The Day Rue "Became" Black
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- Опубликовано: 18 май 2021
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www.theatlantic.com/entertain...
www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/...
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nashuproar.org/30352/opinion/...
mg.co.za/article/2013-08-30-t...
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two years later and i'm making a pinned comment for this video. people comment yearly that i missed the point of the onion tweet and although i totally could go through each comment and respond, i don't want to anymore.
i *know* the onion is satirical. no i didn't miss the point. if your satire about how cruel people are being to a little girl includes being just as cruel to a little girl, it's not good satire. the onion even deleted the tweet and issued an apology for this because although we can all agree it was well intentioned, it was horribly executed. how does piling on more insults about a child even highlight the absurdity and cruelty of how the child is being treated anyway?
oh wow i hadnt even noticed this video was that old
I've watched a ton of Onion videos and read Onion articles, and I flinched when I saw the tweet calling out a young actress by name followed by a sexual insult. Despite knowing (and supporting) the Onion's brand of parody and humor, I had to double take to confirm that it was really them who did that. I'm glad to hear that they deleted and apologized for what they did, but I can't imagine being a preteen and knowing my public ridicule and insult is actually funny to some people.
oh well
the satire doesnt make it ok, even if its a joke you should not be calling a CHILD a c-word
like, you didn't. they shouldn't have used that word to describe a real living child. It was satire, but it was bad satire. Period. I cannot believe people are-- no, I can, but I'm deeply annoyed by it. :/
"I didn't imagine her as black"
No shit I bet you imagine all character as white unless the writer screams their race at you
Text: "The black girl blacked out of bed, her black skin blacking blackily, and blacked blackwards."
White readers: "Huh, this is an interesting metaphor. Anyway this character is white."
Wouldn't people imagine the characters looking like their own race?
@@jgr_lilli_ um... Thats rude... Not all white people do that and two anyone can miss imagine a character that matches their race.
@@SofiaBerruxSubs i read characters according to the race they were written
@@jgr_lilli_ 😂😂😂
‘when i found out rue was black, her death wasn’t as sad’ actually horrifying
So vile and disgusting
Happens in real life everyday, so no surprise there unfortunately.
extremely so
Oh YeA NoBoDy CrIeS WhEn LiTtLE bLaCk GiRlS GeT BrUTaLlY kILlED.... Seriously though, how messed up is humanity
A lot of those “people” say that to get a rise out of people and attention because their parents never gave it to them.
Her being black is actually really important to the plot in a way...the fact that Katniss sees Prim in Rue despite skin tone is actually a powerful message on anti-racism. She doesnt see Rue as BLACK, she sees her as a scared little girl.
White's in real life are racist, katniss is not.
EXACTLYYYYY. No matter what these kids look like skin color, hair, WHATEVER, they’re all still scared children regardless.
This is a really great point! I also think Rue's and Prim's actresses do resemble one another quite a bit. They both have a softness and delicateness to their features which perfectly aligns with their descriptions in the novel.
Also this franchise is feminist without being on the nose about it like in recent Disney films
100%.
i literally cannot fathom the fact that some people were not as sad when rue died simply because they "realised" she was black. people make me sick.
After the BLM riots. I'm not surprised 🤷♀️
White people being racist what’s new
When I watched the movies, I wanted to punch Marvel for what happened to Rue.
When I watched the movie I wasn’t that sad for Rues death. I couldn’t see why I was supposed to care about Rues death over Marvels. Both were kids who were pawns sent to die in the games. Also we had like three scenes with Rue so how did anyone actually care about her character?
@@freddiemedley5580 i think it's fine not to be sad over movie deaths, i'm exclusively talking about people who were sad over her death in the book, before they noticed her race, and became indifferent because she was black.
"Why'd you cast a black person to play a black person?"
"Cause she's a black person..."
Sums it up well.
Well... She's biracial
@@dokessezeaka5159 Well yeah, she is that too.
She is still black, even if it's only half way, I just mean that people ask ridiculous questions and don't read the character descriptions.
@@dokessezeaka5159 biracial people who have a black parent/grand parent are still black (edit) I'm realizing now I made this comment without any explanation. Yes black and white biracial people are biracial, there's no denying that. But a mixed person who passes as black has little to no white features excluding maybe a lighter skin tone. They are still biracial, but these people who were harassing amandala and other young girls like her didn't stop and say "well at least she has some white in her," because they didn't see any white. They saw another black girl and they wanted to tear her down.
@@lya1592 no they're not, why do black people fight so hard for biracial people to be considered black? White people don't do the same. And before somone says "well white people will still see her as black", because WE can define who is black... Not white people. Let biracials be called biracials, why try to erase the other part of their identity?
@@dokessezeaka5159 because as a biracial, I don't give af about my other side 💀💀💀
I remember talking to a friend about this outrage when it first happened and her saying "well the book describes her skin as being dark enough to blend in with the trees and I've never seen a pink-barked tree."
Gold 👌
@Average Commenter for real. Like sure, you could argue that Star Wars had "forced diversity," but did it really matter?
I honestly didn't like any of the new trilogy, but I _did_ like Tran's Rose... at least up until that stupid crash.
My distaste for the movies had zero to do with Finn being black, Rei being a woman, or Rose being asian... and I don't think that's really why Tran got such awful treatment. I think there were just racist gatekeepers who kept throwing in the diversity angle in efforts to explain why the movies were bad as a shitty dogwhistle.
@@Virjunior01 honestly i don't see how you can argue star wars had forced diversity
@@hinasakukimi that's part of exactly WHY you can argue it did. Nobody knows. That's why it shouldn't have mattered. But that's how freaks were able to weaponize it... simply stating something in an authoritative tone.
There are some trees that have pink or white bark though, just saying.. (I'm sorry 😳 I know comments like this are why I don't have any friends and nobody talks to me at parties..)
I love the headcannon that katniss's dad was indigenous, with his knowledge of the land he passed on to his daughter as well as his olive skin and straight dark hair while Primm favors their white mother in looks.
Not to mention the high cheekbones. I remember that vividly and was so sure that Katniss was indigenous in some way. Olive skin, straight dark hair, high cheek bones. I saw Katniss of having indigenous descent from that description.
I thought this too!
Some think he was Covey... :)
Doubtful. I don't there would be any left by then considering there is so few now. Katniss's probable maternal grandmother was Maude Ivory, who was white with blonde hair.
@@margaretconnor5623I think Collins wanted to be ambiguous. Lots of people from different backgrounds have olive skin. I think she wanted it to be left to the imagination.
It's kinda scary how many people can't see how Katniss could relate her to Prim in any way because.. she looks different from Prim?
Like.. how shallow are your relationships? Where's the childhood trauma?
FR. do y'all have any meaningful connections???
It’s a reflection of themselves, if they can’t relate to her, why would katniss they expose themselves everytime just pay attention
There was an mom influencer that was like “its hard for children to relate to those not their color” and had the velvetat Rabbit on their bookself. It’s scary some people can relate to animals but not to someone of a different race.
The first thing I tought about them was shallowness at finest.
Isn't this the same narrative that people use to race swap characters? That you can only relate to people that "looks like you"?
I like how a major argument was that because she wasn't white she wouldn't "remind Katniss of Prim." as if her personality wasn't... what reminded her of Prim...
They literally can’t even wrap their minds around how someone else can identify with a person of color. And yet they claim they’re not racist.
It's because they have never felt empathy towards POC.
Or her age... Everybody seems to forget that Prim and Rue were about the same age
Also you can have some similar features, like height, build, or having similar face shapes etc. while being different races, and personality is definitely a big factor. Also they were both quiet, cute little girls. Why wouldn't Rue remind her of Prim?
They sound like they never had siblings yo 🙄
Holy shit "when I found out rue was black her death wasn't as sad"??? Bruh imagine being a young actress hearing that. That's so horrible
No just the actress. Imagine what it feels like to be black and hearing that. People have become more and more comfortable vocalizing their racial micro aggressions. Its truly a sad world we live in, especially for those of us that are black just because of our skin tone.
@@JasmineJ_ I can confirm, as a darkskin black female, made me sick. Does literally anything stated in this video surprise me at this point? No. I’m 16, and at 11 I had people asking me to see my baby when I was holding a bundle of gym clothes on my walk from school. It’s a part of life, same with the casting decisions. I cherish darkskin female actors every time I see them for this, but sadly they are mostly only seen in movies talking about slavery, oppression, or are solely focused on race. We aren’t allowed to be normal, or kids.
