Culture Bel-Air Adds A Dangerous Twist To Uncle Phil & Geoffrey


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WARNING! Spoilers ahead for Bel-Air episode 4.

Uncle Phil and Geoffrey have certainly been dramatized in Bel-Air, as the reboot's twist gives them a far more dangerous criminal edge. Just as expected, Bel-Air season 1 is giving the Banks family much higher stakes in their story, and not just in terms of Will’s arrival. Bel-Air has introduced several twists on Fresh Prince’s iconic characters, with their dramatic reimaginings quickly departing from the light-hearted motivations and comedic roles of their sitcom counterparts.

Bel-Air has truly leaned into the consequences of Will’s legal troubles, Uncle Phil’s power and status as a notable Bel-Air lawyer, and Carlton’s arrogance surrounding what sent Will to California. While Fresh Prince saw Will and the Banks family run into trouble with the law a few times, it was nothing compared to Uncle Phil’s illegal influence on the justice system and his own criminal activities that are portrayed in Bel-Air. In a strange twist, Bel-Air is beginning to turn the Banks family into a lavish version of The Godfather’s Corleones.

In Fresh Prince, Uncle Phil was just a lawyer who was talented enough in his craft to get Will and Carlton out of trouble. In Bel-Air, Uncle Phil’s status and power in Los Angeles have given him much more influence than just being a lawyer, as it appears he’s actually a secret crime boss. In Bel-Air episode 4, Geoffrey tells Will that he’ll take care of Rashaad, who has discovered where Will went after Philadelphia. In the episode, Will sees a mysterious man in a car watching him at school, with Bel-Air later revealing that Geoffrey has been working with him and that Uncle Phil is their “boss.” This revelation makes more sense when considering why Uncle Phil is keeping Will’s legal troubles a secret, because if someone like Fred Wilkes, LA’s police chief, started digging into how Phil got him out and subsequently how Rashaad was “taken care of,” the family would be in a world of trouble.

Unlike in the original series, Geoffrey is no ordinary butler in Bel-Air, as he instead seems to be a sort of consigliere for the Banks family, which essentially makes him Phil's Tom Hagan. Bel-Air episode 4 ends with Geoffrey telling Uncle Phil they have some “security matters” to discuss, with Will then getting a call from Tray that Rashaad was killed at a strip club. Even before the news of Rashaad’s death, Geoffrey had told Phil’s other hired man that Rashaad was trying to extort them for more money after the family had already offered him $10,000 to keep silent. Since the matter in which Uncle Phil helped Will get out of legal trouble in Bel-Air episode 1 was never revealed, it seems he and Geoffrey had likely paid off or threatened Philly’s officials rather than using his legal prowess.

Since Uncle Phil is also in the middle of his campaign for Los Angeles District Attorney, the idea that he also runs a type of crime ring - or at least hires others in the Los Angeles criminal underground to arrange such activites - makes his Bel-Air role all the more dangerous. If the details of him arranging Rashaad’s death are exposed, not only will Uncle Phil’s campaign be over, but the Banks family could also face legal trouble far worse than if Will had been tried for pulling an unregistered gun in a fight. The Banks mansion may have seemed like a saving grace for Bel-Air's Will Smith, but Uncle Phil and Geoffrey’s criminal activities are potentially making it far more dangerous than if he had just stayed in Philadelphia. While Bel-Air’s twist is an exciting development for Uncle Phil and especially Geoffrey, who was just the sardonic butler in Fresh Prince, it signals far more trouble for the family in the series’ future.

Bel-Air releases new episodes Thursdays on Peacock.
 
It will be Carlton. Then he'll do that stupid dance afterwards.
And he won’t be as good as Alfonso.


Seriously, guy’s got mad talent.
Honestly, I think it's because he realizes he's on the backside of his career, and doesn't have the "star power" he once did, he was in EVERYTHING aroundabout 1997...... but here we are, 25 years later, and what's he in? Lately? That made money?

His post-Hancock work has been expensive solo flops and underperforming capeshit..... going woke might just be the midlife crisis of 90's and 00's entertainers. A way to deny that irrelevance caught up to you, like every other celeb that doesn't die young.... flood your bombs with diversity and inclusion and then you can live the lie that the public doesn't think your washed up, they just can't stand your incredible wokeness.
Don’t forget his Rewind appearance.
 
