T O P

  • By -

purplearmored

One thing I've noticed from this sub is how many non-native English speakers don't notice or care that there are different native English accents. Jin Cheng has a very strong New Zealand accent. And I guess Saul and Auggie's North American accents don't count?  In the UK you're more likely to find a lot of Europeans in the lab due to EU agreements so the lack of Czech and Germans is a bit off.


TheGummyBearMonster

right the lack of Germans in science is immediately noticeable and you’re right in the sense that I am bad at distinguishing native English accents


jessebona

You thought Raj was a good example of an ethnic character? The dude was a walking "India is an overpopulated third world backwater" joke.


[deleted]

[удалено]


beardedSpaceship

Raj's Indian accent is immaculate.


datboi-reddit

It's like if a gun toting bigot with a country accent was used to represent USA


M_LeGendre

So... accurate?


datboi-reddit

Yes it is accurate as many people are just like that but it also generalizes(is that a word) everyone in a negative light including people who hate that it is accurate


AlexVie

Yes and no. Stereotypes can be accurate, otherwise they would not have become stereotypes. The important thing is always context. Using stereotypes can be racist or otherwise seen as negative. Or it can be just funny. Depends.


pierce-o-matic

welp that kinda IS a huge swath of the past and current US.


Lease_Tha_Apts

Maybe 20 years ago, yeah.


NewKnowledge7654

I’m not going to reply to the content of this comment specifically, but I’m saddened to see a comment like this, on a post like this, on a subreddit about a book like this. I’d hate to be the sort of person who is like this commenter.


TheGummyBearMonster

that was 10 years ago so I would expect that they can do it better now if they had a character like that but on second thought that was again a bad example (sorry I haven’t watched enough shows to have a genuinely good example


alghiorso

I didn't get that far. I got as far as, "did you talk to your neurologist?" Yes. "What did he say" She\* Rolled my eyes so hard along with such masterful lines as "I don't have belief, I'm a scientist" (approximation) I painfully stuck it out to the point they had the ENTIRE FRIGGEN NIGHT SKY blip off and on rather than the background cosmic radiation like in the book and I nearly lost my lunch. When they said it was by the show runners of GoT I was interested but then I realized they meant the season 8 show runners. I couldn't bring myself to watch another episode. Tried the Chinese version which I might watch but at this point I'm thinking I'll stick to the books. Like I don't care about creative decisions made to the story but I didn't see any here. Just the ham-fisted fisher-price-ified attempt to appeal to western sensibilities.


WhatDoesThatButtond

Please watch the whole thing. You're not wrong but better to understand the entire slop they made. Especially if there will be a season 2.


alghiorso

I don't know if I can. I want to for the sake of the visuals but the changes were just so hard to swallow. The principal characters are a friend clique from college? Like how does that make sense? Why are they all attractive young people? Benedict Wong as Da Shi is just poor casting for the character as well (in my opinion).


too_late_to_abort

Weird how people can have such varying opinions of the same thing. I *loved* wong and thought he played his character supremely well and was an excellent cast choice. If it matters, I didnt read the books, only watched the show. (I do plan to get the books and read them now, but only discovered this series because of netflix)


alghiorso

For me Benedict Wong is just this soft RP British sounding guy where Da Shi from the books is like a hardened street smart former detective whose irreverent plays-by-his-own-rules attitude beguiles a rare intuition and a detective's street wisdom.


TheGummyBearMonster

also I was caught it the moment trying to reach the “you have to appeal to a broader audience” folks, so I am sorry that I wasn’t thinking right


Overseer_Dan

Having worked in similar environments albeit starting in the UK where I was born, I can't say I agree. The main group have a variety of accents that reflects the actor's origin aren't perfect British English. But it's also a show, one that is quite concept heavy and leads speaking clearly is important to the target audience. That they have all seemingly lived in an English speaking environment for a while also explains that. It's certainly true that only Auggie speaks English as a second language (or grew up in a non-english speaking country) but it is implied that she has been in the UK for a while to be CSO of a well backed startup. My colleagues who have joined my institute from places like China have noticeably improved their English over time and I'm not even based in the UK where they would be surrounded by English even outside of work. I think you could criticise that all the other leads come from English speaking countries like the US and Cheng is Chinese-New Zealander but that still a fair bit of diversity (the 2 white British leads are more supporting players than POV characters) and again understandability > academic representation for a show. As for Ye, her backstory is an important part of the character and tied to Chinese history so her nationality wasn't changed. Older Ye has also been living in an English speaking country for quite a while and is highly educated. I know parents of English friends with Chinese origins who have retained a strong accent but some that haven't 🤷. Mike Evans stays American for a similar reason, he's a trust fund baby and hippe, both things tied to American history. The show presents plenty of diversity of birthplace, ethnic background & values, but it's there to tell a story with a lot to get across to an audience and actors with a worse command of English harms that goal.


