View Full Version : Longtime The Simpsons writer says Apu is practically already gone from the show


TMC
05-02-2018, 03:41 PM
https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2018/05/the-simpsons-apu-problem-mike-reiss-hank-azaria-matt-groening-history-springfield-confidential

Mike Reiss says he's puzzled by recent The Problem with Apu controversy because the writers were aware three or four years ago that the Indian-American character was problematic, which is why they came up with the 2016 "Much Apu About Something" episode. Apu “has barely been in the show since then. People are saying, ‘Get Apu off the show.’ Well, he’s not on!" says Reiss, who's promoting his new Simpsons book Springfield Confidential. “There is all this hoopla about Apu," he says, "and the fact is we were cued into this three or four years ago. We did an episode then to address it." Reiss adds: “Though there’s a lot of discussion on Apu, he’s barely had a line in the past three seasons. Hank Azaria saying he won’t voice the character anymore is like Val Kilmer announcing he won’t play Batman again—no one’s asking him to.”

Dr. Thong
05-02-2018, 05:33 PM
I'm sorry, but all this fuss about Apu baffles me.

Yes, I have heard many sides of the issue, but having watched The Simpsons up through last year, I always thought of Apu as a great character who oftentimes was a lot smarter and shrewder than the other characters.

Was there some stereotypical humor? Yes, but I always felt it never went too far. The Simpsons makes fun of all types of people and ethnicities and in some cases, they are worse on some of the other ones.

TMC
05-04-2018, 08:01 PM
Priyanka Chopra says The Simpsons' Apu "was the bane of my life, growing up" (http://decider.com/2018/05/04/priyanka-chopra-bullied-the-simpsons-apu/)
The Quantico star said she personally experienced the ramifications of the controversial Indian-American character, telling The View: “A lot of people are talking about, ‘oh, the show was so successful for 30 years, why are we suddenly waking up and being offended by a character that everyone loved.' The population of Indian-Americans in America has tripled … so the voice is louder, the representation and the demand for representation for people of color is louder.”