Ching Chong Beautiful Exposes Racism in Video Game Design

by Latoya Peterson

On Christmas, reader Mel sent us a little present. He wrote in about a flash based indie video game covered by the Escapist. The title? Ching Chong Beautiful.

I click over the link, expecting to see a take down. After all, the Escapist does publish a lot of progressive gaming commentary, and our blog bud Pat over at Token Minorities has been known to bless them with a piece or two. So imagine my shock when I checked the endorsement:

That’s kind of the principle behind Newgrounds’ latest well-promoted title, the kind-of-offensive-but-actually-really-funny Ching Chong Beautiful, developed by The Swain. Your brother is kidnapped by Mr. Beautiful, whose obstacle course is A.) known to be deadly and unbeatable and B.) the most popular TV show in Japan. In order to save your brother, you must get a thoroughbred horse, and the only way to do that is – you guessed it – enter Ching Chong Beautiful.

I clicked over and prepared to play.

The game starts throwing stereotypes in the blender from the intro page:

A Game of Great Endurance Challenge!

http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/520768

The game features the new High Scores system and Newgrounds medals! So go grab some green tea, get drunk on sake, and maybe poach some whales if there’s time…the Bang Wong Fishhead Corporation challenges you to defeat Mr.Beautiful’s ancient obstacle course: Ching Chong Beautiful!

And it goes from there.

Now, before some gamers wander over here from other sites complaining about our general lack of humor and understanding, let me make something crystal clear: I get all the fucking jokes. I know what MXC is, I used to watch it on Spike. I know what Takeshi’s Castle is, I’ve watched it online. I know what this is:

The green can next to the television labeled “Sweat” is a play on the sports drink Pocari Sweat, which normally comes in a blue and white can or bottle. (And yes, I’ve tried that too.)

I’m aware that CCB is, in part, mocking the nature of these kinds of game shows that specialize in sadistic environments and public humiliation. But it’s still racist.

Much of the “humor” is visual. The game is set in Japan and includes lots of stereotypical images like these:



And for extra “oh, we’re so cool and un-PC” points, they named their levels things like “Crater Stadium” and “Spicy Tuna Bowl.”


The caption under Crater Stadium says: “A radioactive crater formed from big nuclear bomb! I couldn’t think of a more fitting location for my second course. You will die!”

The only thing missing was the orientalist riff.

So I play through the game. Sadly, the game play was actually fun. The initial concept (being trapped in a Japanese game show) was interesting and the game itself was just the right combination of frustrating and addictive. However, that was brought to a quick stop after a wall jump ended badly, and my little character Ching nearly cracked his head open on a block. Normally, when this happens, he yells out things like “this is bullshit!” or “aww, man!” (The announcer occasionally yells out “Too bad Chinatown!” after you fall.) But after that particular time, Ching screams: “You’re out of your zipperheads!”

What the fuck?

Predictably, the comments to the game are a cesspool – but I was interested to take a peek at the conversation over on the Escapist. And lo and behold, a couple lone voices of reason tried to call attention to how fucked up this all is:

SaintWaldo writes:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ching_chong

Are you really this insensitive?

Just to clarify, this is equivalent to naming your Southern themed Flash game “N***er Lovely”.

Making me even more angry, this story was the FIRST thing I read on Christmas morning. Thanks, Escapist, for filling my holiday with racism.

The response? “Cool down, man.”

SaintWaldo keeps fighting:

HK_01:

Cool down, man.

No. I won’t “cool down”, mainly because I’M not the uncool one.

It’s a racial slur, it offends me, and I’m going to say so. Calmly. I’m also offended that you seem to read any disagreement as “not cool”. I’m rational and presenting coherent arguments that this is a racist title and should not be on the front page of an international magazine on a major holiday. What isn’t cool is being told to not voice your objections to racism. So, concern taken for what it is, but, please, don’t tell me how I should be expressing my genuine disagreement with promoting this title. I don’t tell you anything of the sort.

Other readers chime in as well:

spiral helix:

Thank you Waldo. Big props to you for standing up and pointing out how racist the title of this game is. It is offensive and your reaction is definitely justified. I’m pretty disappointed that Escapist would be so desperate for material over holiday period that they would even stoop to promoting a game with such a title. I usually come to escapist just to watch zero punctuation but the completely inappropriate title of the article made click on it. Thank you escapist for reminding me why i never read the articles here.

