It taught me a lot about humanity.
It taught me that no matter how much reasonable the humans around you may seem, ~95% of people will cheer for a fictional and incredibly unrealistic garbage as long as it is packaged in the current zeitgeist of the time.
The people around me loved that movie, and cheered it on as some sort of extreme cultural achievement, a civil rights victory that showed how successful black people in Africa could be, if only white people hadn't interfered.
I would attempt to point out that, hey guys, this movie is a complete piece of fiction, and moreover, it is a corporate piece of trash produced by Jewish Bob Iger, only attempting to exploit the current popular narrative in order to take your hard-earned dollars, not only from ticket sales, but also the incessant use of brandng on every cheap plastic cup from fast food companies that had a licensing deal with Disney at the time.
Do you think that McDonald's selling 48 ounces of diluted sugar water with a picture of Chadwick Boseman to black kids is an actual win for the black community, given their already extreme childhood obesity rates?
Black Panther taught me a lot about the people around me. Most people, regardless of their intelligence, are completely incapable of separating narrative fiction from the broader context of the story.
For them, Wakanda was real, and everyone was incapable of seeing the movie has an actual product that was being sold to them by a truly amoral multination corporation.
So yes, Black Panther was the movie that had the most impact on me (despite the fact I have never actually watched it).
a picture of a nigger faggot who died from cancer for getting dicks, bodily fluid and other stuff up his ass.
a picture of a nigger faggot who died from cancer for getting dicks, bodily fluid and other stuff up his ass.
Better branding than Poal has. I still want a mug.
Trump tariffs made it hard to get merch produced in Asia.
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