🐱 Black people have been playing the ‘Squid Game’ forever

CatParty


There’s been a lot of talk about what the Netflix mega-hit Squid Game means for Asian representation. How the Korean-language TV series is on track to possibly becoming Netflix’s biggest hit in any language, including English. How the show is part of the global ascendance of Korean culture, from the music group BTS to the Oscar-winning movie Parasite.

That’s all incredibly important stuff to talk about. But, as a Black person, when I watched the series with my teenage daughter, something else stood out.

Can we talk about the way Squid Game portrayed rich, ruling-class Americans? Because I was loving that.

Spoiler alert. If you haven’t watched Squid Game, go binge it and meet me back here. I’ll wait. Okay? We good? Let’s go on.

Squid Game is, at its heart, a cautionary tale about the way the rich oppress the poor. It’s a story of class struggle. A group of people in South Korea who are facing crushing financial debts are recruited to risk their lives in a violent series of games with the promise that the victor will win enough money to settle up with their creditors. It’s basically The Hunger Games rewritten by Bernie Sanders.

The players are a motley crew, including a North Korean refugee, a gangster, a gambling addict, and a disgraced business school prodigy. But it is soon revealed that a group of apparently non-Korean “V.I.P.s” is bankrolling the game. Every one of the players is portrayed more sympathetically than the V.I.P.s, who wear creepy golden animal masks and speak in accents that seem to be jarringly American.

The whole show is in Korean, so the American voices really, really stand out–like a Kobe Bryant jersey at a Boston Celtics home game.

The V.I.P.s are rude and entitled. The V.I.P.s use female servants as footstools. They make crude, juvenile sex jokes about the number 69. One of them tries to rape an undercover cop. Unlike the contestants in the Squid Game, who are humanized and sympathetic, the V.I.P.s are cartoon villains, hateful and irredeemable.

I loved every moment of it.

In America, we’re often encouraged to reach across the aisle, to try to find ways we can compromise with people who represent the rising tide of intolerance, ignorance and greed. When progressives call out the excesses of the super rich, they are often pilloried in the press as socialists, or un-American, or worse.

It’s good to see that, all the way in Seoul, Korea, filmmakers have the same view of the ruling class in America that many Black Americans have had for a long time. It’s an objective view, it’s a damning view, and it’s exactly what we thought all along. The animal masks the V.I.P.s wear in Squid Game aren’t really masks–they’re the true faces of members of the patriarchal power structure. They’re beasts preying on the have-nots. This isn’t some arguably subjective take coming from inside America, this is an objective view from thousands of miles away.

Like my man Frantz Fanon wrote in Black Skin, White Masks: “There are too many idiots in this world. And having said it, I have the burden of proving it.”

The idiots are on global display in Squid Game.

At one point in Squid Game, one of the characters tells a story about how bosses at a car factory he used to work at mismanaged the company and laid off workers. He and other workers took over the factory and fought with the cops. His memories of the factory takeover fade into the Squid Game. It’s all part of the same system.


Near the end of the series, a TV newscast playing in the background in a hair salon delivers the following report about the Korean economy: “The country’s household debt is rapidly on the rise, topping the global average.”

Debt. Layoffs. Police brutality. Arrogant super rich folks. Even without the subtitles, we all get the message. The Squid Game is a game Black people have been playing in America for a long time.

I can’t wait for season two.
 
The fragile negro-ego must be coddled constantly,
and the fact that this korean TV-series doesn't feature any token-niggers is very problematic.
I think koreans should start getting blacked so they can experience the American cultural enrichment
 
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"The cartoonishly evil faceless villains in a fictional TV show are how I like to imagine everyone who disagrees with me. And I will now present this as a good thing. Thank you Korean show for making me feel okay for dehumanizing others so I don't have to interact with the perspective of people I don't like."
 
Remember when they said that Chernobyl (the show) was in fact about Trump? Same thing.

They've been trying hard to make Squid Game a political issue that it's not: The worst offender is how this proves South Korea is a hellhole where people are always abused one way or another... wrong Korea, man.
 
. Is there anything black people won't steal?
No. That's all they know how to do. Plus, their black, dirt covered bodies allows them to hide out more efficiently in the darkness.

I wish the title was true, I'd pay to watch unlikeable niggers in death games. It'd be just like reality TV!
First obstacle: a deep swimming pool. Instant game over for every contestant.
 
I mean Splatoon DOES have a race war in it and-Wait no this isn't Splatoon this is just the Korean netflix show again. God DAMN IT ARTICLE YOU ALMOST HAD A PARALLEL!
Plot twist: Splatoon's race war was encouraged by a black man working at Nintendo.

This behavior likely comes from the fact that many believe her to be an Inkling even though she learned the Inkling language recently and that she looks very different from the Inklings; her Octoling-like appearance was said to simply be a new fashion trend before Agent 8 came to Inkopolis Square.

Marina has demonstrated a high level of intelligence, noted by Pearl in the Octo Expansion.

Marina was born into "the oppression of Octarian society" as she would later describe it and began to be trained as a combat engineer from a very early age
:thinking:
 

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Plot twist: Splatoon's race war was encouraged by a black man working at Nintendo.




:thinking:
It won't let me quote the post with the extra bits of text for some reason but it's always weird to me how like until playable octolings became a thing Marina was the token black one. All the other humanoid octarians had a kinda pinkish meatlike hue to them. Octarian society's "oppression" is due to the fact they lost the race war and as a result had to live in literal underground slums that were basically failed experimental ecosystems made to deal with the land crisis. I think it's kinda obvious why a bunch of them started training to take back the surface with the living conditions they're in. The joke of course is that a bunch of both the inkling and octarian society just more or less forgot about the others and due to this marina and the other octarians who offscreen witnessed the final battle of the first game literally just thought it was some weird surprise stage show/concert their leader was putting on for them with some friends. It's literally the canonical reason for why splatoon 2 has octolings in it on the surface. They just went up there cause they liked that fucking music so much. Could you fucking imagine if that kinda shit happened in real life lmao? People mistaking an entire race of once hostile enemies as just a "weird new fashion trend"? Wild shit.

EDIT: Weird tangent but I Forgot to mention some shit that kinda bugs me about splatoon. OG JP release the humanoid octariand are called "takozones" Which makes me think of taco bell hellfire but it's supposed to mean "octo warrior" The reason this bugs me is it's a pun name similar to inkling but it also ties to the whole militarized society aspect of the octarians. ocrtoling isn't even a fucking pun it's just inkling with octo slapped on. This is a triple tangent at this point Could go deeper but fuck me i gotta hold back on my dumb funny squid shooter lore knowledge.
 
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