The point of having representation in books (if there is a point outside of "the world is diverse your writing should be too") is not to have minority characters deliver twitter explainer thread PSAs on ideas like defining what a micro aggression is or explaining code switching etc. The point is to build a character we emphasize with, relate to, maybe like (thats not required tbh) and have them show not tell us about this life experience, to show us the feelings that come with being gas lit or whatever. make people relate to and experience a life experience difference from their own, they can go on twitter or better yet go to college, to have some logically break down and label these ideas and concepts in a scholarly way, thats not what fictional writing is for.
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Katara comes from a literal fantasy world where the races are Air Nomads, Earth Kingdom, Fire Nation, and Water Tribes. You can't whitewash someone in a series where traditional races don't exist.
Well, two things:
It's still kinda bad editing/colouring etc to give an established character the wrong skin colour. Katara does not have the same skin tone as aang or zuko. That's just a fact, so if your trying to create this character and you make them look nothing like their og style then you've fucked up. Stylisation sure but that doesn't mean you get to change their skin tone. so even if it wasn't racist (it is) it would still be wrong!
Secondly, coding is a thing! Are you seriously going to sit here and tell me that fantasy worlds don't draw and real cultures and peoples? Like for real real the fire nation is clearly based on Japanese culture. Katara and the water tribes are based on indigenous nations. I'm not the expert here on this but anyone can tell indigenous and southeast Asian cultures are where they draw from.
From the clothes to the skin tone, to the way the people groups interact to the spiritual philosophy it's drawn from real-world cultures.
i mean there are a dozen reasons why queer rep (and all rep rlly but im talkin from a queer perspective here) is important, but like one random thing i noticed today.
I was sitting next to a guy today who was making conversation with me, in that sort of weird place where i couldn't tell if he was hitting on me or just being friendly. and i started to get worried that if i turned him down because i'm only attracted to women, he'd get angry. but when we were talking about video games, he mentioned one he loved that i knew had some wlw representation in there. impossible to miss.
so i was able to relax a little, knowing that at the very least, he didn't hate the very thought of it.
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Now hereās a controversial episode from season one. Letās delve into the discourse, shall we.Ā
Summary:Ā It's Queen Arianna's birthday, and she receives an unexpected guest: her estranged sister, Willow. Willow and Rapunzel quickly bond, sharing a lot of the same personality traits (most notably them never wearing shoes), and Arianna feels a bit left out. To add to her aggravation, Willow has given her a pet with an annoying rattle. Eventually, Arianna explodes at her sister, letting her know her irritation with her and throws away the rattle. The pet starts to multiply and rampage over the countryside. Meanwhile, Lance and EugeneĀ take the King camping.Ā
More Filler, More Poor Pacing, More FatigueĀ
This is yet another episode that was moved around. Noticing a pattern yet? It doesnāt effect the plot much, but it kills the pacing dead. By the time you get to this episode youāre just tired and bored and ready for the show to just get on with things.Ā
Let's Talk About RepresentationĀ
So we have here a show that is marketed towardsĀ pre-teen little girls run by two middle aged white guys and written primarily by men. The creators have claimed that female relationships are the focus of the show, but only to give us one female friend for our main hero, no other friendships with women in them, just two sister relationships, and only one mother that is even alive.Ā
Furthermore they go on to break up that single female friendship, refuse to give any focus to the only mother in the show, and then wrap the plot around the dead abusive mom instead, making her unnecessarily even more horrible than she was in the OG film. (just to make the equally abusive father in the show look better)
Meanwhile we get four father figures, all of whom are just some variant on theĀ āoverprotective estranged dadā trope. Even though at least two of them could have been easily written to be mothers instead and itād not change the plot one bit.Ā Ā
When women talk about about poor representation in media, itās things like this we are often complaining about. Thatās not to say that men canāt write women.Ā Miyazaki, of Studio Ghibli fame, has made a lifelong career out writing movies for and starring women. Nor is this a claim that the TTS crew are misogynist. You can be well intentioned and still screw up. As is most often the case in films.Ā
But nevertheless, if you are writing for a demographic that you are not a part of then you need to either include those voices in the development of your story or reach out and consult people within that demographic. And no, youāre wife/niece/daughter/mother does not count here. You need to go beyond your personal social circle, as people who either donāt know you or have worked in the industry can be more open about what is needed in the writing process.Ā Ā
Sadly there are rumors, (and please keep in mind this is only rumor, and weāll never know the actual truth due to the fact that production artists are under contract and canāt share things without fearing for their livelihoods) but there are stories of the head showrunner shutting down the opinions of the female storyboard artists who warned him of some these creative decisions.Ā
Moreover said creator responded to criticisms of how his female characters were written by claiming heĀ āknew strong women in his lifeā as if that actually had anything to do with his writing skills. Itās a poor response and smacks ofĀ āWell I canāt be misogynistic, I love women. See, I married oneā. Dear, male creators, please don't ever do this. It makes you look bad.Ā
So Where are Arianna and Willow From, Again?
