging behind Disney giving female villains more depth.

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I'll clarify my point for you.

I asked questions that are directly related to whynotwriteme's suggestion that The Magnificent Seven (this particular movie) is a subversion of the western genre.

Those movies I mentioned represent different sub-genres of a western (the genre of this particular movie). I was wondering if whynotwriteme felt that these were subversive as well. I don't understand what could be subverted in society by any of these movies mentioned and certainly not by adding diversity to The Magnificent Seven.

I mentioned Seven Samurai because it is the movie the 1960 film is adapted from. In other words, there's nothing sacred about the 1960 film, it's an american version of a foreign film. That makes them all three different versions of the same story. Each one with different protagonists, different villains, and different circumstances.

whynotwriteme suggested there was an agenda being pushed, referencing the director, villain, and the cast. Training Day was made by the same director, and in many ways juxtaposes the circumstances of The Magnificent Seven. I'm suggesting that this group was likely just making art, rather than pushing a consistent agenda.

Now my post criticizing those Disney movies was deliberately tongue-in-cheek. I think Disney should give their male villains the same treatment, but at the same time not lay it on so thick with the sympathy in any of those movies. For example, I thought Maleficent changed so much that it wasn't the same character or story. Cruella (spoiler) treated the character better, but the whole murder-trained-dalmatian-fake-mom angle was way too much in a movie that was already over the top.

I was suggesting more villainous characters are given depth, not only the females, but not done so in a way that bastardizes the story. I don't see the equivalence to your suggestion that a Black and Asian guy being cast in a remake of an old western is subversive.

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"Those movies I mentioned represent different sub-genres of a western (the genre of this particular movie)"

Training Day? No. Males in female Shakespearean roles? Blackface? John Wayne as Genghis Khan? No.

"I think Disney should give their male villains the same treatment, but at the same time not lay it on so thick with the sympathy in any of those movies. For example, I thought Maleficent changed so much that it wasn't the same character or story. Cruella (spoiler) treated the character better, but the whole murder-trained-dalmatian-fake-mom angle was way too much in a movie that was already over the top."

Yeah, and other people think Hollywood shouldn't lay it on so thick with the diversity to the point that it isn't realistic anymore.

"I don't see the equivalence to your suggestion that a Black and Asian guy being cast in a remake of an old western is subversive."

My suggestion?

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Mentions of Shakespeare, blackface, and John Wayne were in response to a completely different post and I think their use is quite clear. Training Day was brought up because it was suggested that Antoine Fuqua added diversity to the cast and made the villain a white guy so that he could push his racial agenda. I never would have mentioned Training Day if Antoine Fuqua wasn't brought up. So again, relevant and quite clear.

You're saying you think that the level of diversity in The Magnificent Seven bothers you. OK. Unfortunately not enough people feel that way. In other words, you're in the minority. If there were enough people with that opinion where it would affect profits Hollywood would immediately reduce diversity.

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"Mentions of Shakespeare, blackface, and John Wayne were in response to a completely different post and I think their use is quite clear."

I didn't suggest it was in response to the same post, and no, your use is not clear at all. As mentioned, they are all non-sequiturs.

Training Day is from 2001 before the rise of wokeness, so no, not relevant in the slightest.

"In other words, you're in the minority."

Lol, says who? Hollywood doesn't care about profits, otherwise they would take note after flops like The Heights. Investors is where it's at.

Anyway, even less people care about your issue with the portrayal of female vs. male Disney villains. What's your point?

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I literally went through every point explaining the relevance. I'm sorry if you either cannot keep up or choose not to have an actual discussion. Most of these points that I brought up were in the form of questions, ones that were not answered. Why not just respond to any of the questions? I haven't criticized your viewpoint that you disapprove of the diversity in The Magnificent Seven and the film industry at large. I don't share that opinion so I was asking for information on that viewpoint and offering my own. Discussions grow; that's literally what a message board is designed to facilitate and why a tree structure is used. It's not a non-sequitur to advance a discussion on a platform designed for just that.

All Publicly-traded companies, like the studios that produced The Magnificent Seven, absolutely care about profit.