BonsaiK:

As someone who is part-Chinese I do find this game as not a very prudent choice for The Escapist to highlight. I’d definitely stop short of saying “I’m offended” (racial epithets make up easily over half of my CD collection after all) but I wonder if it’s the best choice especially given how many young people visit this site. “Ching-Chong” is a reference to Chinese people, but the game is parodying a type of TV show that is Japanese and actually has nothing to do with China. I guess to the American who made this game, that’s not an important distinction for him, because in his eyes Asians are obviously all the same. I interpret this as being very racist, even if he didn’t have any actual racist intent in making the game. It’s a shame that he had to taint his game with a stupid and unfunny name like this because I actually don’t mind the gameplay concept and some of the other humour in the game is reasonably clever.

I realise that The Escapist and a lot of gamers in general are obsessed with Japanese culture (although I can’t work out why, it seems very random to me) so I guess something that both references Japenese culture and is a computer game was irresistible to them as it helps them to magnify this (artificial) link. The fact that the article writer was willing to gloss over a little bit of inconvenient racism, because the article subject matter was just that tempting, makes the Escapist look amateurish. I think that The Escapist can find better things to write articles about than what some racist kid did on Newgrounds.

At this point, the author of the post steps in – and completely sidesteps the racism, merely noting that the game is popular and that is why it was recommended. Fail.

And the usual excuses are trotted out. Other gamers say things like “it’s not that offensive” or ching chong isn’t a slur, it’s a “percieved [sic] view of the sound of the language,” and “As for the racism, I think we should give a pass to any words that have not been used seriously in over fourty years.”

One person helpfully adds: “Having said all that, it’s entirely your right to be offended if you’re oriental, however if not, I think it might be an overreaction.”

Sigh.

So aside from the usual amount of racism, CCB strikes me as a wonderful example of reinforcing stereotypes when you are trying to mock them. This actually happens fairly often in media. The last time I tackled it in the gaming sphere was when I talked about Chris Mottes, CEO of Deadline Games, and his defense of racism in his title Chili Con Carnage:

Employing Mexican-American voice actors? Great job! Promoting underground Mexican bands? Even better. I was so impressed by Mottes’ initiative, I was completely blindsided by his next statement.

However, in reviews, forums, and blogs following the releases of both games, some people slammed Deadline for being bigoted towards Mexicans. While we did employ stereotypes we considered lighthearted and humorous, our intent was most certainly not to cast Mexican individuals in a derogatory light…But despite our best efforts, critics still slammed us for being racists.

Why, Chris, why? Why would you throw away all your hard work for a couple cheap, race based humor shots?

The reality is that no stereotype can be considered light-hearted and humorous. A stereotype is defined as “an often oversimplified or biased mental picture held to characterize the typical individual of a group.” Stereotypes are negative. Even “positive” stereotypes are ultimately detrimental to the groups that struggle to find a sense of self within the narrow parameters of society’s vision.

I’ll touch on this more in next month’s Cerise, but I have to say I was blown away. The tone of Mottes’ piece is unmistakably clear – this is how game designers think. This is how they justify their characters. It is as if the thought never crossed their minds that maybe, just maybe, the industry is sending a very powerful message out to minorities by saying that we do not exist outside of our stereotypical roles. If there were five or ten games with a multi-faceted, modern latino protagonist, maybe slipping in a few “light-hearted” stereotypes in one third person shooter would not be such a huge deal. It is still ill-advised, but you would have enough positive images on the market to balance out the negative images broadcast into the homes of every person who purchased this one game.

However, there is no balance. Stereotype after stereotype abound in the virtually crafted console world, with very few characters of color to provide an alternate perspective. Mottes argues that “most games with racist characters do not reflect the mindset of their developers.” I would argue that they do. It reflects the developer’s mindset in dealing with the world and in dealing with minorities. If the developer was not holding on to this mindset that minorities can be categorized with one or two main characteristics, we would have multi-faceted characters of color to play.

You lose the element of humor when you begin to reinforce the same dynamics you claim to poke fun at. A game lampooning television shows like Takeshi’s Castle? Fair enough. A game that relies on heavily stereotyped images, throws in random associations to bits and pieces of Japanese culture, and openly uses racial slurs? Not funny, not innovative, just racist.