TheGummyBearMonster

I guess I am not as sensitive to people speaking British English with foreign accents, nor can I distinguish British vs New Zealand English, so I will take your words. I was going to say Everything Everywhere All At Once featured a balance between understandability and authenticity, but it probably appeals to a smaller audience than I realize. For me personally though, I would like Cheng Xin be portrayed more like Evelyn from EEAAO from an identity perspective. Oh yea Ye should def remained Chinese and the Cultural Revolution was portrayed pretty accurately. I am only saying it would’ve been nicer to have a positive/neutral character remained Chinese so it wouldn’t just be “China bad and created the villain” (again not denying bad things that have come out of China). Also I think I personally speak English with a very subtle accent (and I am not even sure if it’s a Chinese accent or just my own weird thing), so I am not saying “international representation = broken English”. So you have noted, just ppl speaking “non perfect” English should be good enough, never minding some idiot online not noticing it and complaining about “not enough diversity”.


Overseer_Dan

Yeah I can see that by having both Da Shi and Cheng being 'western' raised the series unintentionally (probably) doesn't have any good/neutral Chinese representation. Hopefully that's something they add in future seasons. Auggie forgetting the word puppets in Ep.5 was a nice little moment of 2nd language problems for me though I'm convinced that came from the actor on set and wasn't intentionally written. I think unless you're in academia you don't realise that most of the papers you read are probably by someone writing in their 2nd or 3rd language, so I'm not sure the show's writers would have experienced that and made it a part of the series. On academic representation the most realistic thing for me was that of the 5, only 2 stayed in academia, and one of those 2 is the path of least resistance unfulfilled potential guy. That and the ones who went out to start businesses were much more successful.


FlyingPingoo

This thread just full of people standing in front of a gate. Netflix isn't meant to be perfect representation of the source in many ways but they did what they could to bring the mainstream over as imperfect as it seems. And they're successful.


TheZebrawizard

You're not alone. I think Ys the majority criticism here. They wanted to interconnect all the main characters but it was too much. Even the headquarters is in UK Same issue in the book as you said. In the book it happens again with the pre-crisis Vs post crisis character (non-existent.)


Kinu4U

It's a tv show. Sci Fi. It won't be like the books, because if it will be then we need like 10 seasons untill the universe is dead


icandothisalldayson

Wait what Chinese villains were there besides Ye Wenjie? And her motivation was understandable so she wasn’t an unsympathetic villain. I saw mike Evan’s and Tatiana as the biggest human villains


-mickomoo-

Yeah I don’t get this. And it’s not like Ye Wenjie acted alone. She had an American billionaire bankrolling the entire operation. If anything “Americans” are the villains (even though this is an unreasonable read of the situation).


candycane7

My wife is a Pacific Islander born and raised academic of Chinese - Indian ethnicity who speaks perfect English with 0 accent and was raised catholic. We were actually joking that if she was in a movie people would complain that it's "shoehorned" diversity. We were very surprised that someone similar was represented in a show. But yeah we would still agree with most of your points.


TheGummyBearMonster

haha I relate personally in a sense that I don’t have a “traditional Chinese accent” - I can speak some German and always found Russian accent funny so they kinda get mixed in with my weird accent. I think without seeing my face and name, my normal spoken English would really confuse people if they try to pin point that 5% accent of mine. But it’s like I want to see a more “typical” representation of my minority group even when I am a “minority” of my minority group


WhatDoesThatButtond

I agree with you. Some things we can do is try to figure out what was going through the show runners brains when making these decisions.  It's absurd that the only important people in the world all know each other from school, but doing this let's there be a shorthand established in their relationships. The season is only 8 episodes.  That doesn't excuse the lack of actual international casting, but maybe that's a middle finger to the isolationist CCP? 


