Must have been a different A2SG then...
Must have been, because this A2SG did
not say the stuff you put in quotes, as the quoted material clearly shows.
Also, if you look at that quoted material, you'll see the point I actually tried to make.
Feel free to try to explain that you weren't citing the list of high rated shows and whiteness of actors within them as evidence of racial bias in casting, and then when Ana showed that those shows weren't as white as you claimed, your argument was "well, that's only 12 shows!"
Note these quotes: "Of these shows, only two have
a lead played by an actor of color", "Of the rest, The Big Bang Theory and Blue Bloods have no
major actors of color,"
I was talking about prominence of roles. It's why Scandal and Empire are equal on the list...had I been talking about the number of black roles, Empire would have been the only one, as it's the only show that has a predominately black cast. Scandal has a black lead (which was my point), but it doesn't make a case for number of roles, since it only has one major role played by a black actor, and a few other supporting roles.
So when Ana cited how proportional the shows were to the audience (using bad math, incidentally), it missed my point entirely.
No, you made the argument that that list of shows exemplified how white casting is.
In terms of prominence of roles, which is why I talked about the
lead actors on those various shows, and didn't mention, even once, how many black actors there were.
When Ana countered with the metric showing that the percentages of primary characters in those shows wasn't really out of line with the percentages of those minorities in America, you dismissed the entire thing as too small of a sample size to have any real meaning.
I actually never said a thing about sample size, I simply said this: "You do realize you're comparing the entire population to only 12 shows, right? Granted, the most popular of the year, but still. I'm not sure comparing them as percentages of the population is all that valid, to be honest."
I get why you assumed it was about sample size, but it really isn't. Here's why it isn't valid: he did not cite the actual number of black actors and compare that to the population. He simply said that 3 shows out of 12 equals 25%, and compared that to the population. That figure does not represent the number of black actors compared to white actors on those shows, so it's not valid to compare it to the population at large. It's bad math on its face. Frankly, sample size is only part of the problem with math in his argument there.
And beside all that, of those three shows, only one has a predominately black cast, the other two feature one black actor each in a lead role (and one of those is questionable, but I don't watch it, so I'll give the benefit of the doubt).
And, for the record, The Big Bang Theory does have 1 major actor of color, unless we're suddenly counting Rajesh as white.
Good point. I did make it a point to include other colors besides black actors, and I missed him. Sorry.
I've done so and shown where you backtracked.
Nope, you only showed where you missed the point I tried to make. But that's on me to explain it better, so I will try harder in the future.
I have read every single post you made in this thread. In fact, i've read every post in this thread.
As far as Idris Elba goes, you simply said it at one point, then brought it up again when Idris wasn't a slam dunk point, then, totally unprompted, reiterated how great he would be, then brought him up again when Ana suggested that perhaps Tom Hiddleston got the part because he was the best actor for the part. Then brought him up again in response to Ana's "someone" remark.
And then, act all "all i did was mention Idris Ilba" when you've been harping on about him page after page in this thread. I suggest you read all of your own posts as well.
Yup. I said I never claimed he should get the part just because he's black, and that remains true.
I used him as an example of how it's white privilege to see most lead characters in movies or on TV overwhelmingly played by white actors, especially for the most iconic of them. You'll note, if you read every post, that I also mentioned Hayley Atwell playing the Doctor, so it's not just white, it's white male privilege...but, I grant you, that's not entirely on point for this thread.
-- A2SG, still, since it is now canon that time lords can change gender when they regenerate, why not Hayley Atwell?