Acceptable Ethnic Targets

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    He: Did you hear about the Sumerian?
    She: No, what about the Sumerian?

    He: He was extremely stupid! Ha ha ha!
    Dave Barry's Greatest Hits, telling the oldest known ethnic joke

    A subset of Acceptable Targets. Remember that these aren't always ethnic in the literal sense we're used to—they just refer to someone who has something about them which, short of plastic surgery, they can't really change. Foreign/unusual accents and dialects are also typically considered speech impediments, and therefore become subjects of mockery much like Acceptable Hard Luck Targets.

    Examples of Acceptable Ethnic Targets include:

    Skinny Men

    For many, skinny means weak and easy to defeat in a physical fight. Doubly so if said guy is also short. While being tall and lanky may be tolerated, being skinny and of average height is unacceptable for a man in the media, since such men look "weak" and weakness, especially physical weakness, is just the very definition of failure at being a "real" man.

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    Film

    • Fight Club: Averted: "Skinny guys fight 'till they're burger." Tyler sounds impressed by skinny guys. Apparently, they don't give up easily.

    Live-Action TV

    • Eric Foreman from That '70s Show often falls under this trope, since Topher Grace is fairly skinny; his friends call him "girly," and his mother even castratingly reassures him that he's "not skinny, but dainty! Meanwhile his girlfriend and mother alike fall immediately for the more traditionally "manly" Casey Kelso.
    • Criminal Minds in comparison to Fight Club above, there was an scrawny unsub who participated in a fight club and lost every fight he got into. This drove him to get a gun and kill anyone who have an higher authority than him.

    Overweight Women

    Such women are pretty much the Distaff Counterpart to the above. While fat men are not exempt from being bashed, in the media - and sometimes in Real Life - it's fat women who get the brunt of said bashing, often called 'whales' or 'hippo-ladies' and considered the epitome of ugliness, which is an inexcusable and unacceptable flaw for a woman. Not to mention that positive portrayals in the media are almost non-existent.

    Film

    Live-Action TV

    • Married... with Children. From Peg's *huge* mother to the fat women frequenting Al's workplace, this show doesn't just verbally mock overweight women, it also portrays them as food-addicted, greedy, mean-spirited and overall just unpleasant beings (although this being Married... with Children, almost everyone is a greedy, mean-spirited and overall just unpleasant human being).

    Western Animation

    • Numerous examples on Family Guy. If the word "cankles" turns up often, then somebody's being made fun of.
      • In-universe, Peter himself often bashes fat women, but has no problems with fat men like himself.
    • The whole reason for the character of Kendra Krinklesac's existence in The Cleveland Show.
    • Steve's fat goth girlfriend in American Dad plays with this: he does love her despite the ridicule and disapproval from family and friends.

    Dwarves

    Also, short people in general. Mostly for the visual. This occurs with the very tall sometimes (see below), but nearly every appearance of a dwarf on television is because their height is going to be emphasized. May be The Napoleon. FYI: Midget is apparently an offensive term.

    Anime and Manga

    • Edward Elric will burst into completely over the top tirades when people bring up his height (4'11", says Word of God) in any way, no matter how innocuous.
      • But by the end of the manga, he's taller than Winry. So he sort of grows out of this trope.

    Comedy

    • In an interesting lampshade, the stand-up comedian Brad Williams is a dwarf and makes extensive use of it in his routine, which generally includes a lot of physical humor. One notable staple of his routine is dancing to various styles of music chosen by the audience. Why? Well, as he and his fellow comedian Carlos Mencia point out, dancing midgets are just funny.

