I have a question, and it might sound kind of bad, but it's something I've been curious to get a black person's perspective on. When it comes to TV shows and movies, would you feel it's better for representation to have a black person there who doesn't really deal with things from a black perspective, or to just not have them there at all? Now, in this hypothetical situation there wouldn't be anything offensive about the character, they would just be there. I started wondering about this when you were talking about how Supergirl handled James.
Speaking only for myself as a black male,
any representation is better than no representation, because not being there at all is far worse. Believe it or not, I didn't have a problem with how
Supergirl handled James--first and foremost, he was written as a man
who just happened to be black. His ethnicity represented
the diversity of the world we live in, and that's important, but he was never there to deal with things from the black perspective. That was something I understood even before the debut of the first episode, so I was cool with James from the get-go. Would I have liked them do more with James, sure, but he did contribute to the show while he was there.
In a very real sense, it all depends on the story being told. If a story demands a character's background/ethnicity be a focus, then that's what it'll be. If it doesn't, then it doesn't. But it's always better to be shown as being there than not. That's why the character of Uhura was so important to black people in the original
Star Trek. Yes, there were episodes in which she only said "Hailing frequencies are open, sir," but she did show the diversity and inclusiveness of that world. And sometimes that overall aspect alone is the most important thing to take away from TV shows and movies with POC characters.