View Full Version : Dear White People strayed too far from its original concept in its last two seasons


TMC
09-30-2021, 04:56 AM
https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/2021/09/10688311/dear-white-people-netflix-ending-reaction

"What had started as an in-depth portrayal of Blackness in a majority white space quickly took a turn into something bizarre and much harder to connect with," says Ineye Komonibo. "In the third season of Dear White People, the show transformed into a sleuth mystery of sorts, its main characters doing a deep dive into the truly confusing lore of a secret society hidden in plain sight on campus. And in the recently released series finale, it further devolves into many fans’ worst nightmare: a musical. These narrative turns were also accompanied by dialogue and storylines that didn’t quite hit the way that they were supposed to, a hint that the writer’s room had spent a lot of time on Twitter reading hot takes and hashtags. The simplest diagnosis of exactly what went wrong with Dear White People as the seasons went on might be that over time, it strayed too far from the original concept of Black students navigating the challenges of attending a school that wasn't made for them. Though a simple premise, that baseline offered up an infinite treasure trove of experiences that the show could have pulled from to keep it timely and perpetually relatable. Viewers were looking to see themselves and their experiences reflected in this show, but as the Netflix project continued, it became more difficult to relate to because of all of the extra things being pumped into the plot, presumably to make it more interesting."

Yong Fang
09-25-2022, 05:34 AM
Dear White People strayed too far from its original concept...

Do you mean it isn't racist and "woke" and blaming the problems of the whole World on white people? Where non-whites take responsibilities for their own lives without blaming others for their own shortcomings?

Babalu
09-25-2022, 09:13 AM
it strayed too far from the original concept of Black students navigating the challenges of attending a school that wasn't made for them.


You mean like Jews and Asians who attended schools that weren't made for them yet wildly succeeded through hard work without excuses?

GentlemanJim
09-25-2022, 12:24 PM
Having never seen the show, I went over to Wikipedia and read the plot synopsis of the episodes of the first two seasons. As well as the explanation that for the 4th and final season one of the shows main writers was promoted to "co-showrunner". That might account for some of the theme drift that the OP states some viewers objected to?

On a more macro level, I'd just like to say that I find it paradoxical the way as a white person all I hear in terms of race relations is how I'm supposed to be more conciliatory and accommodating towards black people, only to find shows such as this designed specifically to be polarizing that are being passed off as comedy.....well, lets just say it gives me "pause".

One silver lining, reading the synopsis for volume 2 episode #8 the use the expression "White savior complex"....which I find reassuring. I always knew the concept existed, just never knew the proper title....now I do. ;)