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when did dressing up as a famous person becom derogatory

Happy2

Legend Member
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When did it become an offensive thing to dress as a famous person at a fancy dress party
Alice Kunek has offended her Opals team mate by dressing up as Kanye West (Yes I know white girl with black face)
Will some one like the late Danny La Rue or present day Dame Edna be disallowed because they are men portraying women ?
I just find it has gone to far Especially as If the team mate was offended she has the girls number Tell her so in person not spread it via twitter

Do you have an opinion nay or yay ?
 
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When did it become an offensive thing to dress as a famous person at a fancy dress party
Alice Kunek has offended her Opals team mate by dressing up as Kanye West (Yes I know white girl with black face)
Will some one like the late Danny La Rue or present day Dame Edna be disallowed because they are men portraying women ?
I just find it has gone to far Especially as If the team mate was offended she has the girls number Tell her so in person not spread it via twitter

Do you have an opinion nay or yay ?


These guys know nothing..... Its going to St Patrick's day soon and believe me no other nationality or race / religion has been made fun of more than the Irish and we all just laugh at ourselves........

Imitation is the highest form of flattery....
 
I haven't caught up on this pseudo-celebrity gossip but was the offended team mate a non-Caucasian person and/or did the offender behave in a stereotypically offensive manner other than putting on the blackface? I don't think putting on some makeup alone should cause most sensible people offence, but perhaps how you carry on wearing it might. I do agree though too many in our society can be hypersensitive about such matters (e.g. remember the backlash against that Jackson Jive blackface act on Red Faces several years ago*).

One of my favourite comedies of all time is The Party, in which Peter Sellers played an accident-prone Indian actor in Hollywood. I thought he struck a beautiful balance between creating a bumbling but loveable character (who gets the girl in the end) and potentially causing offence to the entire Subcontinent. Similarly, Benny Hill had a few skits where he liberally applied the boot polish or dressed in drag (or possibly both). No doubt they would all be quietly shelved by the TV stations now for fear of causing offence.

*Ironically, a few of the performers themselves were from ethnic backgrounds and meant it to be a tribute rather than racist, but that was inadequate to mollify the PC lynch mob.
 
Bring back the black and white minstrel show, that might give the politically correct wowsers something to think about
 
I haven't caught up on this pseudo-celebrity gossip but was the offended team mate a non-Caucasian person and/or did the offender behave in a stereotypically offensive manner other than putting on the blackface? I don't think putting on some makeup alone should cause most sensible people offence, but perhaps how you carry on wearing it might. I do agree though too many in our society can be hypersensitive about such matters (e.g. remember the backlash against that Jackson Jive blackface act on Red Faces several years ago*).

One of my favourite comedies of all time is The Party, in which Peter Sellers played an accident-prone Indian actor in Hollywood. I thought he struck a beautiful balance between creating a bumbling but loveable character (who gets the girl in the end) and potentially causing offence to the entire Subcontinent. Similarly, Benny Hill had a few skits where he liberally applied the boot polish or dressed in drag (or possibly both). No doubt they would all be quietly shelved by the TV stations now for fear of causing offence.

*Ironically, a few of the performers themselves were from ethnic backgrounds and meant it to be a tribute rather than racist, but that was inadequate to mollify the PC lynch mob.
Yes the offended person was of African descent
The offense was not how she acted But that she Blacked up And the offended person saw the photo posted online not at the event apparently
 
People tend to be hypersensitive over issues they see/read in social media.
There is no substitute for face-to-face interaction where generally all parties either see the humour and have a good time because they understand the context of such actions or little skirmishes are settled immediately before any problems escalate way out of control.
 
Goshdarnit! New-fangled socialist media done it again. :mad:

You hit the nail on the head though, context is all-important in these here misunderstandings.
 
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