• The new WDWMAGIC iOS app is here!
    Stay up to date with the latest Disney news, photos, and discussions right from your iPhone. The app is free to download and gives you quick access to news articles, forums, photo galleries, park hours, weather and Lightning Lane pricing. Learn More
  • Happy Holidays from WDWMAGIC

    Wishing you a season filled with warmth, time with the people you care about, and a little extra Disney magic. Thanks for being part of the WDWMAGIC community. We appreciate you reading, sharing, and talking Disney with us all year.

  • Welcome to the WDWMAGIC.COM Forums!
    Please take a look around, and feel free to sign up and join the community.

Splash Mountain re-theme announced

Status
Not open for further replies.

Chi84

Premium Member
If Disney rides are expected to provide history lessons or teaching moments, maybe we’re asking too much from them. Just don’t model a ride based on Merchant of Venice and you have no problem.
 
Last edited:

21stamps

Well-Known Member
I Disney rides are expected to provide history lessons or teaching moments, maybe we’re asking too much from them. Just don’t model a ride based on Merchant of Venice and you have no problem.

Can we say the same for all books? I’d love if all schools brought back 2 classics.

The comment wasn’t about a ride, it was about what books are currently banned in many areas.
 

Incomudro

Well-Known Member
There also existed African-American inventors, entrepreneurs, law makers, cowboys, etc. They tend to show up less in the movies of the time. Funny, that.



Me: We should take steps to recognize the ways in which biases, prejudices, and stereotypes can unconsciously influence creative works.
You: Does that me we should remove everything?
Me: ...

They did show up less in movies of the time.
Know why?
Marketing.
The market for them would have been so small.
So, entertainment - particularly movies was mostly "white" and marketed towards white people where it would seel.
Roles by minorities were indeed often not the best.
 

aw14

Well-Known Member
Do you think the Merchant of Venice should be banned from schools?
absolutely not. Personally, I am for a more "inclusive" approach. Meaning, that these become teachable moments for professional educators. Explain the time, the context, etc...ignoring it or banning it doesn't mean it didn't exist.

Further, there is something to be said that being made to be uncomfortable in a classroom isn't always a bad thing.
 

21stamps

Well-Known Member
absolutely not. Personally, I am for a more "inclusive" approach. Meaning, that these become teachable moments for professional educators. Explain the time, the context, etc...ignoring it or banning it doesn't mean it didn't exist.

Further, there is something to be said that being made to be uncomfortable in a classroom isn't always a bad thing.

This is so refreshing to read.. but I hoped and almost expected you to have such thoughts.


I was required to read all 3 (Huck, Merchant, To Kill a Mockingbird) in school, and all 3 were taught with context of the time, as well as discussions about the racism and anti-semitism .. I think we’re better for it.
 

aw14

Well-Known Member
This is so refreshing to read.. but I hoped and almost expected you to have such thoughts.


I was required to read all 3 (Huck, Merchant, To Kill a Mockingbird) in school, and all 3 were taught with context of the time, as well as discussions about the racism and anti-semitism .. I think we’re better for it.
exactly, more information is better imo. I taught History for a long time. My teaching philosophy was always "if not me, who, if not now, when"?

They need to understand even uncomfortable things, and have it put in its appropriate context.
 

aw14

Well-Known Member
“Characters derived from” was my carefully chosen phrasing. The characters are derived from Song of the South.
The semantics doesnt matter, imo

If you would like to become an imagineer, I am not sure a Life is Beautiful attraction would garner interest, but I wouldn't object
 

Brer Panther

Well-Known Member
I would just like to point out that Raj from The Big Bang Theory is an offensive Indian stereotype far more stereotypical than Brer Rabbit is to African-Americans, yet I don't see anybody demanding reruns of The Big Bang Theory be taken off the air.
 

ImperfectPixie

Well-Known Member
Me: We should take steps to recognize the ways in which biases, prejudices, and stereotypes can unconsciously influence creative works.
You: Does that me we should remove everything?
Me: ...
Way to totally misrepresent a conversation.

You never said that. You've been pointing to things that you think are racist, when they are not. I've simply been providing evidence that proves your "interpretation" of things is incorrect.
 

LittleBuford

Well-Known Member
I would just like to point out that Raj from The Big Bang Theory is an offensive Indian stereotype far more stereotypical than Brer Rabbit is to African-Americans, yet I don't see anybody demanding reruns of The Big Bang Theory be taken off the air.

Disney isn’t retheming Splash Mountain because of people’s demands. It’s a calculated decision rather than some spur-of-the-moment concession.
 

Brer Panther

Well-Known Member
Disney isn’t retheming Splash Mountain because of people’s demands.
Am I really supposed to believe it's just a coincidence that they're retheming Splash Mountain to The Princess and the Frog after a petition was started and got lots of attention telling them to retheme Splash Mountain to The Princess and the Frog?
 

Matt_Black

Well-Known Member
Am I really supposed to believe it's just a coincidence that they're retheming Splash Mountain to The Princess and the Frog after a petition was started and got lots of attention telling them to retheme Splash Mountain to The Princess and the Frog?

Yes. Actually. Turner Classic Movies, the past few weeks, have been running their short documentary on the history of blackface in films. That was first released back in January, or at least that's when they also made it available on Youtube. It was produced well before all the attention now started, it just happens to be really relevant now.
 

ImperfectPixie

Well-Known Member
I would just like to point out that Raj from The Big Bang Theory is an offensive Indian stereotype far more stereotypical than Brer Rabbit is to African-Americans, yet I don't see anybody demanding reruns of The Big Bang Theory be taken off the air.
Hell, Howard Wolowitz & his mother, are also quite offensive to the Jewish community.
All of the characters are very stereotypical. They do everything EXCEPT coming right out and saying that Sheldon is autistic...they even mention that his mother "had him tested" several times throughout the series. I'm mom to 2 autistic boys...but I find Sheldon to be hilarious...because he nails so many qualities that my older son has (my son isn't so self-righteous, thankfully).

ETA: One of the things that comes along with a child receiving an autism diagnosis is isolation. Many, MANY people behave as if it's contagious...because they don't understand it (no one REALLY does - even doctors), and it's scary to face things we don't understand. What I really appreciate about the Sheldon character is that they highlight that he is constantly learning, even though social situations are uncomfortable/difficult for him, and that he is constantly growing as a person...which is honestly something we should all strive to do. And hopefully, the show helps people to understand that "different" isn't a bad thing.
 
Last edited:

LittleBuford

Well-Known Member
Am I really supposed to believe it's just a coincidence that they're retheming Splash Mountain to The Princess and the Frog after a petition was started and got lots of attention telling them to retheme Splash Mountain to The Princess and the Frog?

The timing certainly isn’t coincidental, but a single petition with relatively few signatures isn’t going to prompt such a major move, particularly when no-one was expecting Disney to spend money on any inessential projects. Whether the idea was already in the works or not, Disney decided of its own volition that this was the best move in the long run, as well as something that could earn them some positive PR in the current moment.
 

orlandogal22

Well-Known Member
The timing certainly isn’t coincidental, but a single petition with relatively few signatures isn’t going to prompt such a major move, particularly when no-one was expecting Disney to spend money on any inessential projects. Whether the idea was already in the works or not, Disney decided of its own volition that this was the best move in the long run, as well as something that could earn them some positive PR in the current moment.

It's disingenuous then.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.

Back
Top Bottom