@@betsycheddar I myself am a dark skinned woman. I completely understand where you are coming from. I have had similar experiences and continue to go through it into my 20s. Unfortunately colorism doesn't go away, even within your own race but I choose not to let it define me. I am proud to see that more movies and shows are being made with color blind casting or showing dark skinned actors/actresses in leading roles and roles that are beyond them being oppressed and I hope to continue to see people that look like us thrive in Hollywood. Growing up in the 90s, I didnt see many people outside of oppression movies where actors looked like me and Im glad that is now changing despite non black people still fighting against it.
@@JasmineJ_ bcus of the delusions of "freedom of speech"
@@JasmineJ_ It's no longer micro, THOSE ARE MACRO AGGRESSIONS
as an author this is a problem that i see come up all the time. the current story i am working on features a black main character with multiple descriptions of him having dreads, his family members wearing their hair in protective styles, and just outright saying hes black. i sent a draft over to some peer-reviewers a few months ago, got positive feedback and left it at that. later, i sent them some drafts of cover art to figure out what might draw the most attention and most of them, without any shame, told me that they thought the mc was white, some saying they pictured him with blonde hair or blue eyes. its horrific to me that even today many readers, particularly white ones, still dont process any text that describes the characters as anything other than white.
What's one of your books I would like to read one?
That's scary...
What the hell 💀💀 idk if this is funny or scary that people be changing the races of characters they read about like is it on purpose or accident even 😩
They just lack reading comprehension, most people can figure out the character is black tho 👍
Ignorance is bliss they say
People must’ve completely forgotten or ignored that line about “dark skin.” I imagined Rue to look pretty much exactly like she was in the movie, aside from the hair style.
Same
literally, people are frickin blind
Imagine reading the book wrong, thinking a major character is not black, going online and making it public that you read the books wrong.
...and be applauded for it nonetheless.
They get so many reassuring comments from others who are equally as unable to comprehend what they're reading.
It's how most internet arguments start. One person isn't able to comprehend what they just read, gets outraged and won't back down, even if proven wrong.
I remember that music artist from your pfp, can you remind me what her name is?
I’ve made the mistake the other way around. I honestly thought Christian Grey was a black man for like half the book. I needed to reread the first part of the book again to see I mistook his description with that of his trainer.
@@flyingpig5622 I think Mariya Takeuchi
@@greengibblets78 right on
isnt it ironic that Collins is literally showcasing how all children are innocent and can be gentle regardless of skin color... and then those comments can ONLY see someone as innocent if they are white?
And blonde,the ultimate innocence 😌
No, no one said that. Youre inventing arguments to rebuke.
@@Katya_Lastochka did you even watch the video? someone literally said ‘awkward moment when Rue is some black girl and not the little blonde innocent girl you picture’.
@@Katya_Lastochkaokay white woman. get out pls we’re tired of you and your bs
@@Katya_Lastochkacongrats on your illiteracy being documented for the years to come
"political correctness" being used to describe diversity is appalling.
ikr...what part of having a character casted the same as the book described screams "political correctness"? A simple search through said book if you're confused about the casting would've cleared up everything. But clearly some people are just too narrow-minded and cannot fathom anyone other than white people to be seen on the screen. Then they proceed to attack people who try to reason with them.
"If you're not the default by being white, your existence is inherently political and different, and being included in media is a political statement that I will take as ammo against me personally" -some clown
Woke was originally coined by Black people to bring awareness to Black prejudice and has now been usurped by conservatives to cry about when a gay or trans character or person of color exists on screen for more than two seconds.
this is why for the Ariel situation when people say "they shoudlve just made a black character/story" I always point them to this. Rue was written black. She IS a black girl in the books. Yet the immense backlash of her character in the movie also being black... just the same for ariel. it doesnt matter whether its a black character, written by a black person, originally black or not, they hate black people and hate seeing black people on screen.
Ariel is still white as described in the book and in several movies/series and previous adaptations. It's not the same thing. And btw character design is part of the character wether it moves the story or not🤦🏾♀️
Edit: y'all can stop tagging me now I get it, yt to blk good, blk to yt bad. Y'all mad that ppl don't want an already established character to have a useless race swap cause "iT dOeSnT aFfEcT tHe pLoT" yet get mad when dark characters are made lighter. Leave me alone I'm no longer talking with any of you snowflakes and hypocrites✌🏾
@sewerrat7418 she's just played by a black actress in the live action so not really🤷🏾♀️
White's are racist, enjoy being racist and know they are racist. White's are not confused about white racism. Non white's are the one confused
Personally my gripe with the new Disney adaptations is that they're not doing a good job with adapting anything at all. All of these films are subpar compared to their animated counterparts (and I'm not blaming it on the actors, CG artists or even the writers, not one bit), so they're not doing any favors to the cast involved with these projects. They're not doing good representation either: where's the actual effort put into representing Caribbean culture in this film supposedly set in the Caribbean? Where's the afro-caribbean voices in this? Am I, or anyone else for that matter, supposed to be content with Disney producing the most bland, superficial and monolithic take of my (or anyone's) culture and people, and call it a day?
It's not that I dislike a black actress in the little mermaid role, is that I know the biggest production company in the world can do better, and still they make terrible, inflammatory decisions and let the actors take the brunt of it. I don't think I've seen a single press conference from any Disney exec defending Halle Bailey from the racist mobs, they're hanging their actors to dry for quick cash and mediocre films and they're getting away with it. No, casting a black actress on the role of a traditionally white character shouldn't be a problem unless we're talking about a biopic, adaptations should allow for that much. But race-swapping on its own shouldn't count as representation either: diversity goes beyond just skin color, representation goes deeper than that. GOOD representation IS deeper than that. These actors deserve better stories, better productions, and better public. We should start demanding these things much more vocally.
PD: if I sounded angry in all of this, it was not my intention! english is not my first language. I'm 100% vitriolic towards Disney as a corporation though.
exactly
"i WaNnA gO bAcK tO 2010 wHeN pEoPlE wErEn'T sO sEnSiTiVe"
they weren't sensitive. They were racist ☠☠☠
lmao they definitely were sensitive...
There they were getting super upset over a black girl actress
@@dirtyjamsgot1795 sensitive in the racist kinda way 🥰
@@mikaeruu0309 ✨Spicy✨ sensitivity
Ikr hahaha
nah they were even more sensitive if the only acceptable people that they dont have a temper tantrum over is a white straight person
“When I found out Rue was black her death wasn’t as sad”
Some people shouldn’t be allowed access to the internet
All of the comments in that section are just as bad really, even some of the "tamer" ones. People who would insist they arent racist because they know its bad yet go on to say the stuff they did
that one was pure dehumanisation
Pretty wild
Right just need to banned permanently
Some guy on youtube just said the same thing about sarah a character in the last of us
I didn’t even realize that i had a “white default” when reading until a few days ago. I was watching a youtube video about dork dairies and they pointed out that the main character (Nikki)’s friends Chloe (latina) and Zoey (black) weren’t white. They stated this a good couple of times in the books but i just ignored all descriptions/context clues and “defaulted” them as white because Nikki was. I honestly feel robbed of a piece of my childhood because if i had actually comprehended that representation i would have felt a lot more seen, because a lot of the main trios/friend groups in books and other media at that time were white. As a black girl i feel sad that society has molded our brains to have white as the “default.”
I honestly find it a little weird that Nikki herself is a white blonde girl with the writer being black 😭 like damn you’re not even going to represent your already underrepresented ppl AND u say the character is similar to and pretty much based off your black daughrr
@@tonystonem9614 Nikki doesn't have blonde hair, but yeah, it sucks that the protagonist who is based on the author's daughter, who are both black, is usually portrayed as white in official stuff.
no frr when i read the book when I was like in 2nd grade, I also thought that chloe & zoey were white. but when I reread the book in 4th grade (when i had more reading comprehension), I realized that chloe was latina & zoey was black and i was completely shocked at how i just skipped over that before. you can also tell by their names chloe garcia, and zoeysha ebony franklin.
I mean I couldn't tell either TBH
Holy shit. I still have a book where I colored Zoey and Chloe white 😭
Rue’s death being “less sad” is a crazy take. It reminds me of when that RUclipsr interviewed the head of the KKK and he said he felt bad for “fatherless black children” but not as bad as he feels for white kids 💀
In this case the comment literally said #ihatemyself. I don't think they're standing by their racist biases, unlike the head of the KKK
Absolutely broke my heart when Quvenzhané replied to the reporter "I'm still a little girl." :'(
Timestamp?
