Uhm Junghwa 🎐

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@aeropixels
Uhm Junghwa 🎐
I’m so happy the Carbonite is gone. I’m movin’ on. I’m so happy that it’s over now. The pain is gone.
Something I realized while reading the power rangers comics (there are a lot of aliens and space stuff) time based words stay pretty constant. Like hours/days/years. I always felt that didn’t make sense because different planets would probably have vastly different units of time.
But then I figured out a way to pseudoscience it back into making sense: since earth is in like that very specific life supporting golden zone around our sun, it would make sense that all of the other life bearing planets with advanced humanoids would at least have a very similar golden zone. They would have to revolve around their respective suns at a similar rate to earth for the universal translators to equate our “hours” to whatever units they have, sure. but in a sci fi story where enough coincidences have to happen to have so many humanoid extraterrestrial species to coexist at all, what’s one more coincidence among them?
Does this make sense to anyone else?
Colors of the Power Rangers (part 2/?)
(Read Part 1 here)
So our first foray into the extra terrestrial (besides Zordon and Rita Repulsa and all of them) were the Aquitians. Hailing from the planet Aquitar, these five space ninjas came to help out Earth while our gang were turned into kids for 10 episodes. I remember them constantly getting their asses kicked but at least they distracted the monsters of the week for a while.
But anyways, that's not why we're here. You're here for me to answer the question, "do aliens have races?" And my answer for your question is: It depends, and sometimes, and yes, and it depends.
In this case, yes absolutely. Look at them. There are 4 white aliens and 1 black alien. Well one of them might not be white, I'll have to check later. (edit: i checked the actors, 4 white 1 black) But yes these aliens have what we could consider "races" in a human sense. Compared humanoid to aliens we'll see later, like in SPD, the discussion gets a little more complicated. This line of reasoning extends to the more human presenting Villains and monsters too.
In general, I will be discussing race at its most basic facet, which is how someone looks. To me, it's primarily a sight-based distinction. A person with their eyes closed would not immediately be able to know the race of the person standing in front of them. Things like accents, dialect, and knowledge about said person may inform you, but race at its most basic is about looks.
At the same time, that's why characters like Tommy, Rocky, and Jason took me a while to figure out. Humans are almost never purely one ethnicity, which often plays a part in what race one is perceived as. Many people are mixed and some traits and different people may read these traits differently depending on how they were raised. I am coming at this from the perspective of a mixed Black, Half Caribbean-American, other half a bunch of stuff I can never remember, person. So my perception of white might vary greatly from someone who considers themselves, like, Aryan or something weird like that.
On the subject of Tommy, it's around this time where we learn more about his "heritage" as a "Native American" (Aero find the episode where he's a kid and goes back in time and stuff. Try to find specific tribes if you can). This reveal is interesting to me because I am not sure where to draw the line between character and actor. Is Tommy Native American rep because his character could believably be of indigenous descent? Or is it still white rep because the actor, Jason David Frank is caucasian with no Indigenous lineage? After mulling this over for days (months) I realized that people of Indigenous descent can still be white, in the same way that Rocky is. We all know that white person that's like 1/17 Cherokee. That's what this is. Race is not necessarily the same as ethnicity, and I am discussing visible race. I also don't feel comfortable calling someone representation of a race if the actor isn't that race. I wouldn't call someone black if they wore brown makeup very well (this is an extreme example but you get the point). So I'm comfortable with putting Tommy under "white". If you don't agree please try to persuade me.
So let's do a current tally of the diversity so far, from MMPR seasons 1-3 and Alien Rangers.
White - Jason, Kimberly, Billy, Tommy, Rocky, Kat, Aliens Red, White, Yellow, Black (10)
Black - Zack, Aisha, Alien Blue (3)
Asian - Trini, Adam (2)
Here's a couple of example charts for seasons 1-3: https://nces.ed.gov/nceskids/graphing/classic/bar_pie_data.asp?ChartType=pie
So we're kinda off to a bad start.
the eyes of someone who just vomited carry a vulnerable acceptance to grief only known in portraits of saints
The Colors of the Power Rangers (part 1/?)
But are they?
I think, when it comes to modern shows and movies, we struggle a lot less for racially diverse characters to be represented than we used to. Most shows may even have several shades of brown on screen at the same time. A lot of bad and mean people think we have too much diversity. They'll point to very few and far between instances of characters of color getting prominent roles and so things don't need to change at all. We're fine. Racism is over. Stop complaining.
Don’t listen to them.