What’s worse is that the game (and subsequent reaction) reinforces stereotypes on two levels. The first, what we described above, is the continuing animus toward Asians and Asian Americans, which result in people dismissing the voices and experiences of those impacted by this type of racism. The second is the reinforcement of the wacky Japan narrative, without which MXC would not have been possible. Interestingly, this othering, which masquerades as “understanding” other cultures, actually allows many people to lay their prejudices, xenophobia, and racism out on the table. As Lisa Katayama writes at Boing Boing:

The simple fact that I’m Japanese quickly became one of my greatest advantages as an aspiring writer. I started paying attention to my motherland as a repository of story ideas. I looked at things differently when I went back home, honed my story-finding skills, and launched my own blog, TokyoMango. I got major Japan-related assignments from magazines, consulting gigs from print and radio outlets, and a book deal. It was really strange for me, because all I thought I was doing was telling people about the place I came from. One thing was clear: Weird Japan sells. It’s an almost guaranteed success for book publishers and major traffic bait for blogs.

But writing about my own country’s quirks has its downside. I strive to tell each story objectively without condescension or sensationalism, but every time I write an article about, say, the engineer who has a body pillow girlfriend or the grad student who married a Nintendo DS character, I get hundreds of racially-charged comments from readers, long ranting responses from defenders of Japanese culture, and dozens of emails from people at big media outlets who want to find out more about these “strange” phenomena.

Why do so many love to gawk at this mysterious, foreign “other” that is Japanese culture? There are plenty of strange things going on in the US too, but when it happens in Japan, it’s suddenly incomprehensible, despicable, awesome, and crazy. This fascination doesn’t just end with angry commenters, either. Over the last couple of decades, it has spawned a huge industry of magazines, blogs, and products themed around Japanese culture marketed to Westerners by Westerners who are also obsessed with Japanese culture.

Lisa Katayama writes wonderful, interesting things – but she also began to feel the sting of racism continued to share small things from Japan. What started out as fun became bastardized into something ugly and awful. And games like CCB help to perpetuate the worst of both worlds: anti-Asian racism and wacky Japan stereotypes.

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Trackbacks & Pings

  1. Ching Chong Beautiful Exposes Racism in Video Game Design | The Border House on 30 Dec 2009 at 6:39 pm

    [...] by Guest in Casual Games on December 30, 2009 This post was written by Latoya Peterson, originally posted at Racialicious, and is kindly republished here with [...]

Comments

  1. atlasien wrote:

    I wish I had something intelligent to say but I don’t. I just feel like putting together all the people who designed that game and every single person who defends it and just… hurt them somehow. So that they know how much this stuff made me hurt.

    So, I have to look at things like this as a challenge that helps me understand and overcome my own habits of negative emotions.

  2. atlasien wrote:

    Oh, and I felt obligated to back up SaintWaldo so I left a semi-coherent message of support for them.

  3. brian wrote:

    This game is awful, and the people who defend it are no better.

    That said, I think you need a new title for this post. CHING CHONG BEAUTIFUL EXPOSES RACISM IN VIDEO GAME DESIGN isn’t descriptive of your article at all. It reads as an indictment of the entire industry, but the article is about a bunch of immature flash developers publishing their own trash on their own sites. Please consider something more descriptive and less obviously click-baiting. As a designer of educational games, it irks me to see my entire industry maligned based on the actions of a handful of bigots.

  4. Latoya Peterson wrote:

    @brian –

    Honey, I write about racism in mainstream games all the time. I put in the piece that this one is from an indie designer – but I also referred to Mottes, from Chili Con Carnage, we could bring up Resident Evil 5, we could bring up Gears of War…it goes on and on and on. It’s nice that you design educational games, and there are people who are not interested in perpetuating racism in games, but it happens far more often than this one situation. Click the video games category for more coverage.

  5. Deaf Indian Muslim Anarchist wrote:

    the 5th photo– the one with the “muhahahah!” caption is clearly YELLOWFACE.

    also, like Latoya already said, i don’t understand why they named this “Ching Chong” when that’s a Chinese slur and has nothing to do with Japanese game shows.

    “zipperheads” ? WTF? I had to check the link on Urban Dictionary cos I’ve never heard that one. People sure have really dumb racist slurs.

    I’m with Latoya on this– if the game was clearly a mockery of weird Japanese game shows, that’s fine– there’s no need to mock or degrade an entire group of people based on their ethnicity. sheez.

  6. Natalie wrote:

    “Having said all that, it’s entirely your right to be offended if you’re oriental, however if not, I think it might be an overreaction.”