Pietra Assumpção 23:36
The fact that she was conscious and self aware was staggering. And like you said, heartbreaking
@@sydneypierce7722 thank you!
And rly, how her faces closes when she says that! So terrible
@@thetriplethreat3 people underestimate children so much, and the fact that they are very aware is part of why inequities in our society are so harmful and ppl gotta fight
Rue was always black- I literally never understood the hate 🙄
Precisely, Rue and Thresh were described as having dark skin in the book, so there's no real issue to me.
Neither did i
Racism is illogical
@@rahbeeuh Bingo💯
Imagine how deeply hateful you have to be to see Amandla's cute little smile fill your screen and get genuinely angry about it 😬✌️
Rue's casting was perfect. She was exactly like I pictured her when I read the book.
And she did have similar maneurisms as Prim!
One thing i loved about the books was that there was racism, but drawn among other lines than we do now, showing the emptiness of it all...
Her death scene was one of the most impactful I’ve ever seen (although I could be biased because of nostalgia) and it was definitely the best in the movies
While most of the casting complaints were ridiculous, the age complaints hold a lot of merit. One of the biggest factors of making The Hunger Games despicable is that these are KIDS; 18 at the OLDEST for the games. Majority of them should look like Rue, and Katniss's story holds a much bigger impact when you realize this was all done to a 16/17 year old. Casting adults in their 20's took that away.
It kind of blows my mind that between the time where I first read the books and now, I went from being too young for the games to being too old.
It has long been known that it is difficult to cast teenagers. Especially as main characters. Labor laws dictate the amount of work they are legally allowed to do on set.
I don’t know, I’m kind of glad teenagers weren’t actually casted. Mainly because I feel that teenage actors usually aren’t as good compared to adult actors. I feel like people in their 20’s works better because they have way more experience in terms of acting and still look youngish
Teenagers and kids can’t work as much as adults. My main issue is that they ignore 18 to 21 year olds for these teenage roles.
@@supervideomaker9136there are many good child actors 2018 “It” cast really impressed when I saw that movie
"Awkward moment when Rue is some black girl and not the little blonde innocent girl you picture"
As if black girls can't be innocent, super obvious example of an adultification bias.
That person and everyone like them are plain ol racist
Book: "rue has dark skin"
Racist comments: WHY ISNT SHE WHITE
I think a lot of it comes from “she reminded me of my sister” her sister was blonde and white so Rue should be too. Instead of just the fact that they were the same age and had similar mannerisms and attitudes. Apparently in the minds of these people, you have to look exactly like someone to give the same impression as them.
@@cocktailonion696 yeah i understand WHY they thought this way. Which is exactly the problem. They have a mentality that people have to LOOK the same to relate to them. Which is rooted in racism.
@@cocktailonion696 then they skipped over the part that described her skin tone lol
“Not to be racist or anything” *then proceeds to say racist and hurtful things*
Why did I just think of that video of that chick going: “Not to be racist but Asians-“
@@theblondeone181 Where is the video?
m.ruclips.net/video/OrzuPYau7_w/видео.html
Happens all the time
Istg, next time someone says that in front of me I'm gonna put a finger to the lips and say "then don't speak".
The words "not to be racist" are ALWAYS followed up by something racist. Apart from people making fun of people who say that kinda stuff, I've never seen it otherwise
1. the actor for Cinna (forgot his name sorry) was exactly how I envisioned him. A person that looks and is very calm and trustworthy. Tbh, I didn't imagine him as black or white! 2. the actor for Rue (also forgot her name sorry) was super cute and I could not stop crying when she died. I honestly wanted to kill all the people who were being racist. SHE WAS DESCRIBED AS BLACK AND YOU GET MAD WHEN SHE IS BLACK?! So annoying. It's so sad how literal CHILDREN are being called disgusting and "ew". Sad thing is this is happening again with the cast for Annabeth Chase in the new Percy Jackson show.
I also dont recall any huge descriptors for Cinna. I could be wrong because it’s been awhile, but the focus was more on his lack of capitol look. So I think the casting was spot on for cinna, he reminded me so much of a safe place. Which is what he was for Katniss.
don’t mean to rain on your parade but how in the WORLD do you not know lenny kravitz lmao
@@chewedw1re 🤷♀️ never heard of him
When I read the first book, Cinna was my favorite, and I imagined him as white, but I was very happy with the movie version because I didn't care what he looked like. I was happy that they got his personality right, and I think the actor did an incredibly good job. I love Cinna in the book and in the movies, my only complaint is the fact that he had to die (I understand why but it made my cry so hard christ-)
You cannot be upset about this casting choice and say that you're not racist... what is wrong with people man
I always imagined Cinna as being a tall Asian man lol
How???? How can they call a little girl all these names??? And then claim "not to be racist"???
For goodness sake, she did such a wonderful acting job and I cried so hard❤
It absolutely broke my heart when Quvenzhané had to stop the interviewer and say “well I’m still a little girl”. She is such a smart and well spoken child!
I hate how so many people were mad that they hired a dark skinned girl for Annie. She is just a little girl and I was so mad
@@sampepper7682 also you name threw me off lmao
@@sampepper7682 I swear I’m not trying to plug my own shit, but the last video I made was about why I disagree with the choice to cast her as Annie.
@@TayePurks Oh cool. I'll check it out. I was just trying to say how I don't like how people disscredit her because of her skin color
@@TayePurks Lol why is my name weird? lol
When he said “have you watched Annie as a little girl” and she said “well I am still a little girl” my jaw dropped wtf
ik right
I'm so proud of her honestly
Why didn't he say like " did you watch Annie when you were little" like not in that way why he word it like that
She replied so well to his shitty question. Yes! She clearly was a little girl still there, how could he not see that?!
Unpopular opinion but I know what the interviewer meant. I don’t really think he meant anything bad by it. I watched Annie when I was like, 6. Not when I was 12. I was a little, little girl. He worded it weirdly, that’s for sure.
"Oh, they're not white? Can't extend my empathy"
My brother in christ, that is RACISM talking
The quote about Rue not being an innocent white girl at the beginning hit me hard like... it's right out of the racist handbook. The characters I remember being pained to see die were Cinna and Rue, and I def cried when Rue died, because she's a sweet little girl.
You can't make this shit up, from the commercialization of a book addressing class and revolution, to racists devaluing people whose characters are commentary on thier actual lower social status
The funniest thing is, that Rue reminded Katniss of her sister because they both were little girls who needed someone to help and protect them. It's stupid to think that they needed to look alike so Katniss could feel sympathy towards Rue.
Honestly! I loved the hunger games and I’ll continue to, i always seen rue as katniss other sister.
I feel like one of the points of that whole arc was that Katniss was sympathetic to someone so different to her yet so similar to her
But remember, the people who thought that probably actually behave this way
They didn't need them to look alike, they needed her to be white, because like one of them flat out said, "I'm not gonna feel bad when she dies now that I know she's black." The whole reason Hollywood hesitates to put minorities in lead roles is they fear that white audiences won't be able to empathize with people of color.
True! I always imagined Rue's resemblance with Prim, like they have similar attitude and posture. If I'm not wrong, there was a description of how both looked 'fragile' and 'delicate'. Honestly, I think the cast of Hunger Games the best so far❤
It's always made me mad that even in cartoons, the black female characters would have lighter skin than the black male characters. Like lighter skin = more feminine or some shit.
tbf i think they do it with every race but ye representing black female characters as always lightskinned people sets a bad example, especially for children.
@@letiziavottero262 "they do it with every race" yea that's also bad and kinda highlights the point even more.
When someone pointed this out to me I couldn’t stop noticing it!! You see it all the time. Some colourist trope that associates beauty with lighter skin
@@shay1812 exactly. I'm sorry if i didnt explain my point correctly, but what i meant is that we need to have more dark skin representation, since for example, i've seen a lot of dark skinned people saying that their skin is ugly or not good since its so dark, when in reality skin color shouldn't matter in our selfevaluation. What i was saying with 'they do it with every race' was that in animated media male characters, no matter what race they are, tend to be slightly darker than their female counterpart.
@@6_blocks_under as i answered someone else just now, i didn't mean to say that we should center lightness as perfection, what i meant to say was that in animated media and drawings, there's this idea that a male character is always slightly darker than their female counterpart no matter the race, but im not saying that that is correct, in fact i think there should be wayyyy more representation of every type of person, not just the ' idolized' version of whatever category of people.
*looks at literal small tiny child* “So did ya watch Annie as a little girl?”
