Sorry, it was pretty much just late night ramblings.
What's really bothered me is when Alan Yang said at some award show
"Thank you to the straight white guys who dominated movies and TV so hard, for so long that stories about anyone else seem kind of fresh and original"
And that's the problem. Besides "Parents", "Indians on TV" and maybe "I Love You New York"-- Master of None is basically just another bland straight white guy show to me.
Aziz and Alan love to live in this world where it's just a rainbow coalition, they don't really get *that* deep into what makes us as Asian American males stand out. What makes *our* experience unique. They want to gloss things over and even the sad relationship bits Dev falls into just seem...bland?
For example, the dating episode could have been deeper. Asian American men are the least matched profiles on these dating apps and all this episode gave was one brief line about it. Do you guys understand how those little things effect our psyche subconsciously? Like we have to try harder, be more stylish, be something extravagant just to be maybe equal parity to your below average white guy.
I'm only saying I'm disappointed because I do share a lot of characteristics with Dev's character, in personality AND ethnicity. I get that this is supposed to be more light in tone but it just baffles me how much praise this show gets for being the bare minimum.
That's why I wanted to get input from more people of color to see how they felt about this representation. Because this is basically the only show we have.
I don't understand.
What quantity of Indian culture does this show need for you not to consider it a 'boring white guy show'? What is the ratio?
The way I take it is that this Aziz's mostly personal experience - is his experience not legitimate?