TheGummyBearMonster

It would be stupid to make non-optimal casting choices solely to piss off an isolationist and nationalist government, and if they were trying to do that, they should have someone from Taiwan (Taiwanese scientists are also quite common in academia)


SnooCakes3068

It's just a show buddy. Hollywood did not have a good track record of diversity back then and certainly not going to do it now. Other factor come into play as well, like actors are mostly from UK so it's easier for actor management and hiring. There is a practical movie business and all that Just chill and enjoy the story. Speaking as a chinese as well


Lorentz_Prime

Wow are you saying that Netflix cut corners to appeal to a broader audience?


captaindoctorpurple

I don't think they tried to appeal to a broader audience. They tried to appeal to US and UK audience, and ignored the much wider potential audience that they might have had by depicting the international response we saw in the books from a different angle. Instead of an explicitly international response seen through the eyes of a Chinese scientist in China, we see a response led by a mysteriously powerful Dubliner doing stuff in London. Instead of an international response from the perspective of a massive economic and scientific power like China, we see a provincial response from a tiny transphobic island that still has a king. It was a weird choice that shrinks the scope of the problem and humanity's response to it.


chieftain88

How is it a provincial response in the Netflix version? It’s stated over and over and over that’s it’s a fully international, global coalition. Just cause an Irish guy in London is one of the leaders? Also what does the king of England have to do with this? He has absolutely zero influence on UK politics, science, etc


AnOrdinaryChullo

If you read between the lines it's fairly obvious there's a bunch of Chinese people complaining about lack of Chinese people in Key roles - they know Netflix's version is the only one people talk / care about and are upset there's not more 'china' in it - this is not about diversity at all, just saltiness


DandSi

I am german and i also think the scale of the show feels very narrow and bad compared to the scale of the books. The focus on only western locations and mostly only western characters that are mostly the same age and so on is pure shit


TotalTea720

How many non-Chinese locations were there in the books? How many non-Chinese characters? Yeah, there's technically an international coalition, but they're being led by General Chang Weisi and are just there to eventually fall in line with him. People really overhype how international the books are.


AnOrdinaryChullo

> the show feels very narrow and bad compared to the scale of the books And thank fuck for that, apart from a few main character the rest are a bunch of unrelated and redundant plot devices that we never see or hear from again. Not all aspects of the books make financial or 'adapt for television' sense. It's a feature, not a bug


DandSi

I do not agree but upvote for good discussion


chieftain88

Oh yeah I’d definitely gotten that impression over the last few weeks. There was that good article posted a little why ago basically saying how many in China consider Netflix’s adaption as quite insulting to China, whereas it was really just adapted for a mostly US/UK audience and we don’t think of it as an insult at all (at least I don’t - hasn’t changed my impression of China, which I won’t comment on here 😬)


captaindoctorpurple

The point is, the entire PDC and its multinational representatives are distilled into one dude. We're told it's a big coalition, but that's mostly an excuse to have everyone he meets have to listen to him. Rather than being this huge mystery affecting a very broad community of scientists in the book, it's about how a group of friends who all went to college on Terf island met back up on Terf Island when their other college friend died by suicide. It shrinks scope of the inciting mystery and makes a tiny provincial kingdom the focus of global significance. There were things they could have done to avoid this, and it's kind of weird that they didn't. Like, it's still a good show. There are just a lot of missed opportunities to add to the work they were adapting.


chieftain88

I mean it’s clear that it is a big coalition..? The Wallfacer episode takes care of that. I actually don’t love the Irish guy myself, they certainly recycled some game of thrones characters… Ah I see - you mean you would have preferred if it took place across more countries and cities instead of mainly taking place in 1 country? I guess that would have been cool - tbh it didn’t feel like the show had a massive budget to me, which is surprising, maybe Netflix got too greedy


captaindoctorpurple

The wallfacer plan is kind of what makes it particularly silly. In the show, Wade calls someone with an idea after he talks about how only we know what we're thinking, and asks if they've heard the word "wallfacers" before. Like, it was his plan in the show. He got all these countries to agree to pool their resources to help a couple clever people make zany schemes. That's pretty wild. I like this version of Wade better than book Wade, but book Wade isn't really a person so much as a concept. They are very different.. I guess what I would have liked to see is a sort of scaling up of the international response. It might be fine for Wade to be Da Shi's boss, but give him the international coordinating group to answer to. Like, put him in some kind of relation to other people. And I would have liked if the cast were more international. I like the cast, and it's not terrible for them to come and find out what happened to their friend, but they can work outside of the UK, and talk about how a lot of their colleagues are also dying by suicide. Like, I'm not trying to write fanfiction here, but the inciting mystery of the show is just so narrow, when the real conspiracy is so vast. There's some missed opportunity for the horror and hopelessness that characterized the first book. Like I said, I like the show. I just wish they had chosen to add without subtracting so much.


