• pseudo@jlai.lu
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    1 month ago

    I would said it is different. Arabic people are not westerner but the ones from middle eat are definitely white. The character drawn doesn’t look Arabic whatsoever. I would have thought he is british. Romani are not fully white but definitely westerner, just not the vanilla-type. The Tibetan character is drawn as a white guy with high liner. The actress playing Ariel has definitely some African roots but I would called here mixed-race rather that black.
    It just another kind of biais. I don’t pretend my way is better or closer to reality but it is funny that my biais clashes so much with OP’s.

    • unemployedclaquer@sopuli.xyz
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      1 month ago

      I think you are saying the cartoons are not accurate representations to begin with? I am from the US but not too familiar with the cartoons. I barely watched the original Mermaid when it came out on VHS because I was watching my younger cousins. the other ones I thought were Marvel characters. which also I don’t know.

      • pseudo@jlai.lu
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        1 month ago

        Part of it is the character representation but part of it is also my own definition of what is white or what is westerner and what isn’t.
        The live action character for the tibetain was badly casted if the race is important to the story. The romani girl went from a westerner folk with actual hair texture to some with flat hair. But I don’t see anything else weird, let alone chocking in this casting.
        That’s because my own set of reference. I was not even able to tell that the first row was about native american people without reading the comments. That’s how little I know about them.