Aliens in America: stereotyping for fun and profit

by guest contributor Manish, originally published at Ultrabrown

Oh, wow. This Aliens in America sitcom pilot is far worse than Apu and Fez (thanks, Jyoti):

The previews being shown on the CW Web site… have drawn criticism on the Internet saying the program perpetuates negative stereotypes of Muslims — not to mention of the clueless American Midwesterners — and that it conflates numerous, distinct Middle Eastern and South Asian cultures. [Link]

Where to begin. An international exchange student would probably be middle class and just a regular guy. He’d wear jeans, not a kurta and skull cap. He might use ceremonial expressions like ‘inshallah (if God wills it),’ but he wouldn’t make a show of raising his hands to heaven.

But say you suspend disbelief and grant the show its hick-out-of-water premise. The Nordic blonde is exalted, the brown guy is the lowest man on the totem pole of foreign students and treated as a potential terrorist. A Pakistani Muslim would probably have a Muslim name, not ‘Raja.’ The azaan on the soundtrack sounds Middle Eastern, not Pakistani.

Young actor Adhir Kalyan’s accent is terrible. My 2nd gen brothers, I implore you, get some accent training, stat. My buddy’s nani will be glad to help. She runs Phonemes Anonymous for five bucks an hour over Skype.

The character’s name is Raja Musharraf, and like Pervez, he arrived unwanted There’s no ‘zh’ in Raja. It’s like anything foreign should be pronounced like French. Unless you’re the villain, in which case it’s with a British accent. Unless you’re French.

I enjoy subtle, intelligent humor that doesn’t require a laugh track to remind me to laugh. [Link]

Subtle and intelligent don’t even begin to cover it. And the sad thing is, the writers are probably convinced they’re helping dispel ignorance about Muslims. Interestingly, one of the intentionally racist lines in the clip is ‘Apu! Where’s my slushie?’

· · · · ·

Imagine growing up as a white American in India. You’re stared at a lot and assumed to be ignorant, lazy and promiscuous. Everywhere you go, you get gouged on prices, even at national monuments where they refuse to believe you’re Indian. A few years later, a large TV network puts out a show about an exchange student from New York. The actor is actually an Indian guy doing a fakey American accent, and he dresses like a corn farmer. All the jokes are about how the kid is ignorant, lazy and promiscuous, just like what many people assume of you. Everybody thinks it’s hilarious.

Lighten up, you humorless PC thug, it’s just a comedy!

· · · · ·

Here’s an edit someone on the West Coast contributed to the Wikipedia article. It lasted 25 minutes before being reverted:

This show is racially offensive to the South Asian community and Muslims at large. It is problematic to represent the South Asian community as militant, fanatical, or as props that can serve as some white nerd’s toy to boost his popularity or provide him friendship. This sitcom is a modern day minstrel show, where the “comical” friendly “terrorist” can win the hearts of a white community and an American viewership. [Link]

Silly contributor. Don’t you know the Wikipedia way is to use neutral language and link to the rant?

· · · · ·

Here’s another scene from the show, which comes out this fall:

Trackbacks & Pings

  1. American Muslims on the East Coast « Umar Lee on 01 Aug 2007 at 9:53 pm

    […] American Muslims on the East Coast Jump to Comments Umm Zaid really captures the fact that on the East Coast there is a very distinct and deeply rooted AMERICAN Muslim culture. A sharp contrast from the portrayal in this show […]

  2. Colourfulif.Com » Comment on Aliens in America: stereotyping for fun and profit by Bilal on 28 Oct 2007 at 2:26 pm

    […] of read wrote an interesting post today on Comment on Aliens in America: stereotyping for fun and profit by BilalHere’s a quick […]

  3. Des Temps → Blog Archive → American-Muslim Identity: Advertising, Mass Media + New Media on 29 Oct 2008 at 2:14 pm

    […] premiere was, of course, a big hit with the mainstream media.” The Magical Muslim is a “’comical’ friendly ‘terrorist’ [that] can win the hearts of a white community and an American […]

Comments

  1. gatamala wrote:

    Another classic in the tradition of “The Toy”.

  2. tstorm wrote:

    My guess is that someone at CW had the following idea one day:

    “Hey, we should do a show just like ‘That 70s Show’ except we’ll have all the jokes be about the brown foreign exchange student.”

  3. Angela wrote:

    Oh lord…why must I cry!

    Is this a lame attempt at trying to make us “come togther”? This is just as bass ackwards as BET’s “Hot Ghetto Mess”.

  4. Tariq Nelson wrote:

    Looks totally ridiculous. The market will squeeze this trash out because it just looks like bad TV

  5. Sewere wrote:

    WTF, what the hell is up with this trend of racist tripe that goes for TV these days? Is it like TV corps are hiring from the graduate of the New School of Racism?

    MuthaF’ers all of them.

  6. michelle wrote:

    I am so sad because one of those actors is one of my favorite charcter actors. Dude, he was in Galaxy Quest! Come on! I don’t even know how they think they will redeem themselves!

  7. Abd al-Haq wrote:

    I really like how ALL the white people in the show seem overtly racist. Even the kid.

  8. trollerboi wrote:

    Shades of the magic negro (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_negro) …

    but I really thought the show wasnt that offensive. A little bit of The Wonder Years a little bit of 70s show. For a large section of the population that has never met a muslim - and has visions of hairy mullahs in robes - a benign representation of the same - sets them at ease. They are different.. but they’re not. I dont know. I’m pretty ambivalent about this. Out here in TO, we do see people walking around in long shalwars and skull caps, … as well as leather chaps without asses (in case you needed to know) but that’s another thread.

  9. Marc wrote:

    This is why I don’t own a television…

  10. Lee wrote:

    Veronica Mars was cancelled for this crap?

  11. Keke wrote:

    This show is not at all funny to me. Offensive yes, but funny, no. I can’t believe what passes for television these days……

  12. Yori Kim wrote:

    Uh……………what has our tv come to………this is why I read instead of watching racist crap such as this.

  13. PakiByNature wrote:

    Being a Pakistani American, I find this totally offensive and I would think that most White Americans would find it just as offensive because it sheds all of us in a bad light. Besides all of that, the acting is horrible and its NOT even funny.

  14. Bilal wrote:

    Didn’t really like it… And I totally cringed during the classroom scene in the first episode (ugh).

  15. Fahad wrote:

    I just saw the show and I was appalled at the either lack of knowledge or deliberate stereotyping. This is NOT how Pakistani teenagers are like! this is just like how african-american caricatures were used for humour: the coons etc and how homosexuals were depicted in less politically-correct times. It’s meant to be non-racist and everything but it backfires because it shows a ridiculous caricature of a Pakistani that seems more like an imagined character in the minds of some very ignorant person! I mean comeon! the shalwar kamiz with the white prayer cap! Who wears that in daily life unless they’re going to a mosque or something. And the exaggerated accent and frequent referrals to Allah and Kalima! and then a lack of knowledge about basic American/global culture! The writers should really tone the caricature down a bit!

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