    OMG. Rugs are oriental. People are Asian.

    This article comes at an interesting time for me as it related to a conversation I just had with my sister. She works for a game company, and she has some concerns that a game she’s working on now has some racism problems, but her concerns are being ignored so far on the grounds of humor.

  7. steps wrote:

    Thank you for the link to Lisa Katayama’s piece at Boing Boing. When I was in college, a white guy in one of my marketing classes mentioned to me (being the only PoC in that class) that he always sees a bunch of “weird, unfunny Chinese shit” on YouTube, and when I asked him to show me, he pulled up some Japanese game show clips. Sigh. So many things wrong with that. And so many things wrong with Ching Chong Beautiful.

  8. dersk wrote:

    Oh, zipperhead means Asian? I always thought it meant something like ‘jackass’ or ‘wanker’ – just a more generically derogatory term (but have only read it, usually in hardboiled detective stories).

    Does anyone have any examples of games that play with race or racial stereotypes in a way that’s both engaging (as in, fun) and non-racist?

  9. Afroagogo wrote:

    Wooooo, this gets me mad. When shit like this pops up, I always wonder: guess there was no East Asian or even brown staff member to chime in during the development stage and be like: uh, everyone? I don’t think this is such a good idea.
    Morons. This goes way beyond offensive. It’s like, get-your-ass-beat-for-being-so-in-my-face-ignorant (although I’m not a fan of violence, I’m more for verbal beatdowns).

  10. T-Boy wrote:

    You know, I get tired when people trot out the “But it’s supposed to be comedy!” argument.

    I mean, isn’t comedy supposed to be hard? Isn’t the art of making a good joke supposed to be difficult?

    Isn’t it more likely, when someone points out that thing you just did was not funny, seriously, cut it out, that you just suck at comedy rather than that they’re just being sensitive? I mean, it gives you some degree of control, after all — with that, you know you can improve. That’s pretty empowering.

    I mean, you can’t just take the positive feedback from people who think like you, after all — I mean, the writers of SNL and Monty Python didn’t consider themselves great because they all liked each other’s jokes, they’re considered great because their audiences found them funny.

    When a portion of your audience just sits there all stony-faced or all WTF-faced and didn’t laugh at your gook joke? That doesn’t mean that they were too sensitive, or “didn’t get it”.

    That means you suck. Shut up and improve.

  11. ACW wrote:

    @LP –
    Every post of yours blows me away. Excellent and insightful, as always.

  12. czarsketch wrote:

    I agree wholeheartedly with the direction of this post–the gaming world gets away with some seriously f***ed up stuff these days, simply because its fans seem to tolerate anything in order to get their video game jollies on (being a gamer, this comes from personal experience, and is by no means a generalization of ALL gamers!)

    I had a question that was raised by the conflicting nature of this particular incident. The designers insist (and I’m assuming they actually believe) that this is a piece of racism-mockery designed to satirize the stupid ways in which people perceive Asian culture. This post, my instincts, and the logic used by those crying foul all say that this is an unacceptable reason to include racism in the game itself. So here’s my question:

    Is there ever a time when satire is appropriate when dealing with Isms? And if so, is it restricted to certain Isms, contexts, or levels of observational transparency?

    And, as always, a devil’s advocate question: Could requests to have the game removed from Escapist actually work against a better understanding of the issue by suppressing an opportunity for discussion?

  13. Thefremen wrote:

    With the exception of Alien Homonid, Newgrounds is nothing more than /b/ with the trolls posting in Flash rather than .gif. It is beyond me why The Escapist would want to give these trolls trolling trolls with flash any attention at all. Are they going to start linking to insightful posts at freep now as well?

  14. Latoya Peterson wrote:

    @dersk/czarsketch -

    In terms of gaming, I will say at this current juncture, no, there is no good way to play with racial stereotypes without being burned. The main reason is because the gaming environment is too invested in upholding these stereotypes in too many areas. It’s everything from the usual amount of racism (http://blog.shrub.com/archives/tekanji/2007-08-08_645) to the intense denials of any problems with race, to the bigotry allowed to flourish in game spaces, forums, and blogs, to the ridiculous lack of women and POCs in development, marketing, and design roles. I strongly believe you can’t satirize something you don’t fully grasp, and while a lot of people would like to think they understand racism enough to mock it, it becomes pretty clear that they do not.

