Kind of a double-standard since 'Dragonball' (and we Asians talk about it) changed the ethnicity of the character...
??? Huh?
How so. I'm pretty sure Son Goku looks damn caucasian in the manga and anime. White/pink skin, large eyes. The guy's also an alien from space, born with a tail; in fact, the character he's based upon is literallly a monkey - so how does that equal Asian? The guy who played Son Goku was chosen to resemble the drawn character, and he indeed looks quite a bit like Son Goku.
In fact, the only character in Dragon Ball that looks somewhat Asian is Vegeta; he's got slanted eyes, because he's evil. His skin, however, is clearly white.
It's the schizophrenic part of Japanese culture. Slanted, thin eyes, even more so than with us, are heavily considered trademarks of evil people. And wide open eyes the true hallmarks of a good person. Result being, not a single manga and anime character EVER looks genuinely Asian, ALL of them look caucasian. The only ones who might look somewhat Asian, are ALL evil.
Fact is; Chi-Chi is Asian and that's pretty impressive and something you should consider yourself lucky for. If they had casted someone who looked like the drawn character she wouldn't be Asian either.
????Huh?
What? Huh?
(I don't think my post is that trivial....)
I actually already gave my thoughts about this above, however:
From your post, 3D Master I'm gathering that I should feel lucky that an Asian actress was cast in a role. Just like an African-American should feel lucky for getting a part in a film, no matter what part it is.
'Son Goku' to many is Asian, and could have been portrayed just as well by an Asian actor. However, they decided to have the character (and others) portrayed by a Caucasian actor.
Vegeta, Krillin, Goku look Asian. Yes, they're aliens, but they got Asian features.
Still, I understand the movie was poor anyhow.
That's it. I get off on black people dying. You got me figured out. I'm a Grand Wizard in hiding.So, based on your post, it just 'worked out' that the black characters all died gruesome deaths? (i.e. 'Whops! We killed all the black characters. Moving on...')
Looking at your smilies, I guess you're getting a little kick out of it....Yeah, it did pretty much work out that the black characters (and no, not all of them) died. Circumstances dictated it. If Sterling Brown didn't already have series work, he'd have lived but they couldn't keep him so they killed off the character to create story. They also wanted to keep Charles Malik Whitfield, but he had a film role so they also killed him off in a blast by Lilith to create story since he wasn't available and they thought a death would serve the story better. When are we going to start thinking past race? That the characters happened to be cast with black actors was completely incidental. That so many were cast with black actors shows that the casting department of SPN is, in fact,color blind.
And yes, I laughed when they died. I also laughed when the white guy tripped over the beer bottle and landed throat first on a skewering fork drying tines up next to his sink because of the cursed rabbit's foot he stole; it tickled me pink when the white guy got tricked by the changeling and landed chest first on the moving chain saw in his garage, and I really got off on it when Dean pushed the white vampire's head under the moving chainsaw and sawed it right off. I guess I hate white guys, too. That's the point of SPN. Everybody dies, and isn't it great that Eric Kripke invites people of all genders and races to the party?![]()
Okaaay...


If minorities want to be on sci-fi shows forcefully, then they should make their own.
How dare those 'minorities' ask to be represented just as equally as Caucasians...
Maybe separate water fountains....restrooms...


Hmmm, as for your idea:
Maybe we Asians can take over the Star Trek franchise and create Kirk, Picard, Sisko, and Janeway in our own image....bringing in a Caucasian or two (or even an African-American) to keep up the status quo.

*sigh*
It's also noteworthy that female lead characters aren't that uncommon anymore: Star Trek: Voyager, the afore-mentioned Dark Angel, Alias, Earth 2, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Threshold, Fringe etc. You could perhaps make an argument that most female lead characters also happen to be very attractive. But I'd say that this aspect also plays a role in casting male roles nowadays.
Well, they're trying to get the male demographic...so they want their female leads to pull in those male viewers. (Being that those shows are sci-fi, and in a genre where it is male-dominated--for lack of another term--that's not too surprising).
Us girls are thrown a bone every now then. For example, the character Daniel Jackson, Cameron Mitchell...and others..
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