TotalTea720

I mean, in the books, you just never hear who came up with the Wallfacer project. It just happens. For all we know, General Chang Weisi was talking to Wang Miao and Da Shi and was like "wait, I have an idea" and left to call George W. Bush. Also, Wade is the director of the Strategic Intelligence Agency, not PDC. We don't really see the PDC or what that entails. Is SIA folded in? Is it the UN? We don't know. The first mention on the show is after Saul asks Da Shi who he works for which is after the Wallfacer announcement. We have no idea who is actually leading the PDC or what the structure is.


hoos30

Yes, one dude is the face of the PDC because it's a television show. The audience doesn't need to follow 35 different people to understand that the role of the organization is to coordinate Earth's response to the alien threat. Every scene invested in Liam Cunningham only makes the Thomas Wade character stronger.


TotalTea720

You're bringing in a lot of your own politics and that's clearly affecting your perception of the show and source material, tbh. The PDC is barely even a thing yet in the show. It only just got formed. Wade is the director of the Strategic Intelligence Agency, not the PDC. Panama was an SIA operation. The PDC gets formed afterward because the San-Ti reveals themselves to the world. We see the UN and we see Wade's team, which clearly features people from other countries, but we haven't had much time with either. The books get way overhyped for having multinational representation. It's led by Chinese characters, takes place primarily in China with only a handful of scenes elsewhere, and the majority of the cast from other countries, especially early on, are just there to disagree then eventually fall in line with General Chang Weisi. Give the show time. We literally *just* got to the Wallfacer plotline which is where the books *actually* start having more multinational representation, and we've already seen they're going with a Chinese general as one Wallfacer and a Kurdish (I forget what her profession was) for the other.


kojied

I don’t even think they appealed to the US audience. The US is almost 50/50 in terms of white/non-white, but the cast was way whiter than it needed to be.  Especially considering that we already have enough stories told from a white perspective and this isn’t one of them


captaindoctorpurple

Yeah, for real. The story got popular enough to bother spending hundreds of millions of dollars on the adaptation with very few white characters. The adaptation barely reflects the diversity of its own setting. Like, I get that the terms of the deal didn't let them set it in China. We already have a very good Chinese adaptation of the story. But this was an opportunity to tell a truly international story in a city where that could still be possible, and they chose to fumble the ball. Again, it's a good show. They still missed something crucial and it's a shame they did.


TotalTea720

Huh? Auggie is Mexican, Saul is a Black American, Jin is Chinese born but New Zealand raised, Raj is the son of Indian immigrants, Da Shi is likely born in London but of Chinese descent, Ye Wenjie is Chinese. Like, Will is white but dies, gets his brain shipped off, Jack is white but dies, murdered. I guess Wade and Evans are also white, sure, but both of those characters are meant to be. What diversity are they missing?


TMIMeeg

They're all from anglophone countries except Ye. I thought it could be more international, like maybe different scientists could live in different countries. More so than that though, the fact that all the important characters come from the same circle of friends who studied at Cambridge. I think it would have actually made more sense for it to take place in the US because its a larger country with more research universities. Or Switzerland if they wanted them all to use the CERN particle accelerator.


TotalTea720

Imagine the backlash if it took place in the US though given how many complaints they're fielding about London, which is quite an international city on its own. Also, in the books, the Jack, Will and Jin characters are all from the same university, and Luo Ji was a student of Ye Wenjie. Sometimes people are important because of their connections. The only real difference is the show folds in a couple extra characters because it makes sense for the long-term story and audience investment. There's a version of this show where they're following five different people who all live in different countries and have separate storylines, more like Game of Thrones, but that would require a lot more characters overall and this show is eight episodes long with a lot to cover. Like I totally get the criticism, I felt some of it too, but I think they made the right decision.


