So, it’s not the stupidest thing I’ve heard of even this week (there are so many contenders for that title on a weekly basis these days, including a sitting President trying to steal an election by defunding the Post Office), but it is stupid.
I like Stewart, and as I have noted here I strongly agree with her intro to Max’s GWTW. But as Specifically noted in our discussion of that topic, the rationale for inserting a contextual explainer into the start of GWTW is completely undermined by putting it into something like Blazing Saddles. GWTW *is* racist, and it sentimentalize sand apologizes for racism. Continuing to present it as an acceptable part of popular culture in the 21st century requires some explanation and justification.
BS is not racist, it is in fact anti-racist, and a biting satire every bit as relevant and meaningful today as when it first came out. It needs no justification, and this introduction is as welcome as any attempt to explain a good joke - especially one given before the joke is even told.
This is the kind of thing that *maybe* would be justified if a junior high school teacher was going to show the film in class, probably ending with the exhortation to “please don’t use the N-word on the playground when teasing your friends.”
If HBO really felt the need to cover their ass something like this would have come better after the film, perhaps longer and less insulting, with a focus on the legacy of racism in Hollywood Westerns, and a discussion of “White Flight” in the 1970s.
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