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The Purging of Dee Nguyen and MTV's Disturbing History of Reality TV Racism

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Jun 29, 2020, 8:12:37 AM6/29/20
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MTV recently cut ties with “The Challenge’s” reigning champ, Dee Nguyen, over
insensitive comments concerning police brutality. Here’s why it’s a wildly
hypocritical move.

Just before Bravo announced its decision to fire a handful of cast members
from Vanderpump Rules for accusations of racism and past racist tweets, MTV
had done some Black Lives Matter-related purging of its own.

On June 8, the network’s legendary reality-competition series The Challenge
announced on Twitter that it had permanently cut ties with the show’s
reigning champion, Geordie Shore alum Dee Nguyen, for offensive remarks she
made on Twitter about the current civil rights movement. In response to an
Instagram user calling her out for posting selfies amid global protests for
George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and others killed by police, Nguyen commented,
“people die every fucking day.” She followed that callous remark with a
particularly gross tweet that read, “Idk why some of u think I’m anti BLM.
I’ve been saying that since the day I lost my virginity.” The next day, MTV
also announced that they had fired Taylor Selfridge of Teen Mom OG, in
addition to canceling her pregnancy special, for a series of racist tweets
from 2012 that have been circulating since last year.

As has been the case with corporations simultaneously denouncing racism
within the past few weeks, reactions on social media to MTV’s statement that
they “strongly condemn systemic racism and stand with those raising their
voice against injustice” were mostly skeptical. For one thing, it seemed that
MTV had already come to terms with Selfridge’s past transgressions by having
her discuss the controversy on Teen Mom OG, presumably as a teachable moment
for viewers but also to save face as they kept her employed. It’s hard not to
interpret MTV’s retroactive ousting of her as anything but performative
virtue signaling from yet another company in the wake of, well, racism.
Nguyen’s exit from The Challenge, however, prompted a lot more than just an
eye-roll from viewers on social media—and not just because MTV needlessly
decided to edit her out of the rest of the season. It didn’t take long for
fans and former cast members on Twitter to call out the show’s long,
troubling history of tolerating racist behavior and question the optics of
MTV enforcing such severe punishment on one of the network’s only Asian
stars.

Throughout its 22-year run, The Challenge—which has entire Reddit threads
dedicated to its racist moments—has seen white contestants dress up in
blackface, call Black cast members racial slurs, and taunt them in other
racially charged ways without so much as a slap on the wrist from production.

It was only three years ago on The Challenge: Dirty XXX that Camila Nakagawa,
a Latina, called cast member Leroy Garrett a “Black motherfucker” during a
drunken tirade and, according to Garrett, several racial slurs that either
occurred off-camera or were edited out of the show. Despite producers
hammering down on how awful the incident was, showing back-to-back
confessionals of contestants expressing their horror and disgust in the
episode, and even airing an aftershow about racism in America, Nakagawa was
allowed to stay in the game and go on to win the season’s $450,000 grand
prize. What’s even more embarrassing for MTV, though, is that Nakagawa’s
reported ban from the series since 2017 allegedly came from an altercation
she had with a crew member on The Challenge spin-off Champs vs. Stars and had
nothing to do with her derogatory comments. It’s gross to imagine the amount
of money she could’ve possibly made from the show, which has had five seasons
since her last appearance, if she hadn’t allegedly made herself a financial
liability to the network—not to mention the amount of discomfort her presence
could’ve caused Garrett and other Black cast members had she appeared on
future seasons.


In light of this new stance, The Challenge’s format—which puts cast members
from Real World, Road Rules and, more recently, any reality program featuring
attractive twentysomethings in a Survivor/Big Brother-like competition—has
also proven to be problematic as cast members’ controversies from previous
reality shows have begun to resurface. For example, what is The Challenge to
do with someone like Jordan Wiseley, a three-time champion and popular
Challenge staple, who infamously made monkey noises at his Black, female
roommate Nia Moore on Real World: Portland and called her the N-word? Despite
the fact that he apologized to Moore on the show, which aired in 2013, it’s
going to be hard for viewers, particularly those who think Nguyen was
mishandled, not to be reminded of this incident whenever he reappears on the
show and perhaps call for his termination as well.

Additionally, people on Twitter, including former Challenge competitor Marlon
Williams, who was on Wiseley’s season of Real World, were quick to point out
the optics of The Challenge’s sudden zero-tolerance policy on racism coming
down on a woman of color. Williams argued in a video on Twitter that MTV was
feeding into the racist systems that punish people of color more harshly than
white people for ousting Nguyen “while not even handing out any punishment to
white counterparts.” The passion in his voice tells me he’s probably
witnessed or heard about instances of racism on the program that viewers
aren’t privy to but Black viewers like me can only assume occurred. Or he
could just be pointing to Wiseley, whose racist antics he unfortunately had
to witness in person.

Despite an air of whataboutism in his argument, Williams’ call for the
network to acknowledge its history of negligence with regard to Black people
is spot-on. While anti-Blackness within Asian communities should be taken
seriously, the ironic singling out of one of the few Asian women MTV has
hired for its reality programming makes the network look even more
irresponsible and ignores the structural change needed to make The Challenge
as safe and welcoming for Black people as it is for white people. Doing so
and following the standard they set in firing Nguyen would mean publicly
condemning and cutting future ties with several of its white stars—including
the face of the show Johnny “Bananas” Devenzio for his role in lobbing racial
microaggressions at Cheyenne Floyd with his cousin Vince Gliatta on the show
in 2016.

For now, The Challenge producers seem to think that cropping Nguyen out of
every frame for the rest of the season, even for storylines that directly
involve her, amounts to real anti-racist work. Not only is this decision
infantilizing to Black viewers who MTV seems to think will be triggered by
the mere sight of her on our TV screens, it also makes for bad television.


--
Democrats and the liberal media hate President Trump more than they
love this country.




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