Isn’t it Crazy that something as meaningless as our skin color matters so much to some people like forreal it’s not being pOliTiCaLlY CoRrEcT people are just born this way and the fact that bothers these people sooo much is crazy 🤦🏾♂️
I mean, you are watching a video called "The Day Rue 'Became' Black." So, I would hazard a guess that you care a lot about this subject too.
Right? For the people who complain about 'everything being about race' they sure like to make everything about race.
@@romeyjondorf you mean I care a lot about people not being Racist ? If that’s what you mean then Y E S sir 😂👍🙌lol
@@benelz8542 You are racist if you want to turn a popular white character black. You are racist to black AND white people if you want to do that. Racist to white people because you are saying that the white character is somehow not okay staying as they are simply because they are white, plus it's cultural appropriation. And racist to black people because you are saying that black people have no popular folk heroes or historical figures or characters or anyone who is actually black so that you have to change a white character's race to black. What is that saying about black people? That they have no culture? You racist!
@@romeyjondorf playing a white character is not inherently culture appropriation. Unless its a movie like Brave that are about Scottish people in the 1500s- its fine. We aren't saying white characters are not okay, we are saying that most of the time that any race of people can play y'alls characters due to the stories not being about their race or culture.
Everything you said about black people and our culture is just a straight up strawman argument.
The book literally described Rue and Thresh as black. Even Suzanne Collins said she meant to write them as black characters. Racists were mad that the little girl they spent weeks crying over was black instead of the white girl they had envisioned because they refused to believe the words that were staring them straight in the face.
"And most hauntingly, a twelve-year-old girl from District 11. She has dark brown skin and eyes, but other than that, she's very like Prim in size and demeanor."
Racists just decided to gloss over that part...
Also, If their small brains couldn't comprehend the words on the paper, district 11 is a predominately BLACk district.
@@francesatty7022 yeah, even reading the book in middle school I never thought Rue was white lmao, tbh the movie casted them just the way I imagined and as was described, so these people just be lacking comprehension skills.
I genuinely don’t get what the deal is with those people …no ones lives are worth less than anyone else, period. and Rue is an amazing character and I cried so hard when she died. No one should care what race she is (and its black)
@@thelegitpotato1248 why would you prefer your own race over another?
I find it so deliciously ironic how people got mad about L being played by a black actor in the Death Note adaptation, but didn't say a word about Light being played by a white actor. Both characters originally were Japanese (edit: Asian), people.
Oh yeah that’s true. Why do they make adaptations anyway? Wasn’t the Japanese version good enough? Like they could’ve just added English subtitles or added a dubbing. All they did and the movie still wasn’t good lmao.
@@mrithikasivakumar I don't think it was. I think people should just leave the manga and the anime (which was faithful and pleasing to the fans, I think?) alone.
I do appreciate the Americans trying something original with the story by only using the skeleton of the story. But they could've done a lot better...
L was mixed but yeah, doesn't make any sense at all
Because people rarely complain about movies being whitewashed but any other race, especially black people replacing a non black character is always an issue.
Ironically I only heard backlash about Lights name change to "Turner" because it was stupid and erasing the fact that Light is supposed to be Japanese.
I cried during Rue's death in the movie, because I cried over her death while reading...
It doesn't matter that she looked almost EXACTLY how I imagined her while reading; she was an amazing character portrayed perfectly.
The way so many people had issues with the cast for Katniss and Gale because of HAIR colour, when those characters had olive skin, and they didn’t care about that part at all
Do you wish they had?
I feel so sad. Dark skin little girls should not be seen as “not innocent” or more “grown”..... I’m literally crying. I have a little sister and she is my entire world and she has a deep, rich and beautiful complexion. This world is pure evil.... people ruin everything.
Bruh, my sister is innocent as hell, she doesn't understand the world at all and we are a black family. Every comment that implied Rue couldn't be cute or innocent because of her race both saddened and disgusted me.
ikr
It’s not great now but it’s so much better than 20 years ago. Let’s keep improving and we need people to continue speaking up and make it a better place for little girls like your sister.
There is definitely a bias but it has a lot to do with how little girls are currently portrayed in Tv etc. They are never shown as innocent because innocent is mashed up with naive and dumb. In the opposite extreme, they are too often oversexualized; They are shown instead as 'sassy' like a 40 y.o. divorcee with a cigarette dangling off the lip, as she twerks trying to look younger. Somehow the little girls all have the "attitude", backtalking but they get away with it because it is funny. It is a disservice because even shows that are well received are at a loss how to portray this aspect of youth. It is no longer the 1950's so there cannot be a 'Leave it to Beaver' perfect ideal nuclear family because they would be laughable. And while boys can occasionally perform hair-raising stunts, girls are still seen as being "young ladies" with perfect hair ribbons and a matching handbag, again as if she were a much older version of herself. When they figure out that girls are just female kids, there will be a lot more roles for skateboarders and kite flying runners and small girls with sweet faces.
I'm 35 so I was an adult that did not read the book when it came out, but when the uproar happened I did my research and read alot of that live on Twitter and website comment sections. It was waaaaaay more widespread and casual then this video can give creedance too. There were other adults my age talking reckless like that.
the fact that so many people were saying "it doesn't suit the character" dude what? so your skintone affects your personality sheeeshhh how did I not know that?
Though to be fair, I'm willing to guess that race does affect those people's personalities. They'd probably be less racist if they weren't white.
@@timothymclean yeah, definitely, I think having to deal with racist comments has to affect you, but it's different for everyone so it doesn't make sense to think you know someones race based on what they say
the only way it could ever affect your personality is the culture and experinces (racist experiences from white people) that came with it
well actually your ethnicity does of course influence your personality in a small way.
@@timothymclean haha, "less racist if they weren't white". jeez, travel a bit. google it. the most racist nations are not what you have been led by your nose ring to believe.
It helps the story that rue is black- firstly it distinguishes prim and rue design wise, secondly it helps show that Karina doesn’t care about the superficial stuff
the audacity to question THE AUTHOR'S clearly stated decisions is baffling to me
How the comments called the actress "not cute" and "not innocent" just for being black ended me. Like how can you say that and still try to say youre not racist.
She was perfect as Rue.
Yeah exactly that’s just a self report on their part
whenever someone says "im not racist but...." we know whats coming next
@@lavellelee5734 its always racist
They still looked cute and innocent in The Hate U Give, where they were a grownup. They have an air of delicacy to themself that is rare in current teen actresses.
@@miticaBEP07 But they replaced a girl who was supposed to be dark skin with a light skin girl
An explicitly stated character of color: *exists within literature*
Whte readers: I can’t read all of a sudden I-
Does this result mainly from unconscious bias, or more intentional ignorance?
@Dru Baxter wow, congrats
@Dru Baxter sounds like something a casual racist would feel the need to correct. must’ve struck a nerve lol
@Dru Baxter hnnnnng no
@Dru Baxter Listen, the fact that it was white readers that responded like this, white readers that had a problem with it, speaks volumes. The fact you're choosing to interpret this comment as racist, especially considering the topic of the video also speaks volumes.
also, I hate that in the past as nowadays all little girls that are black in the media have a sass atitude, throw shades and are rebelious. I like when they are portraited as fierce or confident, but they fall all in these stereotypes over and over, having no individuality and being "the black children" again and again.
Like in the Nice White Teachers, Bad Brown Schools video, the Black characters are shown to be nonsensically beligerante. People think racism has to be intentional but I'd say what makes white writers comfortable will be the same thing that makes white audiences comfortable. If that's what you get with 'liberal Hollywood' writers... oof, that's context I guess
White racist are writing them, what you think will happen
It was refreshing in the recent House of Usher miniseries to show that the only innocent member of the Usher family was the black girl Lenore. You never see that
I think a really poignant anecdote I read was Kerry Washington (a gorgeous woman) was portrayed as a 'Damsel in distress' in Django. When asked about this trope, her response was 'There are no woman of colour ever portrayed as this in mainstream American movies' and she didn't take any grievances with this - the opposite actually. As a white dude even thinking about it I never even considered this. Most woman of colour are portrayed as angry and physical; not beautiful and feminine. It made me reflect a lot on my own cognizant biases.
To say the actress who portrayed Rue as anything less than a beautiful and talented little girl is baffling.
It wasn’t just about desirability, though that plays a role too. It was playing the metaphorical “Princess in the tower” whose rescue forms the crux of the plot.
While the “damsel in distress” role gets criticized for reducing a woman to an object or prize, this is mainly through a white lens. For black women, it means getting to be vulnerable and let someone else take care of them, something that is often denied to them. Add in the unfortunate fact that missing black girls and black women in trouble get far less attention than their white counterparts and it’s easy to see why they’d see value in a role where they’re not only desired, but have someone go through hell and back to protect.