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"I literally went through every point explaining the relevance"

Non-sequiturs are not relevant. The other posters' opinion on other movies or issues have nothing to do with the question whether there's an agenda behind the diverse casting of this particular movie. No one needs to answer any of those questions which are clearly based on assumptions made about said posters.

No, simply making a profit is not the goal anymore. Never heard of CSR and purpose washing? The point is to draw investors and receive other financial benefits, just look at Meghan and and Harry. They're making money without selling any actual products.

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Here is a list of quotes from the post I responded to that were each opened up for discussion (which was a response in a discussion about weather woke was derogatory or not):
In movies it refers to a picture that is intended to push an agenda
"Woke" is casting an African actress as Anne Boelyn.
"Woke" is also throwing a shit-fit if a white actor plays an Arab or a Native American.
"Woke" is hypocrisy and attempting to right perceived wrongs by inflicting the same wrongs on the group you perceive has "oppressed" you.
"Woke" means that the movie is attempting to indoctrinate you first, entertain you second

Like I said discussions grow. Every response has a reply option, by design. In other words, a growing discussion is an intended possibility of every post and reply.

Again, the goal of a publicly-traded company is to generate profit for investors. It's a open market, people do not invest in companies that lose them money. CSR and purpose-washing only exist because consumers' purchases matter and profit is the goal.

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Wth? That was the poster explaining what woke is and why it's not a compliment. Of course he's going to mention other examples to clarify.

Your idea of a discussion "growing" is apparently trying to expose the posters you don't agree with as having a double standard. As you can see yourself, the other poster didn't appreciate your questions either, so your attempt to make the dicussion grow was a complete failure, which is no surprise.

Not every investor is interested in making a direct financial profit, they want to promote their agenda instead. CSR is less interested in short term profit and there is no evidence it helps sell products. Just take a look at how many overtly woke films flop.

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Objectively, the discussion grew quite a bit. You've been invested enough in it to continue it. I'm not trying to expose anybody for anything. If you see a double standard to how you assume those questions would be answered that's on you. I assume that you have an opinion on those topics that is not a double standard. For example, you responded to Training Day by mentioning it predated the woke movement. I respect that opinion, didn't argue that, even though I disagree with it. I don't see a double standard there, just an opinion I don't agree with. It's irrational to assume that you can comment on someone's post, but they cannot reply, weather it's in agreement or disagreement.

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Lol, how can you disagree with the fact that Training Day was made before the woke movement???

The discussion didn't "grow", we're discussing something completely unrelated that shouldn't even be discussed: unfounded assumptions about other posters. The difference of opinion is about this movie, not all the other nonsense you brought up.

"It's irrational to assume that you can comment on someone's post, but they cannot reply, weather it's in agreement or disagreement"

Yeah, that's another of your unfounded assumptions, not mine. I made no assumptions about anything.

Stop playing innocent.

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The discussion started with a post on what woke was. Asking if other films are woke and how is absolutely on topic.

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Shakespeare, blackface and John Wayne have nothing to do with wokeness or diversity casting.

Just like your questions directed at the other poster, your question about Training Day was a hypothetical one you already answered yourself:

"This same director and some of the same cast members were also responsible for Training Day, a movie with a black villain and a white protagonist. The villain was a corrupt and murderous cop who tries to have his white trainee killed to save himself. In the end the white cop wins and the black cop dies, brutally."

Now how could a movie made 15 years later by the same people possibly have awoke diversity agenda, right???

You're not exactly with the times if you're asking whether a movie from 2001 is "woke"...πŸ˜‘

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I don't use the term woke, so I wouldn't know.

What you quoted from me about Training Day isn't even a question. It's a statement. There was a question right after it in my post: "What agenda is this group of artists pushing exactly?". That question was most definitely not hypothetical and went unanswered.

I'd argue that any individual upset by the diversity in films like this one isn't "exactly with the times".

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Uhm, hello, I said that you answered your own question about Training Day, which was the quote.

"I'd argue that any individual upset by the diversity in films like this one isn't "exactly with the times".

Yeah, the same goes for your complaint about female Disney villains...πŸ™„

Again you're making assumptions. Disagreeing or thinking it's dumb does not equal being "upset". And disagreeing with casting minorities in the specific historical setting of this movie does not mean one does not like diversity in movies.