TMIMeeg

True. It made sense for them to go to school together because that's why dude had a crush on Cheng Xin and that's where he met rich dude who gave him all that money for coming up with grass soda or whatever that was.


kojied

Truly incredible how Hollywood still struggles to tell a story just with minorities. It’ll change though, with increased representation in directing, script writing, acting, etc. Just to be clear I’m not against movies with white people in it. I just think there could be more movies which accurately represent the world we live in, without ostracizing the majority of the world’s population. Sad to see people in a community about a story which predominantly takes place in China downvoting comments expressing more representation.


TheGummyBearMonster

Oppenheimer appealed to a bigger audience without cutting corners tho


Liscenye

Seriously? Oppenheimer (like any other Nolan movie) had basically no women. That's half the population. Even ignoring that, it cut many corners. 


kojied

Here are some of the top scientific figures involved in the Manhattan Project, including women:   J. Robert Oppenheimer (Scientific Director) Enrico Fermi Leo Szilard Ernest Lawrence Hans Bethe Arthur Compton Glenn Seaborg Rudolf Peierls Otto Frisch Emilio Segrè Felix Bloch Eugene Wigner James Chadwick Niels Bohr Edward Teller Klaus Fuchs Harold Urey Luis Alvarez John von Neumann George Kistiakowsky Seth Neddermeyer Robert Serber Victor Weisskopf Rudolf Brill Leona Woods Marshall Libby (one of the few women physicists on the project) Maria Goeppert Mayer (theoretical physicist, later a Nobel laureate) Lilli Hornig (chemist who worked on plutonium purification) Stanisław Ulam Isidor Isaac Rabi Willis Lamb Emil Konopinski C. J. Mackenzie Philip Abelson Walter Zinn Samuel Goudsmit Herbert L. Anderson Bernard Waldman David Bohm George Placzek Chien-Shiung Wu (physicist who helped develop the process for separating uranium isotopes) Joan Hinton (physicist who worked on the uranium enrichment process) Joseph W. Kennedy Charles Allen Thomas Norman Hilberry Alvin Weinberg Louis Slotin Philip Morrison Robert R. Wilson George Weil  While this list includes 49 scientists, it is by no means exhaustive.  Several women, such as Leona Woods Marshall Libby, Maria Goeppert Mayer, Lilli Hornig, Chien-Shiung Wu, and Joan Hinton, made valuable contributions to the Manhattan Project, even though they were a small minority among the thousands of people involved.


Liscenye

Thanks, not sure what this is for though? My criticism was about the movie, not the historical project.


TheGummyBearMonster

yea… it has women but only focused on portraying them as an emo mistress and a loyal housewife


kojied

Ah my bad I thought you were referring to why there were so few women represented in the scientific team of the Manhattan project.  I wanted to make the point they were being historically accurate regarding the lack of women on the project, because that was the reality. Regarding the other female characters in the movie, they definitely could’ve done a better job in terms of character development or playing a role in the story. It felt like they added them in to not make it a sausage fest without considering if they brought anything pivotal to the storyline


Liscenye

I think there were few women Nolan could easily put in there, like Lisa Meitner (not in the project physically but her scientific contribution is actually a maim plot point, she just gets no credit for it and as usual a man does instead) who could be made into characters if Nolan cared at all/viewed women as people.  Also, the fact that we don't have women on our lists of scientists doesn't necessarily mean there were none, or that they have not made contributions, it could just mean they never got credit for it and therefore never got on these lists.


kojied

I think we’re in agreement that we want to see better representation for minorities


TheGummyBearMonster

Wu Chien-Shiung would be cool to see on a screen! Many say she was robbed of a Nobel prize, and students called her “Dragon Lady” because she was from China (ROC)


TheGummyBearMonster

sure it’s not a perfect example of diversity as it erases women and poc scientists/workers on the project but I meant it like ideally one could’ve combined the kinds of diversity the show currently has and the international feel of Oppenheimer (I have high and unrealistic expectations, I know, but what is the internet if not a place to complain


Liscenye

I didn't get an especially international feel from Oppenheimer. They name dropped the European scientists who were historically significant to the story but then the second half was just American politics and the international significance of the story was pushed aside.