    Film

    • Almost every character ever played by Peter Dinklage is an exception. He's made a career out of subverting dwarf stereotypes.
      • As a dwarf actor in Living In Oblivion his role completely skewers the use of dwarfs as surreal visual elements. When the filmmaker protagonists film a dream sequence in which a dwarf walks around holding an apple, the dwarf actor insists that the whole thing is overplayed, yells at the director and eventually storms off the set. (This was actually his first film role.)
      • The Vin Diesel movie Find Me Guilty featured a dwarf lawyer, played by Dinklage, who was largely treated as just another character, his height hardly even being commented upon. This was primarily because the movie was almost entirely based on real events, and he was portraying a real lawyer who just happened to be a dwarf.
      • Death at a Funeral features Peter Dinklage (as Peter in the 2007 original or Frank in the 2010 remake) as a major character. His height is never commented on except as an identifying feature.
      • Dinklage also played Finbar McBride, the protagonist of The Station Agent. His dwarfism is a major part of the film, but isn't played for laughs at all. So... Averted Trope.
      • Averted in Penelope. Though one character is a dwarf nobody makes any mention of this except one clearly idiotic character who is ignored. He also wears a bitchin' eyepatch.
    • Subverted and used, extensively, in the 1981 comedy film Under The Rainbow.
    • Semi-averted in Pirates of the Caribbean. A member of Jack's crew is also a little person, and while they once or twice play his size for laughs, he's largely treated as just another member of Jack's dysfunctional little "family".
      • Nearly every production that features Martin Klebba generally ignores his condition... unless his dwarfism is the entire point of his appearance. He's a person not afraid to laugh at himself, after all. Perhaps because he looks like he could fight back.
    • Played straight in the second Austin Powers film with Mini-Me, though Mini-Me is a mutated clone and mute, not a normal dwarf; he's also stated to have certain "compensating" advantages.
    • In Bruges has Jordan Prentice playing Jimmy, an actor with dwarfism. This is more of an in-story example; main character Ray has a strange obsession with "midgets" but none of the other characters seem prejudiced against him. He's also mistaken for a child, and is in fact playing a child in the film's Film Within A Film. And he's an asshole with a coke habit and occasionally racist rants, but this is shown as having more to do with him being an actor than being a dwarf. In spite of this, though, he's a fairly multilayered, believable character.
    • Averted in movies of Luis Bunuel, who occasionally cast dwarves because he liked their demeanor in front of the camera, even though script didn't require a dwarf.
    • Star Trek III the Search For Spock: "Don't call me tiny!"
    • Me Myself and Irene: it's intended as humiliation that Jim Carrey's character's wife runs off with a dwarf.
    • Played for Drama in Freaks where the normal-height, physically attractive Cleopatra toys with Franz's affections, thinking of him as a subhuman joke. The "normal" Cleopatra and Hercules are depicted as grotesque on the inside, whereas the "freaks" are mostly decent people...and if you harm one of them, you get to deal with all of them.
    • Gimli in The Lord of the Rings. "Toss me!" ("Don't tell the elf!")

    Literature

    • Tyrion from A Song of Ice and Fire gets a lot of mockery for being short and ugly, sometimes being referred to as "Halfman" and "the Imp" by certain characters and is hated by the common people. Of course, this has left him very embittered. And when Cersei tries to have him killed, it leads to a veritable parade of people killing dwarves on the basis that it might be him, and bringing her their heads. Although one other dwarf is shown with a relatively high station in a religious settlement, it is clear that were he not a son of the richest and most powerful lord in the land, Tyrion would have suffered even more, something he is well aware of.
    • Vincent Lorimar, in Unda Vosari, openly tells somebody he hits "like a midget" (as well as comparing his fists to testicles and calling him the dick in the middle).
    • Averted with Newt in Cat's Cradle, who is a perfectly normal guy described as very calm and dignified.
    • Subverted in Terry Pratchett's Discworld, where the Dwarfs are a belligerent minority with a fairly direct response to being denigrated as lawn-ornaments, short-stuff, and only ever being offered half-pints of beer. The Ankh-Morpork City Watch will usually close a case as "suicide" if the deceased has, immediately prior to their demise, been heard to make mock of an axe-carrying dwarf's short stature.
    • Averted in Ender's Shadow with Bean. While Bean does grow in later novels (it's a genetic disease that eventually makes him grow too tall), for the duration of the first book he is significantly shorter than all the others. However, Bean is shown as being smarter than all the rest of the school of geniuses. There are many moments where Bean is mistreated for his height, but those are mostly done by bullies or portrayed negatively. Largely, Bean uses his height to his advantage, as he does with everything.