As Reddit user u/deleted correctly pointed out, representation within the red ranger role needs to be done better. Their post got zero upvotes and 83 comments. The top comment on this correct post, from different user u/deleted, is a seemingly long list of times where the red ranger role was seemingly diverse, but even then those are a handful of instances in a 30 year running show, and half of those characters were still white.
The reason the post singles out Red Rangers specifically is because in most teams, the red ranger is the leader of the group. This is more explicitly said in some seasons more than others, but even when red isn’t given the literal role of leader, their character is still often given heightened screen time and stakes. We’ll get into this more later.
Anyways, having diverse characters in cartoons was getting increasingly common in the 80s and 90s, but racial diversity in live action shows was incredibly important. Only a few decades ago did Fred Rogers have to fight to have a black man be given a respectful appearance on his show in 1969. I'm sure in the 90s, a lot of people want to feel like they've come a long way in terms of representation.
Of course, being born in 1998, I still subconsciously felt that a lot of media was catered to a group of people that i was outside of. That subtle feeling of being secondary for a reason I couldn’t comprehend at the time. If I had to draw “a person” I would reach for the beige crayons before the brown one. Representation, or a lack of it, really affects young children. You begin to notice when the people that look like you on tv are almost never the main character, unless everyone else in the show is black too.
But a show that I feel really contributed to showing people of color can coexist with whites on screen was Power Rangers. A show that changed casts almost every season with different ethnicities being given new colors, roles, and powers felt almost groundbreaking. As a black kid, being shown people that looked like me doing cool flips and kicks alongside the usual kinds of people that do them made me feel like I could do them too. But looking back on things, I start to wonder if things were truly as diverse as we say they were.
Even today, on a sort of weird, almost corporate level, I think diversity is usually left to be as basic as “ok let’s have mostly white people, and then a black and brown person for a little flavor. An Asian would be great. A Latino if we’re really desperate.” And honestly, I think Power Rangers might have suffered from that mindset. But I’m willing to put my power coins where my mouthplate is and find the data to really see how diverse Power Rangers was, from the beginning to the end. I’m going to list every Ranger based on both season, suit color, and each ranger’s race, and make several fun charts for each.
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers premiered in 1993. Over 4 million kids and maybe even some adults watched as 5 colorful teenagers were chosen by floating head alien Zordon to become 5 even more colorful teenagers to defeat the evil Rita Repulsa. This season set the precedent for most of the show’s tropes, not which of least being the casting philosophy. Unfortunately, this season is also where I hit my first snag in my data collecting.
We have Jason, the Zordon appointed leader and Red Ranger, probably because he's the best fighter. Billy, the nerd and worst fighter of the group as blue. Trini, the kind and intelligent but less of a nerd than Billy, girl as yellow. Zack, the funny, dance and hip hop loving black ranger. And finally Kimberly, the prettier popular girl (I know she has other traits but honestly they're all goody two shoes characters that it's hard to really differentiate them). Double finally, Tommy, the green ranger who was evil for a bit and then joined the team for real, and is also the other best fighter. He’s complicated. I’ll get into him in a bit. But they obviously weren't afraid to play with teenage stereotypes back then when you consider the team as a whole.
Let's poach the elephant in the room while we're here. Yes, Zack, a black man is the black ranger, and Trini, and Asian woman, is the yellow ranger. Everyone says this is a coincidence and I guess I believe them, but it's just funny that this ended up working out this way, especially because this kind of thing hasn't really happened in a season since then.
Billy and Kimberly are both white, Zack is Black, and Trini is Asian. But what is Jason? To me, this is the most mixed man I've ever seen in my life, so doing research on this took me a long time. Sometimes in the comics he's depicted with more Asian features, and other times he is depicted very caucasionally. In either case, I feel comfortable enough labeling him as white/white passing.
But even then, I still got wrapped up in my analysis of Austin St John’s (the actor) character. So in a play of desperation to actually get this project that I’ve talked about for like 3 years at this point rolling, I asked a few of my coworkers.
My prompt towards them essentially was: “I’m going to show you a group of people and you’re going to point out their race to me. Don’t think about it, just say it.”
Two of them pretty confidently just said he was white (they’re both white) and the other two got really uncomfortable and thought I was testing them or trying to trick them so they refused to respond (they’re also white). So Jason’s white. That’s that.
A lot of (often disingenuous) white people want to claim that because a character has any sort of ethnic background, that either lessens their whiteness or makes them entirely a person of color. But much like sex and gender have an overlap but aren’t interchangeable words, so are race and ethnicity. Let’s look at the next cast to see what I mean.