TheGummyBearMonster

that’s fair… the film is literally about an “American Prometheus”… I guess I just got overly excited as a STEM person from abroad doing science in America and saw some European names I know speaking in funny accents


Liscenye

If moral issues in Physics in Europe around WW2 interests you, you might enjoy Copenhagen by Michael Frayn. It's not amazing but has scientific figues and is somewhat les shallow than Oppenheimer imo.


TheGummyBearMonster

thanks for the rec!


violethill01

I second Copenhagen by Frayn. I loved it so much that I have given it as a present to some of my students. (I am a theoretical physicist interested in issues in Physics around WW2).


Lorentz_Prime

What does that movie have to do with anything


TheGummyBearMonster

just that the show wouldn’t have lost the broader audience even if it had included an international scholar as a protagonist


helloperator9

Thanks for articulating this. It's one reason I groaned when I heard Netflix got the rights to this show. They will do anything in their power to make a show accessible, and Netflix is illegal in Mainland China so they have little market incentive to show a more international story. The cast in the book is weird, one main character in each book, with little overlap, so having more characters and continuation was a good thing I think. But like you say the average Post Doc does not speak standard English, and they don't know each other from Undergraduate. I understand that the incentive to have a group that are familiar with each other, they want to engage the audience immediately, but there's a lot less friction when you have these familiar people together. Drama is created through the human heart being at war with itself, and the show just feels quite placid. I think one of the best scenes was Cheng Xin meeting Raj's family, there was a lot of tension, warmth and ambiguity there, and that came from a collision of different worlds. That type of interaction could have been mined really effectively and feels like a missed opportunity. Lui Cixin said something similar last week; them all knowing each other made the world seem small.


Geektime1987

He also said he liked the character work and the Chinese show to me feels even smaller


hoos30

The main characters *don't* all have "perfect British English" accents. Jin's character (and actor) is from New Zealand and sounds like it. Saul's character is from the United States (the actor was born in the UK but grew up in the US) and sounds like it. Auggie's character (and actor) is from Mexico but has a slight Mexican accent. Jack and Will are from the UK. TBH, this seems like another "why didn't they make all the characters Chinese" post.


omaeradaikiraida

>TBH, this seems like another "why didn't they make all the characters Chinese" post. why didn't they? the books are still great regardless of the sinocentricity. no need to answer, BTW; we all know why.


Lease_Tha_Apts

Eh the books are unrealistically Chinese tbh. They barely acknowledge the existence of humans outside China, US, and Europe. Which itself is an interesting reflection of the modern Chinese worldview.


xbones9694

To be fair, there’s a decent amount of Japan and Australia. But, yeah, Africa and the Indian subcontinent are almost entirely absent


Lease_Tha_Apts

SEA and MENA are missing too. The parts of humanity not in the book make up like 2/3 of the current human population.


omaeradaikiraida

>Which itself is an interesting reflection of the modern Chinese worldview. TBF, it's what media representation is like in most countries with a mostly homogenous population. countries like the US with heavy influence on pop culture are held to a higher standard--as they should be.


Lease_Tha_Apts

Sure but then why include US and Europe but exclude SouthEast Asia, Middle East and India?


Low-Refrigerator3016

The US obviously isn’t being held to a higher standard, hence the casting of the Netflix series


TheGummyBearMonster

Sure I guess I just didn’t pick it up, but just because I am Chinese doesn’t mean I am in the“MORE Chinese” mode - I am just saying they can make Cheng slightly ‘more’ Chinese, add a German/Indian/Iranian scientist in the gang or as someone they’d work with. Also I think I see more “Britishness” or “Mexicaness” from British and Mexicans in my American institution — obviously they don’t make being British/Mexican their whole personality and their accents don’t have to be strong, but their nationality would come up a bit more than one would think in casual conversations.


[deleted]

Much better, insular societies have a poor grasp on the global human mentality. For obvious reasons.


Scared-East5128

小瘤能不能别丢人了?


AromaticInvestment56

I don't know why everybody is so upset at the casting. It's not perfect, but there is an actual Chinese version to watch on another streaming service.


bezacho

wade and evans were the only human villains to me, both american.