@animeotaku307 very good additional points thanks
The damsel in distress is just something that's been appropriated by pop feminism and demonised, ignoring the historical context. A damsel being kidnapped or imperilled was to show how evil the villain was because she was a complete innocent who couldn't have had anything to do with whatever conflict, and rescuing her was to show her as someone of great importance. She wasn't rescued because she was useful or had something the hero wanted - she deserved to be rescued because it was the right thing to do, and the innocent should be protected. Realistically, it's impossible for someone to be able to save themselves all the time. Complete independence and needing no one at all is a sign of emotional IMMATURITY because we humans are built to need people. One of the biggest problems in the world right now is human trafficking, and the people are kept in line by being conditioned to think they're there of their own free will, and part of saving a victim is getting them to accept help
Kerry Washington hit the nail on the head that there is something very empowering in a story that's driven by the need or want to save a black woman's life, and that encourages the black man to do something chivalrous for the black woman, since African-Americans didn't get to have that fairy tale. A damsel in distress story doesn't reduce a woman to a prize or object - it tells the reader/viewer that the damsel is someone of great importance simply for who she is as a person, rather than being a head of state, having knowledge or skills etc. There's nothing wrong with that trope, only if it's overused
"Since finding out Rue was black, I'm less sad about her death" THIS IS A REAL THING THAT IS STUDIED. My English teacher in school taught us about a man who raped and killed little girls, and in court he described all these gruesome things he did to the girls. Everyone in the courtroom was disgusted until he mentioned that the girls were all black. People cared less. Some of them didn't care at all. So yeah, Twitter user, you should hate yourself /:
Unbelievable. I can not fathom how these people think. Rue's death in the movie absolutely gutted me. I tried so hard not to ugly cry in public when I saw it in the theater, but I couldn't even help it. Cried my face off 😭
@@ilikeyoutube836 There were people all over the internet saying they just didn't "feel" her death in the movie BECAUSE SHE WAS BLACK. I don't ever want to know these people.
I hate this world
Wow...😟 serious social problem.
People generally empathize more with white people, even actual black people (learned this in psych) because of how we’re all conditioned to think.
I always found the entire backlash surrounding Rue and Thresh's race ridiculous, since they were both clearly described as "dark skinned" in the original novel.
It's so dumb honestly like- did you guys read the damn books
im clicking on this video like wasnt she described as black in the books? tbh its 10 years since I read them
@@StephenFrysmanboobs she was people are just so racist that anyone who isnt white cant be seen as a child. Now that's fucking creepy
@@lesbiangoddess290 Because they don’t picture the character as Black.
@@keepyourshoesathedoor but why? That's the real question here. The video explained the link people unintentionally make between white skin and innocence. It's the brainwashing from the media that promoted eugenics and erased anyone who was darker than a paper bag. Did you not watch the video or what?
People being perplexed and enraged by Rue being black are on par with someone going "What?! I never imagined Ariel with a fishtale!" 🐠🧜🏿♀️🦀
I'm white and live in a North-Western European country I read the first Hunger Games book before the film came out. And I remember distinctly that Rue was described as having brown skin. I had to write a book report, and commented that I liked the attempt of the writer to have characters of multiple ethnicities/colours in the story. Because most of the previous books we had to read were mostly fully white. I made the comparisons with some older books I knew, that had darker skinned characters in supporting roles or as shared main roles. We talked about it during class and fellow students that were not white came up with the suggestion to read books with a non-white main character. Which we luckily did, it is so important. I can't imagine how people overlooked that Rue was black.
How could anyone look at Amandla as Rue and think she’s not cute, sweet, and innocent? How? She’s too pure for this world! Being black doesn’t change that!
I think that having a black actor ended up being more poignant as it was a subtle way to recognize real life shit like redlining and monoracial neighborhoods. Not to mention that it hit me harder that it didn't matter at all to Katniss that Rue didn't look like her sister. They were the same age and had a similar resilient personality that created their bond. I think if Rue hadn't tragically been killed, Katniss would have found a way to have 3 victors in the final standoff. Love is love. Yes, there's nuance, but she loved that little girl
I had not read the books and I was incredibly impressed with the movie casting because the actress was so damn great she made Rue feel like the sweetest angel descended upon this earth and even I wanted to bloody adopt her. Katniss seeing her sister in her made 100% sense to me, and her death hit me way harder than I thought possible - the actress was that damn great. It was deeply disturbing to find out that what some others saw when they watched the movie wasn't an incredibly sweet child, but some "subhuman". How disturbingly monstrous of them.
@@Call-me-Al agreed. The character is 12. Amandla was 12. How do you see a little girl and think that she’s deserving of harm? Especially over the colour of her skin. I will never understand that.
because they don't see black people as people it's horrible:( i watched these movies as a kid whiLe i read the books and i never questioned Rue being black at ALL i was just sad such a young vulnerable child involved in the story to begin with... and it was awful to see her die rues death is always the hardest to watch
@@Call-me-Al yes! Rue's actress was beautiful and talented. My only criticism is that the flower/improvised funeral scene wasn't like I pictured it in the book. I imagined armfuls of flowers because the book spent so much time talking about how much time/energy Katniss wasted collecting so much because of her intense grief and the way she hyperfocuses on things. But the movie's depiction was probably more realistic than my head cannon 🤷
“Because POC only exist for political correctness and not because they’re people” 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾. Can we get an applause for that statement.
Exactly, and I always get upset seeing how more black people are getting the spotlight in shows because its not for representation or just because they're a good actor(although they do give us representation and most of them are good actors), but because they are trying to get brownie points, and make a political statement to prove they aren't racist and that we are equal(basically because of all the attention towards BLM.)
PRECISELY.
also, let me screenshot and show this to my friend who genuinely thinks that about POC in media and tends to violently criticize any movie or series with black/brown main or supporting characters, even though black/brown people... You know... EXIST.
Yes 👏 we 👏 can👏.
Tell that to the crazy sjws 😂
They started doing that with women to lately I’m so sick of this shit
When I read the books I remember imagining Katniss as Indigenous, and her having olive skin and dark hair is what did it for me 🤷🏾♀️ I get that there are “dark” skinned white ppl that are like Italian, but I usually see Italians with more fair skin than darker skin. Though, Ariana Grande has olive skin and the dude from 365 days has deep olive skin as well.
I’m Indigenous and I remember talking to a family member about the Rue controversy. My sister said she thought Katniss was indigenous too based on her description in the book. We both read the book and thought Rue and Thresh were black. I think she was perfectly cast.
This pretty much boils down to two things:
1) since race is something very noticeable just by looking at someone, it’s hard to mention it smoothly in text cause it’s just not something that comes up in conversation. Also there were literal lines describing their skin color so it doesn’t matter
2) if every fictional character must be white, that makes it impossible for everyone else to get a job as an actor for the movie, thus discriminating against them. Just because it’s not written anywhere doesn’t mean it can’t be black
3) it’s more realistic for the story to have black characters since it’s supposed to take place in a dystopian North America, so it’s not like only white people would survive the apocalypse
Just grow up or shut up.
As a black woman who read the book, I was overjoyed when I read the character description and immediately imagined a dark skinned adorable black girl. Not hard to do. Didn't get, olive, blonde, or light out of it anywhere.
Same and I cried just as hard In the Cinema when she died
I sobbed so hard when Rue died in the movie. I never even knew this was an issue; I was younger and wasn't on the internet at the time. It's surreal knowing this kind of shit even happens because I didn't know it was a thing till now. My god
@@leoninenoble that's my response, too.
White dude here. When I was in the service this film came out. By this point in my career I had already been to Afghanistan, and read one of the books down range. The first I think. It was 2007 and I was at Bagram, so yeah.
When I got to Minot AFB in 2008 I was placed in a dispatcher position. One day we got a brand new troop, and I thought of Rue. She was a tiny thing, looked like just may have had to put on some weight just to get to basic, and here she was in the Nuclear Security Zone.
I drank alot that night. The next day at work I asked her if she ever read the book. She had. I hoped she makes it at the time, and if my math is correct she should be a Tech Sgt by now.
I worry about my white brothers and sisters who have never actually known or worked with people of color.
@@JohnBoulden what a wholesome comment💖 Thank you for sharing your story! :D
Rue’s death was the saddest death in the hunger games trilogy. She was so kind and innocent and young. I got a little choked up when they showed her covered in flowers. Rue was such a wonderful character and I wished she could’ve stayed longer
I was like 10 but STILL bawled my eyes out.
