Friday, July 3, 2009

LG and blackface

Someone call LG marketing, quick. I'm serious.

As The Grand Narrative alerts us, LG has some ads for it's Cyon "Black & White" phones that feature a White woman and a black man.

Please note how I did not capitalize black, as I customarily do, because I'm not referring to the race or ethnicity of the man: He is a White made up to look Black. Or black.

It is hardly surprising that this would raise eyebrows with someone like The Grand Narrative blogger, or even offend. Indeed, his comments section is full of critical comments. islets writes:
its definitely something that would have been unacceptable here in US .
And this is where I come in. Are you sure about that? Do a Google image search for Rose Wurgel blackface and see what you come up with.

You might have encountered this picture of Rose, who was the daughter in a show called "Black. White." on Fox Television around the time I came to Hawaii. Making Whites look like Blacks and vice-versa featured crucially in this program, though the intentions were good.

And that brings us back to LG: What were their intentions? Were they trying to mock Blacks? Were they disgusted by the idea of making a Black person look attractive as the central figure in the ad? Maybe they were not trying to find a Black person but a person who looks blackish (just like that White woman is almost snowy pale).

At TGN, they are speculating on why a White person was made up to be Black, and I could do the same, but it's pointless unless you contact LG themselves and ask them what was up.

That's right, ask them. Don't put them on the defensive; just ask. And then after their explanation, explain to them that they made a huge marketing faux-pas and that they should yank these ads posthaste.

Because even if not bad intentions were there, the fallout is far too great. Even if no malice was intended, the ad is extremely problematic.

But let's not kid ourselves. It is problematic primarily because of American problems with blackface in the past. Korea did not invent "Amos & Andy" and does not have — nor do many of the people in Korea particularly understand — the cultural baggage associated with it. Blackface was a way to keep Blacks out of mainstream entertainment and, moreover, it was a way to mock and ridicule Blacks in a way that was used to justify the segregation, anti-miscegenation laws, and general discrimination faced by Blacks in the early and middle 20th century.


And to be fair, it can be very confusing for companies outside North American to recognize what's okay and what's not. Functionally, what is so different from this model made out to be Black from the Wayans Brothers, as Alex mentions, dressing up as White chicks in the movie White Chicks? And when the likes of Bing Crosby is dancing around in blackface in a classic and still beloved movie, how are Koreans (or Japanese, Taiwanese, etc.) supposed to pick up that it's bad. America changed the rules of its game and Korea didn't get the memo. (And many Americans didn't get the memo about yellowface either, for that matter.)

This is not the same thing as depicting Blacks or Africans as near-naked natives, so how would you explain to a Korean advertiser what the rules are? It all comes down to explaining that in America we don't do that anymore, and then explaining why. (And frankly, one or both of the models should have spoken up, if they were North American.)

Not being an American company, LG has not been a part of that at all. But if it's going to market to the masses, it has to recognize such cultural concerns, and now the ball is in their court. To not pull the ad would be gross cultural insensitivity.

This, by the way, is what Rose Wurgel looks like without blackface:

Frankly, I like her better as a Black person (though she's cute enough in her "normal" look), but my preference may be because her hairstyle and look sort of reminds of my ex-girlfriend back at UCI.

UPDATE (September 13, 2009):
Someone commented on this Japan Probe post with a link to this here Monster Island post, citing it as an example that it's not only the Japanese who are guilty of employing blackface.

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6 comments:

John from Daejeon said...

kushibo,

Aren't you glad you didn't retire with all the wonderful fodder that just seems to be coming out of every nook and cranny?

As for LG, they are very, very big in the U.S. (just walk into any Best Buy, Fry’s, or Wal-mart—it’s not only cell phones and microwave ovens that they make), and they should have at least one American on their payroll in South Korea who can proof read their marketing promotions to help prevent blunders like this from pissing off prospective buyers overseas. I know that I will stop buying any more Lucky Goldstar products for the foreseeable future.

kushibo said...

John from Taejŏn wrote:
Aren't you glad you didn't retire with all the wonderful fodder that just seems to be coming out of every nook and cranny?

It's the same old same old. In a country of 50 million or 300 million there will never be an end to the stream of stupidity, offensiveness, outrage, bad behavior, etc., etc., by some citizens, politicians, whatever.

None of this is new. The only thing new is that new people are treating it like it's OMYGOD THE WORST THING EVER as they think that each and every Korean is poring over all these stories and memorizing their content as they eat their corn flakes or ride the subway.

I know that I will stop buying any more Lucky Goldstar products for the foreseeable future.

And why is that?

Why not write a letter and protest or make a call and ask why they did this? I don't suspect anything malicious, just ignorant of American cultural norms, but that's no good excuse. Do you suspect malice or racism, and if so how?

John from Daejeon said...

kushibo wrote, "I don't suspect anything malicious, just ignorant of American cultural norms, but that's no good excuse. Do you suspect malice or racism, and if so how?"

No, I just suspect extreme stupidity, and I did shoot off an e-mail voicing my displeasure and my reasoning for going with Nokia and Emerson when I return back to the states.

Left Flank said...

You forgot to mention Ben Stiller's Tropic Thunder.

Shinbone said...

how can they tell the models 'okay, you're going to be in blackface' and the models are like 'okay, blackface, got it' without any sort of reasoned objection on their part

reijene said...

why did they have to paint a white guy a dark chocolat hue when there are perfectly beautiful chocolate-colored male (and female!) models in the industry. Tyson Beckford, Maurice Townsell, Alain Vixamar (just stating...)! i am guessing the casting director of that particular ad campaign just settled for what he (it) could get.