I don't get it either. Why the fuck are they reinforcing negative black stereotypes? Why do they insist this is what passes as authentic black identity?
Because glorifying those negative stereotypes if the core of "black identity"in America. Many rappers who made it out of poverty don't let their old lives and habits behind, they embrace them as the epitome of success: drugs, crimes, etc. If you want to sell blacks something, sell them precisely what this reboot is selling.

Also, wokes hate family values. Using blacks to destroy them is the main reason they won't let them succeed on anything.
 
My issue with this is that the original did go into some dramatic and actually heart wrenching moments.

It should be simple. Remake this for a modern audience, but keep the spirit of the original.

Fuck, remember the episode where Wills dad came back only to WALK OUT AGAIN? Fuck "How come he don't want me man!"

How can you not?
 
They could have at least turned him into a crime lord the likes of a bootleg Shredder.

Freaking... Phil the Ripper. If you're gonna miss every point of his character, at least be entertaining while you do so.
If he's called "the ripper" he should at LEAST do a fucking shredder voice while wearing a cheap samurai costume while doing his crime. But that'd be funny and not "realistic and hard hitting" enough to studio execs so we can't have him be a wacky funny gimmick drug lord.
 
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I think we both agree his ego is involved in this, but if this were just a cash-in I think it would have kept the general format with all the woke stuff. He may also just be chasing trends or wanting to do this kind of role more. I doubt he is washed up but his lifestyle isn't cheap judging by his kids so who knows? I honestly think he is the type where he has a purpose for wanting to do it this way, almost in spite of the people who remember him for Fresh Prince.
Upon further inspection, how about this -

He's gone super-woke, for whatever reason, the exact ones don't matter because broadly, every modern celebrity MUST go woke or face expulsion from the club....

Now, in the Current Year of thinking, where everything you do in the past is a possible albatross around your neck, even if nobody had a problem with it before, perhaps he sees the original Fresh Prince as something akin to a minstrel show? Something that makes LIGHT OF "blackness" instead of treating it as the SUOOPER SERIAL thing it should be? And every work that even comes close to touching black folks must adapt to THE MESSAGE about how every waking second of their existence is misery due to muh institutional racisms? And the WORST thing that could happen when you create black-centric media is that white people enjoy it instead of being ashamed and brow-beaten with progressive moralizing?

So, it's his duty as a woke acolyte to DESTROY the old version and replace it in both history and public consciousness with a 'better' one?

Even though it was beloved, popular, and fondly remembered, because it fails the black character test in modern media, it has to go, be deconstructed and then memory holed, and he has to be the one to sacrifice it to "prove" he agrees?

This is a regime-sponsored book burning where he's the one doing the burning of his own books, and brushing off the odd looks he's getting as "you racists just don't get it!'

How bout' that?

Could I sell that to a Jury?
 
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My issue with this is that the original did go into some dramatic and actually heart wrenching moments.

It should be simple. Remake this for a modern audience, but keep the spirit of the original.

Fuck, remember the episode where Wills dad came back only to WALK OUT AGAIN? Fuck "How come he don't want me man!"
Doing that would mean that they are talking about father abandonment among the black community and they can't do that. Staying with your kids and raise them is white supremacy.

Every thing the Banks have done to improve their lives is "being white" under woke rules. They can't show a man overcoming poverty with effort, they need to show that the only way a black man can success in a world of systematic racism against them is through crime.
 
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Isn't it racist to make Uncle Phil a criminal just because he's black? OG Uncle Phil was a much more positive representation of black people in media, if that's what the writers care about (and they always seem to, now)
The Virgin New Uncle Phil
- Literal criminal
- In a terrible dramatic reboot nobody wanted
- Not played by James Avery

The Chad Old Uncle Phil
- Honest and hardworking
- In a great sitcom beloved by all for decades.
- Played by James Avery.
 
The Virgin New Uncle Phil
- Literal criminal
- In a terrible dramatic reboot nobody wanted
- Not played by James Avery

The Chad Old Uncle Phil
- Honest and hardworking
- In a great sitcom beloved by all for decades.
- Played by James Avery.
And remember the more humble origins of the Chad Old Uncle Phil when he lived on a farm and being called Zeke.
 
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