That scene still makes me cry like a decade later
@@beastofbussycreek Reading her death had me crying but the movie seem like they gave her such little time because it's a movie.
I bawled my eyes out when they sent her the bread. It was a such small but meaningful gesture, that probably cost them a lot of money they didnt have.
Rue and prim and finnick all tie for me. They’re all horrifying.
Its also worth pointing out that Rue and Thresh are from District 11. According to the official map of Panem, 11 sits in what would be known as the American South today. A lot of it making up what would be Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi. States that by and large have a predominantly Black population. It stands to reason that the tributes from these districts would more than likely be Black. Thats not saying wh¡te folks dont exist or dont live in 11, but Black folks are far more common in that area. So is it really that surprising that Rue and Thresh are Black?
This is actually a really great point that deserves more attention.
@NateIsNotOkay I'm surprised more people didn't come to that conclusion. Seemed like it was common knowledge to me.
Great analysis. I only have one genuine question: why did you use that weird "i" in the word "white?"
@temporaneo617 skirt the algorithm. For some reason if it picks up those words in that order, it doesn't like it and the post gets suppressed.
@@TheydyGodiva wow that's awful
The "whiteness by default" hits hard because the outcry at Rue's casting was ridiculous and so obviously racist, it's easy to see it as a "it's other racist people who are the problem" if not for the fact that I had one thing in common with them: I didn't read any description because I'm lazy and I haven't been able to read descriptions for years and I absolutely pictured Rue as a white blonde girl.
So even beyond the obvious racism and lack of empathy toward black people that I could discount as being an issue for other people, -I mean what kind of person feels less empathy for a 12 year old being brutally murdered by a government because she's black?, they have to be "the real racists"), I was still also projecting a racist view of the world right out of my subconscious. That not only is white the default, but specifically the default for innocence and youth (which is proven by the fact that I didn't really picture Thresh as anything, neither white nor black, I just hadn't thought of it, but the innocent sweet young girl? She's white and blonde).
That's why it drives me crazy when people refuses to acknowledge racism beyond incredibly obvious actions and act like calling anything else racist is immoral, that implicit biases are not a thing and not a product of systemic racism which obviously "doesn't exist". Yes it is for god's sake it very clearly exists and implicit biases is something we need to account for when looking for solutions. We can't fix everything by just targeting the most blatant racists.
imagine being 9 years old and having to correct an interviewer "well I'm still a little girl"
you can literally see her start to answer his question, realize what he said, and correct him. she literally wasn't even in the double digits of age yet and she's being talked to like that? and currently, quvenzhane is still a minor! she's 17!
Time stamp? That’s awful
@@cherrytries2922 im not sure. i dont wanna rewatch the video, but it was when she was being interviewed and he asked a question like: "when you were a little girl.."
@@cherrytries2922 23:35
damn she young
That’s disturbing
Seriously, not only was Rue described as dark skinned, Katniss even said it was her quiet personality that reminded her of her sister.
As far as Cinna being black, my reaction was "oh, that makes sense" because when I read it I couldn't see how silver eyeliner would work on someone with pale skin.
It works
@@tiffprendergast it does work on all skin tones, but it does pop more on darker skin.
Also i don't think silver eyeliner works on anyone but lenny kravitz lol
@@Erin-ho8qu lool
I can't in all fairness remember what I imagined Cinna to look like when I read the book before the movie came out, but I do remember thinking his casting was perfect. Cinna is cool and stylish and Lenny Kravitz fits that description perfectly. When I imagined Rue, I imagined her to look like my childhood best friend, and again thought the casting was spot-on (at the time I wasn't aware of colourism being a thing). I was shocked when all these people came out of the woodwork complaining that Rue wasn't white and I was just thinking, "But where did that come from? She's described as having dark skin!"
I remember the first time I came across the term "olive skin tone" while reading a fantasy novel. I just imagined the character as green, like - you know - a green olive...
OMG HAHAHAHA
“I never pictured Rue to be black” oh so you can’t read?? You have reading comprehension skills?? That’s what you’re saying to me right now?? Great, got it
Frrrr. She was literally described with dark skin. “The boy tribute from District 11, Thresh, has the same dark skin as Rue”
Even my 10 year old caught that. Back then I read a lot of pages and forgot tiny details but I still knew that tho
Lol, great response.
Bruh they literally said shes from a district where dark skin is a common trait >:((((
@@nevereverr tbh I didn't I catch that either.
But I wasn't upset by any of the casting choices because to me it didn't matter. As long as they played their character well, that's all I cared about.
What's funny about the whole idea that "white people can't relate to POC characters" is that my favorite Disney character growing up was Lilo Pelekai, from Lilo and Stitch. I'm white. She's Hawaiian. I related to her more than any other cartoon character because we were both friendless, bullied, and from 'broken' homes. Her skin color didn't stop me from seeing myself in her, for all the same reasons Rue's skin color didn't stop Katniss from seeing Prim in her.
Any white person who says they can't relate to or empathize with a POC character *because* the character isn't white is racist, full stop.
I agree
Fr, my favorite Disney princess is Mulan, I'm many different ethnicities but not asian
I think it’s funny that POC have have to relate to white characters they’re whole life, but one black character it’s too much to handle for some of white people.
@@artvulture456 Mulan's my favorite Disney character and movie, too. (I'm not Asian either.)
i am giggling at the person who suggested johnny depp instead of woody for haymitch bc woody was some old guy… he’s two years older than johnny depp 😭
As a white person I have the privilege of white default. But as a working class NYer, I don't have that experience, and I am forever grateful.
Once, someone (a racist, obvs) saw one of my daughter's school class pictures and commented on how few white kids were in her class. What? Who counts skin colors?
So I went and looked at my own elementary class photos from decades earlier, and the ratios were similar (less than 25% white).
People sometimes wonder why I live in NYC with its HCOL for small living spaces. Growing up without white as a default is a big reason. When I - as a white person - walk into somewhere where everyone is white, I *notice*. I can't imagine what it must feel like as a person of color.
the tweet that said "rue cant be black thats genetically impossible" had me really confused lmao. how does someone even come to that conclusion?
Lmfao who does that person think she's so closely related to?
My hubby and I just recently rewatched the series and a lot of scenes were shot in NC and the first thing I asked when watching The Reaping when the whole town comes out was, "isn't this America? Where are all the black people?" It was so weird to me, having come from the south to see so many white people in what is supposed to be southern America. So yeah, I agree that tweet was weird.
@@samanthasexton7926 district 11 had a lot more black people, maybe they separated them based off that when Panem was created. who knows.
Like how would it be genetically impossible??? That makes no since... Hunger Games is literally based in a future America. America. The place with literally everyone from everywhere. Plus, the author wrote her as black, and it's a made up future. Anything the author writes is what is possible for the made up universe. People will come up with anything. Although, the tweet at 8:13 pissed me off even more. Literally, that tweet is disgusting
@@Styxintheriver I think the book implies that systematic racism still exists in Panem. District 11 has the most black people and is treated the most harshly by the Capitol.
Bruh it literally called her skin dark in the books- They’re trying to act like die hard fans but in reality they just weren’t paying attention.
The sad thing is, many of them probably were and just chose to ignore it and build up an image that they liked more, because how on earth could you be brown skinned AND sweet, innocent, and worthy of life?
See, that's what's hilarious! They were so upset that their favorite story was being "ruined", but didn't even know the details of what they read? 🤣
@@mariesummers. I do that, not with skin color but when I have a character with brown hair I may imagine them as blonde. But why the heck do I have the authority to get mad? I didn’t make the character.
And even then, Rue in the movie is nowhere near Thresh’s skin color (which the book explicitly states). She’s portrayed by a HIGH yellow actor. Like black people should’ve been reasonably upset with the casting (because _colorism_ ) not these shit for brains racists🥴
Yea really egregious, it's not even "brown skin" It's described multiple ways, as dark, satiny brown, dark eyes, her dog mutant is described as having curly fur. Between that and where it takes place and how District 11 is described, it's almost like the author was daring the controversy. 🤣
This was so well done! I really hate when I hear people say they couldn't relate to a character because of skin color or they won't read it because of skin color. Like you can't relate to being a 2,000 year old immortal but you still read the book. We've had to grow up reading about whiteness, surrounded by it, but some folks are so self-centered that everything is always about them. I just 🤬🤬 like how did you read dark skin and think white?! Like they're so self-absorbed that it was "oh they must be the darkest version of white because why would an author write anything that's not white people 1000% of the time" 🙄
I'd argue it's worse, you can absolutely relate to the 2,000 year old immortal, you can absolutely relate to the character despite their different skin colour. I mean, unless you view them as fundamentally lesser or alien...