Like I said, stop playing innocent.

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I JUST SPENT 10 MINUTES READING THIS "CONVERSATION"...ABED IS BEING POLITE,WELL SPOKEN AND FAIR...YOU ARE BLATHERING ON LIKE A FUCKING NUT..FURTHERMORE,YOU DON'T EVEN HAVE A POINT...SO MUCH INSIPID BLIND RAGE.

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Always so angry, just like your countless sock puppet accounts.πŸ˜‚

Stop trolling and go make another one of your gay cowboy home videos.πŸ†

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ASSUMPTION MAKES YOU WEAK...YOUR WEAK MIND MAKES YOU EMBARRASSING.

NO ANGER...NOT EVEN A TOUCH...YOU DON'T MERIT ANGER.

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Cursing and typing in all capitals means anger. Just ask your therapist in the looney bin.😊

Nah, your gay cowboy videos are embarrassing!🀣

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YOU ARE ALL ALONE SWEETHEART...YOU DON'T SEEM TO REALIZE THE IMPACT YOUR ACTIONS AND ATTITUDE HAVE HAD ON OTHERS.

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No, you sure are Mr. Niceguy!πŸ˜‚

Oh no, the resident troll doesn't think I'm polite!😱

Go give your imaginary boyfriend a blowjob, he's getting jealous over all the attention you're giving me!πŸ†

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SAD.

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Yes, you are. Not my problem.πŸ™ƒ

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YOU HAVE PLENTY ON YOUR OWN.

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My only problem is your obsession with me. Let's see how long it takes before you or one of your sock puppets start bothering me again.β±πŸ™‚

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BY "OBSESSION" & "BOTHERING YOU"?,DO YOU MEAN READING POSTS AND REPLYING?...YOU KNOW,THE REASON FOR THE SITE.

ONCE AGAIN I AM ONLY ME...NO PUPPETS...DO YOU SEE ANY OTHER CAP'D UP MOTHERFUCKERS AS COOL AS ME?...THE ANSWER IS NO.😎

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Lol, the only thing you do is butt in to call me names and throw other abuse at me. But let's just see, I know you can't help yourself!πŸ˜‚

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IT IS TRUE...I AM QUITE OBSESSED WITH YOU...PERHAPS A RESTRAINING ORDER?

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Come on, you're a grown-ass man, you need to learn how to restrain yourself!

Like I said, we'll see how it goes. Sleep tight.πŸ˜ŠπŸ†

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OOH...WE'RE GONNA SLEEP TOGETHER?...I'M A LITTLE NERVOUS..I HAVE NEVER DONE THIS BEFORE...BE PATIENT WITH ME DARLING.

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Lol, no way, just keep your aubergine away from me!πŸ†πŸ˜‚

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WEIRD.πŸ€”

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Keep fighting the "Good" fight against ignorance and closemindedness. πŸ‘

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White supremacists see an "agenda" on everything that involves minorities.

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All true.

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Lol, janoss the woke snowflake is easily triggered!🀣🀣🀣

"Should be white saviors vs evil Mexicans. You got it."

No surprise you need to lie to make your point

"Just so you know, "Woke" isn't an insult. No one thinks it is. Just you."

Oh, and how about the OP??? "Woke" is a legitimate critcism and if it had no negative connotation you wouldn't be crying right now.

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It's definitely an insult. No one should strive to be woke.

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That stupid word has lost all meaning now that right wingers overuse it. No one takes it as an insult even if that's the intention.

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100% an insult, no matter what the sock puppets say.πŸ™‚

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I'm completely anti-woke, but I really appreciated the diversity in this film. I just had a feeling there would be a thread in here like this. Diversity does not automatically make a movie woke, I'm sick of people thinking this. I think there are times when forced diversity is woke, but this isn't one of them. I see westerns as a great opportunity and the plot of people with all different backgrounds joining together. Who said the movie was supposed to be woke anyways?

They did not kill off all the whites, at first I took problem with this too, but two white people live. No one puts Asians in the same category as whites, if they do then they're just delusional.

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