Giss Neric
Well-Known Member
Tony has had no input and will not have any input. This is a symbolic title / gesture.
Tony has had no input and will not have any input. This is a symbolic title / gesture.
They would never. It would be really insightful and self-reflective for Disney to make a documentary about it, maybe on Disney+. They could interview historians and the people that were involved with the original movie and have an honest discussion about it. But they would never do that either.
Walt only improved the parks—his changes were never negative. The current Disney regime? Forgive me if my faith in them is minimal.
I was called unhinged, because I tried to point out that actions like this could be emboldening some truly unhinged people feeling as though their very identities are under attack. I think the user who made that statement somehow thought I was among them for merely pointing this out. As if what I was saying isn't common knowledge... but unicuique suum. Non praevalebunt.I haven’t seen anyone here on these boards call anyone else racist or do any shaming. Maybe I missed it?
A doc? It would be fascinating. I've wanted one for years. Get people who really know what they're talking about.But they should. It would be much more meaningful than what they’re actually doing.
Like getting Frozen out of Norway?How about change stuff that actually needs to be changed in the parks?
The source material is Song of the South.The source material is absolutely racist? The source material is NOT Song of the South. The source material is African-American folktales, many of them stories brought over from Africa and adapted to the new world the slaves found themselves in, with other stories being ones that the slaves adapted from other cultures, including Europe and North America. Some people with Ph.D. at the end of their names think that the Brer Rabbit stories of winning with cleverness represent slaves outsmarting the slave owners and overseers.
Others have said it better: "Aesop and Uncle Remus had taught us that comedy is a disguised form of philosophical instruction; and especially when it allows us to glimpse the animal instincts lying beneath the surface of our civilized affectations."
Ralph Ellison
Song of the South was a vehicle for telling African-American folktales. Splash Mountain went directly to the source material. It was a preservation resource for African-American history, heritage and culture that was seen and experienced by millions of people each year. Now none of those people are going to see that heritage.
An important piece of African-American heritage, culture and history is now going to die. And what replaces it? A movie I like, but one that appropriates a European story.
The movie isn’t racist. Is Uncle Remus hung or lynched? NOPE. Is Uncle Remus called anything derogatory? NOPE.
This bull**** that Song of the South is racist is the narrative some of the snowflakes want to push for their agenda to show their support for this insipid PR/PC decision.
In Song of the South, Uncle Remus is magical. His stories come to life - literally, according to the movie's ending. He reminded me of my own grandfather, and yes, I'm white. James Baskett was superb in the film, and now he'll be deleted - despite the fact that he was given an honorary Oscar. That's right. The first black male to win an Oscar will be forgotten thanks to people who think they're anti-racist. Oh the irony...
Both sides are clowning. Having seen the film, I’ve never understood the take that it’s “irredeemably and maliciously racist”. It isn’t. But I’ve also seen the film. It’s really awkward and inaccurate. You can’t say it “isn’t racist” cause it is. It’s just not at level those who haven’t seen it imagine that it is.I dunno. Sounds like the one popping off some swear words is the real snowflake here over a Disney cartoon.
This is the second time I have to read a poster try to correct another member of this forum by telling them that they are not keeping up with the thread.Naughty TinkerBelle..8878.., you haven't read the thread. This has been brought up several times:
- Song of the South doesn't fit in Frontierland, either. MK's FL is a mash up of "Frontier" and "The South." Big Thunder Mountain in Arizona is next to the Mississippi and Georgia as it is. PatF would fit perfectly with the paddle boat on the Mississippi right next to it, no?
- It's not about adding a new ride or finding a ride for PatF. It's all about getting rid of the attraction associated with the racist movie, Song of the South (even if the animals from the animated segments aren't racist in and of themselves). Disney knew the movie would be problematic, but they made it anyway. Then they had to hide it, and then they stupidly created a ride based on a problematic source. This is about Disney fully disavowing SotS. It's gravy that PatF gets an attraction.
You're allowed to be sad too, but you didn't need my permission for that.How about the fans like me who aren’t white but still love the attraction? That’s a fairly sweeping generalization.
Isn’t the Frontier inclusive of all land west of the Mississippi? Both northern and ‘southern’ regions of the United States. ‘The South’ does not only mean the Carolinas, Georgia and Florida.
Honestly I'm fascinated by the discussion surrounding it. That plus quarantine boredomAgain, if it‘s all “just a ride” to you then why have you posted about 50 times in this discussion?
They don't care. The actual goal is to reset history to their ideological utopia, which always, always fails. You're arguing facts with postmodern marxists. They don't believe in facts.
The source material is Song of the South.
I dunno. Sounds like the one popping off some swear words is the real snowflake here over a Disney cartoon.
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