But yeah genuinely baffling to me how dark skin could possibly translate to a character that could not conceivably be black is beyond me.
I really hope that out of everyone who was so outraged about Rue suddenly "becoming" black, that a nice handful of them went: "WELL at least I still have the BOOKS" and went back to reread them, only to realize that Rue was always black and that the actual problem lied with them.
“some old guy is playing haymitch”
haymitch is literally an old guy in the books
people that complained about the casting proved time and time again that they had absolutely no reading comprehension
as if JD werent an old guy too😂
Right! And he turned out absolutely perfect imo.
@@marianaortiz5489 exactly, they're about the same age 😂
Haymitch's games were the second quarter quell (50th hunger games) he was around age as Katniss's mom and people are mad. He around 39- 42 years old in the first book.
I always thought it was so natural and sweet that she basically described rue as reminiscent of prim in every way but skin tone. There was power in that, the idea of seeing a little black girl in the same light you see your little white sister. It really sucks to hear that people ignored that line entirely so they thought the kids had to look the same in order for katniss to care about rue.
Me, being in a country where everyone is mixed, that sometimes a parent is blonde, and the child black, but they look exactly the same, except for the skin tone. 👁👄👁
Seriously, I never knew about this controversy, and I've read the book and watched the movie, and actually found cute the connection between Katniss and Rue, I even cried when Rue died.
It's kinda like when you have a child, suddenly every child you see reminds you of yours. At least that's what my mom said. She can't stand watching children get hurt in any way in movies and stuff.
@@MissCaraMint Kinda, but there are some children that look more similar regardless of their color skin or hairtype. I mean, as someone who draws, I tend to see people look more alike when they have similar face complexions.
@@MissCaraMint I’m the exact same way, except towards the little brother who I raised. He brought out the motherly instinct in me I never knew I had, and seeing children get hurt in any form makes me nauseous
@@rominaforcadell8848 what country is that?
I felt like Rue’s actress performance was incredible. She showed how compassionate and brave that little girl was despite fear lingering in the air. When she died she looked ethereal, highlighting how cruel a loss of life is.
“Call me racist, but..” oh, I will. Don’t worry I will be calling you racist 🤦🏽♀️ god damn.
i always imagined her as black because she’s literally referred to as “dark skin.” how does one miss that?
I mean we’ve seen what some folks consider “tall, _dark_ , and handsome”. Literally anything “dark” would probably just be slightly tan to them if it means to get further away from the prospect of blackness. It’s embarrassing,
lol i read the books in spanish and im from a small city in southamerica where we dont have plack, maybe mix but not fully black i only saw black people in tv and one time when i went to usa as 16 years old and even me as a 11 years old when i read the books know that tresh and rue were african americans and i was in the fandom back 10-13 and i always were sourprise that people were mad beacuse to me they always were black it was no mistery
@@not_obsidian Even my countrymen who have colorist tendencies (You know, Asian standards) know what "tall, dark and handsome" is and it's definitely not some tanned white boy 😂
I'll be honest I'm an incredibly sloppy reader up to the point that I read the hobbit 4 times before realising that thorin dies so yes I can imagine you can skip over that. But what I can't imagine is then getting mad at the truth of the fact that she is a black character
But also I generally don't actually pay attention to descriptions of characters until I want to draw them
Terrible reading comprehension
The tweet admitting to feeling less sad about Rue's death after Amandla Stanberg's casting was wild. Imagine broadcasting to the world that you inherently value fictional white children's lives more than their black counterparts. I'm glad you made a video about this topic 💜🙏
yeah i remember first reading that comment when it went viral back in 2012 it took me a full back to the room bc wow imagine how horribly racist you have to be to write that?
ok i haven´t watched the full video and i haven´t read the book, but when I read I remember that rue read as black. Were people not expecting her to be black? Wasn´t her whole district black people now that I think about it? i don´t understand!
not only they value fictional white people over fictional black people, racists value fictional white characters, or more stupidly, their perception of a character's whiteness over real black people, over a real little girl
*666 likes*
@@lunalu2174 So in the book, Rue is very briefly described as being black. Not a huge paragraph or anything, but it's established. Maybe some people missed it, that happens, fine. And maybe some were willfully ignorant or got caught up and forgot... We can have a whole other discussion of white-washing characters in ones head while reading, but in the end the real crime was the vitriol that went to the studio, the actress and everyone else... For a canonically black character being played by a black actress. Sigh.
This effect is so much funnier in the Scythe fandom because one of the main characters, Citra, is *literally described as being of 37% African descent* (Sci-Fi world, long story), in the THIRD CHAPTER OF THE FIRST BOOK no less, and some people still fancast her as a white girl, or are surprised to find out she's canonically black
Scythe was one of my favorite books as well as Arc of a Scythe in general, and I’ll be real, it’s been long enough since I read the first 2 that I totally forgot that detail! Thanks for letting me know, maybe it’s time for a re-read!
I remember being so f*cking confused by this at the time. Did any of these people actually read the book?? Rue was always a Black girl and was clearly described in the text. The amount of racism that jumped out was horrifying to witness in real time. I feel so bad for Amandla who experienced that extreme racist backlash. She did a fantastic job in the movie and left me sobbing in the theatre!
The statement that "a character is black, therefore it's less sad when they die" says so many profoundly monstrous things about our society...
What gets me is that this person clearly realizes what they are saying is horrible... And they still go out there and say it?! M'dude, if you happen to feel that way, just shut up and be ashamed of yourself! What do you think is going to happen?! The only people you get any possitive response fron are going to be racists, which... If that's who you're adessing your tweet to, why all that song and dance about feeling bad about it?!
@@tereziamarkova2822 The whole thing was a big mask-off moment. A lot white racists exposed themselves.
But worst for me was that it was all young people. Being very loudly unbashed in their hatred for black people. Usually I'd be unsuprised if it came from older boomer types (not that they're excused in their racism either) but this whole mess from a generation of youth all probably younger than 25 at the time? Yeah that doesn't bode well.
if that’s the goal they chose the wrong actress
If someone isn’t horribly racist race doesn’t matter in the tragedy of a character’s death, the writing does. 🤦♀️ I hate people
I wouldn't be surprised if that wasn't very intentional. Especially when being racist to "troll snowflakes" was very popular back then.
I think the most common thing of that nature we have now is the phrase "Hitler did nothing wrong." Very few people actually believe it, or even care if it's right or not, they just enjoy being assholes.
The worst is that "Rue" is a name common in Black people, in Louissiana. I can't understand how people could imagine Rue as anything other than a Black girl.
I read the book two years ago without ever watching the movies and I remember the image I had of Rue (a black girl, just as described by the author). I still have not watched the movies so this is the first time I see the character. I cannot believe there are people like this out there.
I honestly thought it was an invented name for the novels. I learn something new every day.
Rue as a name has multiple origins so it's common for both whites and blacks in the south.
Rue McClanahan from the Golden Girls.
@@princeapoopoo5787 it's a plant. It can be used for medicinal purposes or also decorative since it has pretty tiny yellow flowers
To your last point: I was confused that katniss was white - olive skin to me is light brown and I was thinking of someone from syria for example, however I actually missed that Rue was described as black in the books and I realized my internal white washing... so I was surprised by the casting and then ashamed that I hadn't pictured her with dark skin. Thanks for your video - good content :)
She's literally referenced as black in the books wtf I swear to god katniss says that she's got dark skin and curly hair like 10 times and she only reminds her of prim because of the way she carries herself and the her manerisms
Yeah it was probably to emphasize how painful her death was since she was around the same age as Prim which shows she was so young
You're right but also I know that from watching the entire video, just saying.
LITCHERALLY THOUGH. Im confused. She's always been black. The fans who were confused or "insulted" when she "became" black just can't read
EXACTLY omg these people are so dumb
It’s so crazy how many people read the book and didn’t realise rue was black?? How can you read “dark skin” and picture a white person?? 😭
Some people are just SLOW
ikr and didnt it specifically mention "mahoggony brown" skin or something LMAOOO
@@onekem you know other people can have dark skin without being of black race, right?? South Asia???
Edit: okay I get it now. Y'all can stop replying
The same reason why jesus is always depicted as white.
