Stereotypes in Film(Continued...)
OF MOUSE AND MEN In 1999, the Cartoon Network pulled Speedy from its airwaves Speedy Gonzales The Fastest Mouse in All Mexico hasn't always been the most ethnically sensitive rodent. Speedy's crimes against political correctness include illegally crossing the border, stealing cheese, wearing a huge sombrero, and having an exaggerated accent. Though Speedy had many virtues—alacrity, loyalty, intelligence—his Mexican mice brethren were, in general, drunk, fat, and lazy: the trifecta of insidious Chicano stereotypes. In the Oscar-nominated 1957 short Tabasco Road, Speedy admonished his friends Pablo and Fernando: "No mas tequila. Already muy loaded!" In 1999, the Cartoon Network pulled Speedy Gonzales from the U.S. airwaves in part because he perpetuated negative Mexican stereotypes. But according to a Fox News interview with the network's spokeswoman, Laurie Goldberg, Speedy is "hugely popular" south of the border and thousands of Latinos signed petitions to reinstate Gonzales. A Warner Brothers spokesperson told Radar that Speedy is not only "heroic," but also "aspirational," because of his smarts. Sombrero and all, the Cartoon Network brought Speedy back for a limited run in late 2002. |
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