    One of the games that comes the closest to joking about isms is the Grand Theft Auto series, which has been called out for various racist story lines, but actually has far better representation of POCs in general and POC protagonists than other games. (I say this without playing the PSP mini games, so I reserve the right to revise/alter that statement). They do occasionally weave in jokes about race that don’t suck, but at the same time, due to the dynamics of the game, it can be read as both funny and problematic. But saying GTA comes the closest reveals just how far there is to actually go.

    We generally discuss the dynamics of satire in the context race based humor, and it can be difficult to call. Even if a joke is created by a member of a certain group, for other members of that group, it often travels outside of that group, causing awkward situations. Both Chris Rock and Dave Chappelle stopped performing some of their funniest sets, because it was being applied and interpreted in ways they did not intend.

    In terms of having the game feature removed, it’s a bit late for that. I would love to see the Escapist print an apology demonstrating they understand the objections of their readers and how this contributes to a hostile game space for players of color, but I’m not holding my breath. And if you read the full comment thread, I doubt that you can call what’s currently happening discussion.

  15. mrguy wrote:

    For some gamers it’s considered cool, or funny to be “politically incorrect”. So the more offensive you are in gaming the more some people are entertained. That’s how you end up with games like this. And if you don’t like it, then they say you’re too sensitive.

  16. Jess wrote:

    OK, here’s a serious question: would this have worked better if the title was different?

    The first two images don’t strike me as all that bad. The third one is awful. The one with “Spicy Tuna Bowl” seems okay, (not terribly funny but I can sort of see where they were going) and the Crater Stadium is so-so, at least to me.

    But the title really makes it terrible — IMO had they gone with something more like the Japanese game shows it purports to parody, then you have something better.

  17. Latoya Peterson wrote:

    @Jess –

    Mishmash of racial stereotypes.

    Zipperheads.

    No, changing the title would not have changed the over all message of the game – which is strange because the structure of the game play didn’t need a “weird Asians” message. You could have stripped out all the things I pointed out and still had a solid game. But I guess it’s more fun to be racist.

  18. Erika wrote:

    I was rolling my eyes at most of the stuff in this game, because it’s rather typical “un-PC” racist bullshit, but then I got to the “crater stadium”. Seriously? What the fuck?? That’s about as funny as having a game set in Auschwitz.
    Ughhh.

  19. Jess wrote:

    Fair enough. I missed the context of “zipperheads” a bit since it has been a long time since I heard that word. I mean, it was falling out of fashion in the 70s when I was a kid (people came up with other racial slurs by that point I guess).

    Kind of like hearing someone say “Quadroon” — it makes you sort of do a double-take. Like “What? This is what year again?”

    (I honestly heard zipperhead mean a stupid person by the time I was a teen, but still, that makes it no better. I seem to remember the word cropping up in “Punk Rock Girl” but it hasn’t got any association with Asians there that I could remember).

    Anyhow, I just asked because reading abut it and playing it are sort of different things, you know? Like, I can’t feel it as I am playing it.

  20. Westerly wrote:

    What’s worse? The game itself (between ‘zipperheads’ and the ‘Crater Stadium’ I’m kind reeling) – or all of the dismissal and denial that inevitably arises when someone is actually affected by it and *dares* to find it problematic. I really admire SaintWaldo for taking a stand and actually trying to have a conversation about it, even if the responses were the usual evasive, predictable bullshit.

    I like video games myself (though for many reasons wouldn’t call myself a gamer). I agree with the proviso that “not all gamers think/do X” etc. Of course, But at the same time you see things like this and it isn’t terribly surprising that the gaming community tends to have the reputation that it does:

    Sure, it’s a part of new media with a deep investment in some incredibly old attitudes that they resent being questioned over or called out on.

  21. DovS wrote:

    I think something that people often overlook when trying to defend racially-based humor is that humor and racism are not mutually exclusive. You say, “That’s racist.” They say, “It’s a joke!” The implication is that, it can’t be both at once so, since it’s a joke, it’s not racist.

    It might even be a very, very funny joke. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t still racist.

  22. Bao wrote:

    Wow. Thanks for posting this. Mind if I cross-post?

  23. Latoya Peterson wrote:

    @Bao – Sure.

    @Jess – You can follow the Escapist link or the unlinked mention at the top if you want to play the game. I played for about an hour, which was about 8 or so levels, and it’s pretty easy to see that the game would have functioned find without the racist asides all throughout.

