Oooooooooops, posted this in the listening thread:
Just finished
K-9 and Company. It wasn't exactly the best of Classic Who, but it wasn't nearly as bad as I'd been lead to believe. Brendan and most of the villains were annoying as hell but Sarah Jane was spot-on, as usual. (I still think Lis Sladen was stoned while filming the title sequence, though.) Alas, calling the plot "wafer-thin" would be an insult to wafers.
Anyways, getting back into "Talons of Weng Chiang" on the weeknight rotation.
It's been mentioned upthread the overt racism we notice in this otherwise excellent serial and how the main antagonist is a white man in yellowface(?)
It's easy to forget how far Asians have come in the past little over a generation. George Takei was truly groundbreaking in his supporting role as Sulu. Remember, "Kung Fu" was supposed to have Bruce Lee as Kane, but it would be silly to have an Asian in the lead role of a prime time TV show, so they cast David Carridine as an Asian.
As a kid, not long after the series first aired, I remember being confused as to why they had a white guy playing someone named Kwai Chang.
And of course for the great film "Breakfast at Tiffany's", the irate Japanese upstairs neighbor was played by the great Japanese actor, Micky Rooney--complete with Coke bottle eyeglasses and big buckteeth.
That's a very good point. I had no idea Kung Fu was supposed to be a Bruce Lee vehicle. How disappointing. And the less said about Mickey Rooney's role, the better. That seemed bad even for the times.