Jason, Trini, and Zack were written out of the show for a reason I might talk about in a future video, but their powers were transferred to a new set of heroes, Rocky, Aisha, and Adam respectively. Tommy also lost his green powers and became white (haha).
Some new room elephants have joined the party though! They race swapped black and yellow! They did it! They fixed racism once again. But smaller elephant is Rocky. Both his character and his actor are of Hispanic descent, which fans love to point out. But also this is a white man. A person named Steve Cardenas plays a character named Rocky Santos. He is white. Ethnicity =/= race. Just ask Rory Gilmore.
She’s Latina.
Next up we have the Mighty Morphin Alien Rangers. The main cast got turned into kids so Zordon had to call in his friends from the planet Aquitar to fill in. I don’t think they did the best job, like I remember them getting their asses kicked a bunch, but that’s not what we’re here to talk about.
Can aliens have human races?
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Yes.
I think christians shouldn’t be allowed to say cuss words
I think most parking enforcement officers deserve to die
hush little baby dont you cry. mamas gonna buy you a big horse fly. and if that big horse fly dont fly. mamas gonna buy you another horse fly
[club mix] another horse fly. another horse fly
More Speed Racer? (wanted to redraw one of my favorite movie shot ever)
Speed Racer (2008) actor, Emile Hirsch, with a self-painted portrait, 9/22/2024
Source: X / X
Dust turned a bit more like fire than I wanted, but I like it
Speed Racer (2008)
hi, big speed racer fan, in your speed racer post you mentioned that you have proof that the movie is set in 1991 ? please say more about that.
oh I can absolutely do that! best movie of all time! let me explain my logic
so Speed, Pops, and Royalton all talk a lot about the '43 Grand Prix. watching the recording of that race inspired Pops and Speed to get back into racing after Rex's death, but this was also the race that inspired Royalton to get into racing in an evil, stock-market-manipulation kind of way.
everyone in the film calls it "the '43 Prix", including in the script (because I checked, because I wanted to be sure about this, DM me if you want more script stuff btw it's so good):
the important part here is that everyone calls it "the '43 Prix" and not "the 43rd Prix" - we know for sure that this race took place in 1943.
but fun fact! it was, also, the 43rd Prix! we know this because of the poster on Speed's wonderful, beautiful orange wall.
Rex's poster of Ben Burns (which Speed kept), says "Grand Prix Winner XLIII", and you might think that would mean the year and not the race number, but
when Horuko gives Speed the invitation to the Grand Prix, he calls it the 91st annual Grand Prix and the invitation says XCI, meaning that the WRL uses roman numerals to indicate the race number and not the year.
not that it matters, because it seems like in this universe, the race numbers and the year numbers match up! the 43rd race was in 1943, and so this, the 91st race, must be in or very near 1991!
that's my main argument here. but also, we need to look at Ben Burns
and I mean like, literally, we need to look at him.
he's not very young here, right? this was a flashback shot of his Grand Prix win against Stickelton, and he doesn't look like a teenager or anything; he's definitely a grown man.
but now look at present-day Ben Burns:
he's still pretty young! Richard Roundtree was 66 when he played Burns, and the character can't have been too much older than that.
so if we're very generous and say that Burns was 20-22 when he won against Stickelton in 1943, and that he's 68-70 in the present day, our year of 1991 makes sense here too!
so that's why the absolute masterpiece Speed Racer (2008) takes place in 1991, thank you for coming to my ted talk
final notes:
this argument falls apart if you, instead, decide that the film takes place in a post-apocalyptic future, and the '43 Prix was actually in 2043 or even 3043. they never actually say it was 1943, so there's still some room for fun alternate interpretations here.
there is an out-of-universe explanation for the race number btw! the 91st Indy 500 took place in 2007 while the movie was being made, so the Wachowskis probably picked the number 91 because of that.
also this is a complete tangent, but while looking up Richard Roundtree's age (may he rest in peace), I looked at some photos from when he was young and? I think I accidentally found the one they used to make that winning flashback photo?
this one's on his IMDB as "Richard Rountree [sic] at home, c. 1972" and if you mirror it, and rotate it a bit...
yeah. I mean, they definitely changed some things, but his eyes are the same, and the general emotion of his face.
wild thing to discover by accident, but hey, I guess this is a thing I know now!
Speed Racer
Speed Racer (1967 – 1968) season 1, episode 3: "Challenge of the Masked Racer: Part 1"