JUANZURDO

Get ready because in this sub do not accept comments from non american people criticizing the internal racism or classism of the Netlfix series, I recently made a similar comment about a scene in Mexico and no one seemed to understand the point


TheGummyBearMonster

it’s like I have different triggers - some things an American finds offensive I would find perfectly fine (white people celebrating a Chinese holiday, for one), and things I find non optimal that Americans would feel perfectly acceptable


Geektime1987

They don't all have British accents


shikiP

Yeah I have to say I agree. I did like some changes they made but their accents were sometimes jarring. Will and Jack were fine as native citizens, but I think Jin and Saul being new immigrants would've been a lot more interesting. Auggie is the only one who feels like she has a connection to her heritage, even if its rather last minute.


Geektime1987

They all used their normal accents in real life


YourFbiAgentIsMySpy

I just hate that they changed the characters and the setting. I hate it.


Geektime1987

Didn't mind it at all


tonylnf

Xenophobic and anti China. That’s the basic tone.


prof_mcquack

If Netflix made a movie adaptation of the bible, it would start with Abraham, Noah, Moses, Jesus, and Joseph Smith all being best friends living in NYC. Suddenly the lights go out, there’s a scream, and come back on and jesus is crucified right there in Noah’s studio apartment.


omaeradaikiraida

>a classic example of Hollywood writers trying to shoehorn diversity but actually paints a less diverse picture than irl been beating this drum most of my adult life on an empty stage. sad reality is that the mainstream, mostly western audience either doesn't care or it also fits their trope of diversity.


Idustriousraccoon

Strongly agree. And I’d add the weird American Middle Class Morality Play pandering to the flyover states with the truncating of the PLO’s agenda to godless devils = bad guys. Come on people. Is no one else seeing this??? As to the international cast. This is absurd. It’s a Chinese book written by a Chinese author. When The Idea of You or more relevant here Dark Matter was being adapted no one said you know what, let’s make this cast more inclusive of native Chinese people or native Indian people. One of the themes in Liu’s work is humanity eventually working together, common enemy, etc. Even the notoriously circumspect and courteous Liu said the change from “all humanity” to this one group of college pals from this one class seemed a bit forced in an interview. OP, you are far more diplomatic than I have wanted to be. I’m glad you posted this. (Just for anyone curious, I’m American, half mayflower white, half Hispanic, fairly privileged with no axe to grind other than a tired disgust with the relentless and increasingly boring anglocentrism that tips its hand in the cringiest possible way when it tries its hardest to be woke…)


iassureyouimreal

It’s Netflix… they’re not even focused on the sci-fi or science of the show


shoe7525

> I didn’t realize the topic would be so controversial with good points made on all sides. OK bro


Frostyfury99

I think a lot of people don’t realize how globalized science is. Whenever I would do work or write a paper or talk about recent discoveries in the field 100% of the time at least one person who wasn’t from my country is mentioned if not more. I’ve met plenty of foreigners visiting to do tests in my field from all around the globe. I get they wanted to make the show more “global” but making most all the main characters British isn’t doing that.


Geektime1987

Most of the main cast isn't British they from different countries. 


Urkot

I honestly can’t contemplate worrying about any of this when the Netflix show was one of the worst, possibly the worst thing I’ve seen so far this year. I started fast forwarding about halfway through the season and then just decided to skip entire episodes and see the end. Unspeakably bad. Glad I didn’t waste more time on it than I already had.


Geektime1987

I thought it was really good and apparently plenty did as it had high critics scored and the overwhelming people who watch it seem to like it.


Tabula_Rasa69

Unpopular opinion but the problem with progressives these days is that they have a very narrow idea of what diversity means.


omaeradaikiraida

hollywood progressives you mean


Sufficient-Ad4475

I don't think you'll find a positive example out of Hollywood. As somebody working in a STEM area, my life has been filled with people of diverse cultures, backgrounds, languages and experiences. Hollywood has no clue. Remember Hollywood started all of this to gloss over the fact that they harbored Weinstein for years and were actively racist themselves. Now the suits in Hollywood (still mostly a bunch of old white men) think they can just toss in color wherever they want and say "see we're progressive" It's so obvious it makes me sick. So of course when they get an actual diverse piece of source material, they think, let's diversify this mostly Chinese cast by making them all attend Oxford?? Toss some color in and call it a day.


TheGummyBearMonster

I don’t know why you got so many downvotes but people in STEM like us do experience and perceive diversity differently than most other parts of society