    Live-Action TV

    • An episode of CSI dealing with dwarfs swung in its treatment of them from respectful to "humorous".
    • House had an episode with a dwarf woman and her daughter. The daughter's condition was caused by a curable disease (Cushing's?), meaning that when cured, she hit a growth spurt.
    • Aversion: The short-lived alien invasion drama Threshold included a dwarf character, the fact that he was short was mentioned only in a few purely practical contexts along the lines of explaining why he couldn't drive someone else's car.
      • There was a scene in a bar where the character was surrounded by half a dozen babes when another character tracked him down (he'd gone missing). He was asked "How do you get the babes?", and replied "Chicks dig brains", or words to that effect. The dwarf character had several math (and language?) degrees and was otherwise a valued team member.
    • Aversion: The HBO drama Carnivale featured a dwarf, Samson, who was effectively the traveling carnival's leader.
    • Aversion: In Seinfeld, one of Kramer's closest friends aside from the other three main characters is a dwarf named Mickey. In one episode, his height becomes important: The child actor he doubles has grown, so he uses insoles - which the other dwarfs don't like.
    • There was said to be a stigma among dwarf-actors about "trying to heighten," because that creates unfair competition.
    • Played half-straight in Scrubs. A recurring character holds a black belt that's generally shown with punches to the crotch, or in one case, crushing the hand of another character to end a tense handshake.
      • "Would you stop using that expression, Randall? It's stuck in my head."
      • But averted in an episode where assisting a really short surgeon is considered a terrible assignment to pull; the "boys' club" that uses him as an instrument of social coercion is portrayed as a pack of Jerkasses, and he gets to deliver the Aesop of the episode.
        • To be fair, the "punishment" aspect of being assigned to assist the incredibly short doctor was due to the fact that the assisting surgeon would be required to stand hunched over for hours at a time, resulting in severe back pain and stiffness because of the height disparity.
    • Pushing Daisies's fifth episode, "Girth", may as well be renamed "CHENO IS SHORT", given that it consists almost entirely of reminders that Kristin Chenoweth is 4'11" - ranging from a Backstory involving a stereotypical short person's profession of horse jockey to a scene where she can't use a spade as a lever because she can't get traction on the ground. And deliberately shooting her from high angles to make her look even shorter.
      • One must wonder if a scene in The West Wing, where her character is walking on a hallway with C.J. "Flamingo" Cregg, is poking fun at her slight stature, or C.J.'s towering one.
    • Subverted but also played straight in some ways in Max and Paddy's Road to Nowhere. Max admits to having a midget girlfriend and the abuse that she gets, as well as what he has to put up with for being so much taller than her, is rightfully shown as hurtful. She later finds Max indulging in jokes at her expense behind her back, causing her to leave him. The trope is played straight when Paddy calls her a dwarf, prompting Max to "correct" him on the differences between dwarfs and midgets: "Dwarfs are in the circus and do cartwheels." This is less a joke at the expense of dwarfs and more one about Max's ignorance.
    • The size of presenters Richard "Hamster" Hammond and Jeremy Clarkson is a source of numerous jokes on Top Gear. Hammond's height may have actually saved his life during a serious crash of a Vampire drag racer at 288 mph; it is believed that a taller man could have been decapitated.
    • NCIS halfway-subverts this - Goth 'lab rat' Abby dates an intelligent, charming fellow science geek with a love for bowling, who just happens to be a dwarf. The one time the script calls for a joke about it, it's at the expense of Abby - who says something rather thoughtlessly in her typical way that comes across as a jab about his height, and apologizes. However, the relationship doesn't last - the actor playing her love interest committed suicide, and it's implied she was dumped due to her differing height.
    • Subverted very hard in NCIS: Los Angeles with Hetty, who is not only small, but also an extremely Badass ex-operative that has literally Seen It All, and has an enormous amount of political clout.
    • Mostly, any show where Meredith Eaton makes a participation is a self aversion, as she's usually proud of her genetic condition and is shown to not be intimidated by the "tall" people.
      • Most notably in Boston Legal. Her size is often played for laughs, but she's shown to be an accomplished woman and a relentless lawyer. Also, Denny Crane is shown to fall in love with her and finding her unique proportions exotic and sexy, but it is a very turbulent relation.
    • Daniel Frishman as District Attorney Vincent Daniels on Night Court. While many jokes were made at the expense of his height, Frishman played up his character as a smug, over-rich, total and complete bastard, the direct antithesis of the usual "adorable midget" phenomenon that was sweeping the nation at the time.
      • The jokes were made by Dan Fielding, who taunted Daniels mercilessly about his height—but got his punishment when Daniels turned out to be his supervisor.
    • Politically-corrected on Los Angeles Law, where a midget-attorney (Warwick Davis) was harassed by punks, only to be "saved" by Jimmy Smits. The rest of the episode showed Smitts embarrassingly grinning and laughing like an idiot Jack-o-Lantern while chumming around with him, pretending to hit it off together as the studio bent over backwards to be politically-correct and "height-blind."
    • Lampshaded in one promo for Shasta McNasty, where a character played by Verne Troyer remarks that "people get freaked out by little people"... and then proves it by screaming in the ear of a guy who was napping, causing him to freak out.
    • Subverted on Hannah Montana. Miley briefly goes out with a guy who is about an inch shorter than her (he must be about 5' 3). She doesn't mind his height but is turned off when he has to stand on something to kiss her. She ditches him but then goes to apologize for being rude, after he tells her he always was rejected because of his small height. Although we never hear from him again.
      • Played straight in some parts of the episode, there are a lot of (corny) jokes against small people.
    • Alternately averted and played for laughs on Chelsea Lately, where Chelsea Handler employs a dwarf as a sidekick because of a personal attraction for little people. But she's a comedienne, so nobody's safe from ridicule.
    • The Lone Gunmen episode "Madam, I'm Adam" had a plot that involved a dwarf wrestling league and the situation was played as something that even the Gunman found bizarre. However, when the truth fully came out, it turned into a Crowning Moment of Heartwarming. Their "client" was a normal-height man who was trying to win back his wife, one of the wrestlers, and had undergone a drastic procedure to try and overcome the anger problems that drove her away. The husband makes no mention of her height, but her jerkass boyfriend showed his colors when he did.
    • In Modern Family, Mitchell sees his old high school girlfriend holding hands with a short red-haired person and worries that he gave her a son. Of course, he's actually a dwarf and her husband.
    • Santana has been known to pick on fellow Glee club member Rachel for her size, or lack thereof ("Listen to Dwarf Diane Warren").

