Media

The Gross Absurdities of White Privilege

I recently had a chance to watch Netflix’s Inventing Anna and Hulu’s The Dropout. Both of them are fabulous programs about how far a lie can go.  Anna Delvey pretended to be a German heiress who scammed her way into New York’s elite society.  The miniseries is based on the legendary New York magazine article about her.  Elizabeth Holmes is the founder of Theranos, a company that claimed to diagnose medical ailments quickly through a blood testing machine.  She thought she was going to be the next Steve Jobs, even wearing black turtlenecks to emulate the late Apple founder.  In the end, she stole a lot of money from investors.

Both ladies were convicted for a garden variety of fraud charges.

Something that isn’t really discussed with these programs is how the women were able to get away with so much.  I have a hard time believing that any woman of color would ever be taken seriously if she even attempted to commit this level of fraud.  Being an attractive, young white woman does have a lot of cachet.  The craziest thing about Inventing Anna happened in episode four when an investment banker just gives Anna a $40 million loan without a detailed background check or even a basic Google search on her.  I remember applying for a $10,000 business loan years ago, and I was told to bring in five years of tax returns, W2s, 1099s, two government-approved photo IDs like a passport and driver’s license, and a host of other notarized paperwork just to be considered for an interview with the bank, which later denied me the loan.

Even Ryan Coogler can’t even withdraw $12,000 from his own bank account, but, sure, let’s give crazy Anna millions of dollars. In what galaxy does any of these make any sense?

Getting Nostaglic For “The Real World”

Over the holiday break, I watched The Real World Homecoming for New York and Los Angeles.  I watched the original first three seasons of the show 30 years ago (yeah, I’m that old)!  I really enjoyed the social experiment of bringing together people from vastly different backgrounds “to see what happens when people stop being polite and start getting real.”  I lost interest in the show after season five because it started to evolve into a “hookup” show.

I learned a lot about others from watching this show.  The first time I saw an openly LGBT person on TV (Norman from New York), the first time I saw a woman talk openly about her abortion (Tami from Los Angeles), and the first time I saw someone talk openly about living with HIV (Pedro from San Francisco) all happened on The Real World.

So, it has been great to watch the reunion homecomings and see how much – or little – the cast has changed.  Too bad there are no plans to do a homecoming for San Francisco.  There could be many reasons for this, including primarily Pedro Zamora’s death, but also the original house the cast lived in was significantly damaged in a fire 20 years ago, and any lingering animosity towards Puck and Rachel Campos, who is now a Fox News personality from the rest of the cast.

Lupin: The Show We Need Right Now!

I happened upon this great French show on Netflix a few months ago called Lupin.  Inspired by the adventures of Arsène Lupin, gentleman thief Assane Diop sets out to avenge his father for an injustice inflicted by a wealthy family.  This is a very modern take on a classic story.  Best of all, I love that the story centers around a smart Black man who games the system and makes the police look like fools.

It’s a show we all need right now!

Check out “Mr. Soul”

I got an invitation last year to an early screening of Mr. Soul, a documentary about Soul!, a ground-breaking 1970s PBS show that ran during the height of the Black Arts Movement.  I had heard of the show, as I used to work for Basic Black on WGBH, but never seen full episodes of the show.  So watching this film was a treat and a Black history lesson.

The documentary is amazing!  I wish this show was on now.  I would much rather watch this every day instead of most of the garbage on TV today. Please watch the film, and watch the first season of Soul! on Amazon Prime Video.