Originally posted by flexmoreHey flex.
i want to know why there were no black people in THE LION KING.
it might just be the same reason.
p.s. Scar does have a black mane.
Drawings and reality are juxtaposed against the average conscious being.
What is your question?
Are you proud you won?
Or ashamed of the same?
Originally posted by StarValleyWyGood Afternoon SVW,
Hey flex.
Drawings and reality are juxtaposed against the average conscious being.
What is your question?
Are you proud you won?
Or ashamed of the same?
Fruit and vegetables are part of the everyday recommended diet.
How many answers can never be asked for?
Did you dream of impossible questions?
Or were you fearful of rhetoric?
Originally posted by flexmoreI was watching the Marx Brothers last weekend, And although there were black faces, they were in stereotypical black occupations - jazz musicans, circus stagehands, train porter. There was never a black face in the crowds of shoppers or the audience.
i want to know why there were no black people in THE LION KING.
it might just be the same reason.
p.s. Scar does have a black mane.
The invisible people.
Originally posted by steerpikewell-aren;t the marx brothers films mostly based in places where there aren't many black people? like a small european state, of an upper class cruise ship?...
I was watching the Marx Brothers last weekend, And although there were black faces, they were in stereotypical black occupations - jazz musicans, circus stagehands, train porter. There was never a black face in the crowds of shoppers or the audience.
The invisible people.
Originally posted by geniusThat's true - there are no black people in Europe, after all.
well-aren;t the marx brothers films mostly based in places where there aren't many black people? like a small european state, of an upper class cruise ship?...
Also, black people never ever use cruise ships.
Makes sense when you explain it like that.
Originally posted by Redmikei meant that they were an insignifican't minority - and it was an upperclass sruise ship, and very few black people in the 1930's could afford to go on such a ship. and, indeed, would they be allowed to?...
That's true - there are no black people in Europe, after all.
Also, black people never ever use cruise ships.
Makes sense when you explain it like that.