@@schabowy6149 That’s not the point.The main point is people thought she was white even though she was described as having dark/mahogany skin.Because of that,people still shouldn’t be acting surprised.I’m very aware that some people can have dark skin without being black.
Can confirm that the first time I watched hunger games I sat down 20 minutes in, I was incredibly confused, spent most of the movie gawking at the set peices. But when that little kid died I just cried for like five minutes
What sucks is that growing up I didn't get to read books with POC, lgbtq, disabiled or mentally challenged because my elementary school librarian hid the books in a bin behind the main desk. I only recently read a book with a main character that was Hispanic, trans and gay (I love him so much, he's so sassy) and I'm 17!
As a POC I didn’t picture Catniss or her dad as white. I picture them as Native. Olive skin and straight black hair. Sounds indigenous to me.
I don't really see how that would work though...I mean there's really only a couple hundred thousand people left, so wouldn't everyone be super super mixed? Like no one is "white" and no one is "black" or Native American or any sort of specific race really?
@@demdem5794
There is a lot of isolation between the directs so if plantations or reservations were isolated with that style of Autoritaran control and low mobility, I could imagine... not that it would mather without the outright racist thoughts people bring to these scenarios.
Having grown up in homogeneous Germany and knowing less than the rural average share of people of color compounds my discomfort but makes it obvious, media representation Mathers.
@@demdem5794
There is a lot of isolation between the directs so if plantations or reservations were isolated with that style of Autoritaran control and low mobility, I could imagine... not that it would mather without the outright racist thoughts people bring to these scenarios.
Having grown up in homogeneous Germany and knowing less than the rural average share of people of color compounds my discomfort but makes it obvious, media representation Mathers.
@@Eris_Norregard there are populations in India but I thought that could be blamed on the mother
@@Eris_Norregard there are populations in India but I thought that could be blamed on the mother
This video made me so angry, I had no idea people were so horrible to that little girl. Gross.
Side note though: Lenny Kravitz as Cinna was one of the best casting choices ever and no one is going to tell me otherwise.
I'm sorry but i have to tel you that they in fact, cast Cinna to play Lenny Kravitz. You've been bamboozled.
Re: Lenny Kravitz...right?
You’re right and you should say it
I also want to mention this: His daughter, Zoë Kravitz, had auditooned for a film series (which is Divergent). At the same time, the main lead of the series, Shailene Woodley, had once auditioned for Hunger Games as Katniss.
literally, i wasn't that attached to Cinna in the books but he plays him so well in the films he turned into one of my favourite characters as soon as I watched them.
Cinna and Thresh were perfect as cast, too both seem a lot more broodingly savvy about what to expect from the Capital and how to survive it than Katniss, so it makes it all that much more tragic when they risk themselves to help her and end up dying for their resistance to the Capitol schemes; there aren't really any of the cast that are not convincing as their characters, and I've read every word of the trilogy multiple times, too. I'm very thrilled with the diversity in both the books and the movie version.
Rue death was such a emotional moment for me, it hurt even more then Prim's.
Because i had a connection with her, we saw her kindess in the middle of The Hunger Games for her to die like that.
Not saying Prim isn't the same, but i had more of the protective feelings for her.
After reading those screenshots I felt like crying. Why do people hate us so much? Why can't they see us the same as any little white girl?
i agrée- im not black but the fact that people feel this way about someone’s race! it’s disgusting, i wish the best for you
@@auds.loves.hyuka. Thank you. I'm mixed and have light skin so I know that I'm never going to get the worst of it but seeing those hateful comments about a girl that looked like me really really hurt--especially when you know that it would be way worse if they were dark skinned.
Sorry for this. I babysitt some girls from Ghana. Least summer I saw LaChanda Gatson with the Creative Soul Photography at youtube and they adore it. 😍
@@mashaylaamos5301 - Just here to say blatant and rampant racism is abysmal to deal with, so in the wake of everything, always make sure you love you. Don't let anyone or anything make you feel lesser, because you're just as smart, pretty, 3 dimensional, worthy and capable.
Dang. Seeing comments like this hurts. People can be straight up disgusting. No matter who or what you come across, remember that sh*t is a reflection of them, not you.
I just want to impart the importance of never letting these things lessen the way you see yourself. So in case anyone needs to hear this, always keep yourself in high regard. Racism can be an echo chamber for the world at large, but for you as an individual too, and it effects people in big and subtle ways. Be mindful of what your absorbing, what sentiments you repeat to yourself, and make sure you are feeding yourself the positive energy you know you deserve, and detoxing from all the stupid, f*cked up bull people will hurl your way.
@@mariesummers. Thank you so so much. I honestly try not to let these things seep into my skin but it can truly be difficult at times. I truly appreciate your kind words and sympathy.
it’s crazy because amandala was the “digestible” version of a black girl aka a mixed girl. imagine if she was actually fully black or had 4c hair😭😭 anti blackness is crazyyy
What does 4c hair mean?
@@ivankervis4374 really tight kinky/coily hair, as opposed to distinct curls like Amandla has. If you search 4c hair on Google you can see a lot of pics
@@amoureux6502 gotcha
Does it fucking matter she’s still black it doesn’t matter if she’s completely black or not what matters is that she’s black and she played her character rue well hell she was still black so this comment makes no sense at all
@@EDK-San51912 amandla is biracial not black.
I fell in absolute love with this book series after my deployment. Book 2, in particular, has always been a favorite due to its many examples of how PTSD an manifest in various people. Its an amazing example of how even folks who have been though similar traumatic situations handle things very differently because no 2 examples (and no 2 people) are the same.
I mentioned I deployed. That deployment was to Afghanistan. When you get there, a lot of folks will tell you that you can't trust the kids, that the kids want to murder you just as much as the adults do, but I never found that to be the case. I went on 42 different convoys on that deployment, and I met and saw local children on every single one. Heck, we used to hand the kids a $20 and they'd run off and run back with a huge bag of naan for us. Plenty of opportunity to poison us or lead someone back to where we were, but it never happened.
Even in the hardest of environments, a place where it wasn't unheard of for a child to witness their own parents' literal executions right in front of them, a place where little girls couldn't be out on the street alone without being arrested, kids are kids. They light up when you give them treats, they want to play games on your iPhone, and they'll play soccer with you for hours on end while you're waiting for the truck to change a tire. Do they know how to handle more adult situations that they shouldn't have to be dealing with? Yes. But they are still kids. Children are innocent because they don't have the power to own any of the blame. They have zero control over their situations 99% of the time.
The same people who will blame an Afghan child for planting an explosive (that they are nearly always threatened into placing) will make excuses for the significantly older Hitler Youth of Nazi Germany. It doesn't take a genius to figure out why.
Holy shit, I straight up gasped when you read the comment that said the person didn’t care Rue died after finding out she was black. Still having trouble processing that one tbh.
I used to avoid “mainstream” literature out of a misguided attempt to be different, so I wasn’t really plugged into this drama at the time. You did an amazing job covering it. It was deeply uncomfortable to listen to all of those sickening comments, but that’s exactly why it’s so important to talk about stuff like this. Thank you for taking the time for this 🙏
That tweet about rue’s death seeming less sad makes me want to throw up
It caused me physical pain to read it.
Some people should watch A Time to Kill and adress their predjudice
@IntrepidFinch wtf we all had the same experience!!
Really? Cuz it was the one calling her a nigger that made me sick. Mind you. She was only 12
Seriously. What an asshole
"Did you watch Annie as a little girl?"
"Well, I'm still a little girl."
PWNED!
Honestly shit like that just makes me sad
I never noticed it......before.
And it's not even like she was trying to be sassy. She was just giving a straightforward answer and put him in his place without even intending to.
I didn't like the new Annie. Too much autotune, not that I liked the original that much either. But Quvenzhene is adorable and a half.
It's so sad watching her not even noticing it at first and then being like hold up
It was when Rue was cast as a black child that I realized I just assumed all characters were white. I confronted my own prejudices and made a correction after that. I grew. I hope others did too.
This is making me question everything. For some reason I pictured Rue as white in the books. I have a habbit of skimming books and miss stuff, but it was brought up like 3 times! That is kinda scarry how conditioned we are to default to white... I'm gonna try to be more conciouse of this from now on, thanks for the video!
I never realized people had a problem with Rue- I thought she was adorable
Because most people don't. Just a few on Twitter or somewhere else. The video is about that bubble.😉
Ur lucky, it was awful see all the shit that as posted when people saw who was casted as Rue.
That's part of the problem. If you're white, you don't see these issues bcs you're never the target of racism
@@strenghsGirl its not a bubble though
Not the point but ok