  24. Ms Sheeba wrote:

    This is somewhat similar to the travesty which was the 5th instalment in the Resident Evil series:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resident_Evil_5

    I like the way the harmfulness of stereotypes was expressed in this video:

    “Stereotypes are negative. Even “positive” stereotypes are ultimately detrimental to the groups that struggle to find a sense of self within the narrow parameters of society’s vision.”

    That’s exactly it. The psychological impact it has on a person of colour. I’ve found manifest in a weariness to express one’s individual self. It causes bemusement in the minds of those that are insular. They react in surprise, anger and shock at something that should not be shocking at all.
    The fact that you are a unique human being just like everyone else.

  25. alirae wrote:

    I was just wondering if anyone has any ideas as to why people find it necessary to be racist to be funny? I know so many people who make racist jokes and use racial slurs just to get a laugh. Why does this actually work? I mean, people actually laugh at racial jokes? What’s wrong with them?
    Don’t people realize that when they keep saying these jokes, whether they are racist or not, it makes them come off as ignorant assholes?
    Ugh..people make me so mad.

  26. Nipple Anus wrote:

    Bonus:
    http://www.poetv.com/video.php?vid=39000
    Here’s Jerry Seinfeld calling a Japanese man “Wing Wong”

  27. Edward Hong wrote:

    I am so incredibly glad that Racialicious covered this wretched Newgrounds game. I check out this site every now and then and I remember the very first day that it came out, it was on the site’s front page. Imagine just checking out one of your favorite websites and BAM! CHING CHONG BEAUTIFUL is in your face!

    I decided to play through it and like what you guys found out, it was just baaad. I immediately wrote my review noting how tasteless it was and I immediately got banned from reviewing any more games on the websites for several days. I protested this action and wrote to the founder of the website. He apologized for the action of one of his moderators and released the ban.

    I then contacted the author and illustrator of the game, asking very nicely what was the point of the name. The illustrator was very ignorant and told me this:

    “i think you’re completely overreacting, id already had plenty of asian people tell me they thought it was funny. if that makes me a dick then so be it.”

    The author, on the other hand, had a much more elaborate and nonsensical explanation:

    “It actually had a basis in the storyline, because it’s an insensitive (i wouldn’t say RACIST) slang word for Chinese people, like calling Japanese “Japs”. The game was supposed to highlight how the protagonist is himself an insensitive American, who can’t even get his slurs right…he’s referring to the Japanese by a Chinese slur. But somehow, after a year of working on the project, that just kind of simply became the actual name of the game.”

    -Swain

    Sheesh. We got a lot of work to do.

  28. bdsista wrote:

    Ok, so lets do this the right way, who owns the company? Are there stockholders? Are there advertisers? Then you do a major boycott, contact the stockholders and the advertisers and the media and you do what Tom Joyner has done very successfully, which is jam phone lines, get in on mainstream media and let the advertisers know about the bad publicity. If this is private or not sponsored by advertising dollars, then you still try to get in on mainstream TV and get a statement nationally from the National Asian Associations, Asian Journalists Associations, etc. with a demand to remove the game. Then prepare for the censorship BS game, but keep the pressure on. Does Asian Week know about this? In other words, economically shut em down.

  29. Edward Hong wrote:

    The creator of the website that first featured this game is Tom Fulps and his email address is tom@newgrounds.com

    He is the big man to talk to when it comes to overseeing what goes on the Newgrounds website…if we are passionate about we say and believe in, I believe it’s a good time to email this man like crazy about what needs to be changed. CRITICAL MASS, BABY.

  30. Jay wrote:

    We really really need to explain to everyone that A Modest Proposal doesn’t actually work if people are willing to do the thing it proposes.

    I thought people were smart.

  31. Ria wrote:

    I’d save my breath if I were you guys. He’s a fratboy caucasian male; the only stereotype he’s had to deal with is what stereo type to get at Best Buy on black friday. And yes, before anyone mentions, I realize that I’m stereotyping white men who joined fraternities. Here’s one more: Thank goodness we won’t be seeing yellowface games from mainstream gaming studios; most of their game designers are Asian guys. Please excuse the sound of my back cracking as I stoop to their level.

    It only takes one look at a flash site like NewGrounds, or any random gaming forum to see that the “industry” is filled with and possibly run by these fratboy types.

  32. anders wrote:

    expect Newgrounds to be the “animated flash 4chan”.