The show keeps droppingĀ hints that theyāre from Corona itself and are born princesses, but that makes little sense. Because if Arianna was the rightful heir sheād have far more political power then she actually does in the show. If weāre to buy the idea that only Rapunzel will be in charge, and not her and Eugene, or even just Eugene. Then we have to accept that itās because sheās the rightful heir by birth. If so, then Frederic must also be the blood heir or otherwise he wouldnāt be able to do all the things he does in the show.Ā
TTS is so determine to not have any real world markers in the show and keeping things a āfantasyā that it winds up swinging too far in the opposite direction. To the point that it undermines its own worldbuilding.Ā Ā Ā Ā
The Conflict Between Willow and Arianna is Good, but UnnecessaryĀ
Iāve seen some debate overĀ āwho is rightā here, along with tons of unwarranted shade thrown at Willow, but the truth is, it doesnāt matter. Neither side is right or wrong, and for once the conflict in TTS is real, complex, not easily solvable with a ten minute conversation, and is presented evenly so that you know where each side is coming from. But in the end, it doesnāt add anything to the series.Ā
Willow is never seen outside of this episode. This is the only story that gives Arianna any kind of focus. Rapunzel learns nothing useful from witnessing their squabbles and itās all build up to a be bad parable/parallel in the series finale.Ā
Itās a waste. A waste of conflict. A waste of character. A waste of time.Ā
Had Arianna been treated as an important character to the narrative, like she should have been, then maybe the episode would have fared better.Ā
Arianna is Reduced to a Pointless Parallel
We talked about it before but this might be the most grievous example of Tangledās useless parallels.
Willow and Arianna are meant to be āforeshadowingā (and I use that term loosely) for Rapunzel and Cassandraās conflict in the finale season. Let me count the ways of how bad this actually is..
For starters Willows and Ariannaās conflit isnāt actually the same as Raps and Cass. Thereās some overlap, but ultimately theirs is actually deeper and more complex than the Raps vs Cass stuff. Itās also only between them and does not involve ruining the lives of other people. So itās a weak comparison to begin with.
Cassandra isnāt even here to make the parallel complete. She barely interacts with Arianna and has never met Willow on screen.
Rapunzel learns the wrong lessons from this. She gets encouragement from her aunt to go traveling and a pep talk from her mom during the showās finale, but she doesnāt actually apply any of the actual context of the arguments being made to her own life. Making the parallel shallow.
Reducing a character from the original film, one that you did not create and who has reasons to be have more plot importance then they are given, to a mere āparallelā for your favorite OC is just bad fanfiction. This is something that I would expect from a seven year old setting out to write their first ever story. Not from grown adults, who are supposedly professionals, who've worked for years in the industry and are employed by the largest entertainment studio in the world.
Now before you jump down my throat, thereās nothing wrong with fanfiction itself, nor with children exploring their favorite stories in ways they find personally fulfilling. But I happen to hold mass produced media to a different, and ultimately higher standard. As well should we all. A television show made by the mouse has more real world impact than a little girl posting on Ao3.
Critiquing stuff like female representation, the behind the scenes hiring processes that leads to either good or bad rep, and the impression these stories can have on people still developing their worldviews is important. Questioning things are needed in order to make change happen. If you never acknowledge how giving a show targeted to women to a male showrunner can cause problems then youāre never going to push the big companies for more female lead shows. Which means more women are left without work. Ā Ā
This is Subjective but...
I donāt like the Uumlaut being used as the main conflict. Look, if you like the Gremlins references, good for you, but I was promised sword fights and adventure according to the pilot and all I got was a parody of a 80s horror comedy that decided to skip out on the āhorrorā part. The Uumlaut isnāt threatening enough to be interesting and the lack of real threats and challenges in this show is really starting to weigh things down. Plus it just distracts from the far more interesting human drama going on with Willow and Arianna.Ā
Like if you don't want action to be the focus of every episode, thatās fine, but commit to that. Don't just half-ass it because you feel the need to shoehorn in an action sequence where it isnāt needed.Ā Ā Ā
Conclusion
I like Willow as a character, but not this episode.Ā They needed to do more with her to justifyĀ her existence, and they needed to do more with Arianna while at it. Sadly, you won't really miss out on much if you decided to skip this episode and thatās a shame.Ā
Also...Ā
Iāll forever headcanon that Willow is the wife that Stan mentioned back in Rapunzelās Enemy and that sheās his and Peteās beard. You canāt change my mind. Poly relationships for the win!Ā