Subject: I'd like to believe it's deliberate.
Author:
Posted on: 2023-04-11 16:26:01 UTC

Specifically, I'd like to think it's deliberately based on what people claim to be afraid of when they whine about [insert franchise] being "too woke." Tokenism for the sake of tokenism, doing things just to spite the viewers, sh***ing on the original, blah blah blah.

That way, when people complain about media that isn't actually doing that, one can say, "No, you're thinking of Velma. This is far from Velma."

Example 1: "Okay, it's fine if you think the scene in Captain Marvel with the motorcycle guy was over the top, but it was cathartic for a lot of people who've endured sexism in real life. It wasn't done just to put men down—that would be Fred in Velma."

Example 2: "No, Tolkien probably didn't picture dark-skinned Elves when he wrote them, but letting non-white people see themselves as Elves in a big-budget production is good and doesn't change anything about who the Elves are and what they represent in Middle-earth. It's not like Mindy Kaling making Shaggy Norville Black just to give a really bad take on racial stereotypes."

That said, my confidence that there's any such noble intent behind Velma is exceedingly low. I think it's more likely that it's a show Mindy Kaling wanted to make, but couldn't get backing for without the face of an already-popular franchise. (I don't remember where I came across that theory; apologies for lack of credit.) Or it's just the most cynical in a long line of cynical cash-grabs in recent years.

~Neshomeh

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