    Professional Wrestling

    • Any midget match/segment is used for comedy or for the heel to mock their opponent.

    Radio

    • One of The Now Show's many Running Gag s is the small stature of Jon Holmes. It is exaggerated for humourous effect.

    How do you get the cast of The Now Show in a Mini? Two in the front, two in the back, and Jon Holmes in the cupholder.

    Real Life

    • Tom Cruise.
    • Jamie Cullum (not helped by his relationship with Sophie Dahl being a case of Huge Girl Tiny Guy).
    • Nicolas Sarkozy is towered over by his wife Carla Bruni, and his attempts to draw attention away from this only open him up to more jokes.
    • Ryan Seacrest.
    • Unless they'e actual dwarves women - being generally shorter than men anyway - are usually safe from this. But as Hayden Panettiere can attest, there are exceptions.

    Western Animation

    • Possibly averted in The Incredibles, in which there are two characters short enough to potentially be the butt of dwarf jokes, but both characterizations are based on something else entirely—Mr. Huph is defined by his callous indifference to human suffering, and the humor of Edna Mode's character stems from her artistic temperament. It is only a possible aversion because the cartoony style of the film makes it uncertain whether their shortness is supposed to be indicative of dwarfism, or just a quirk of character design.
      • Most likely it's to contrast them with Mr. Incredible. Mr. Huph because it's thus more humorous that this tiny little guy is ranting and ordering around a massive, superpowered dude because of his authority, and Edna because she smacks the same guy around and bends him to her will with far more style and good humor.
      • And many of the characters in The Incredibles are physical exaggerations, including Mr. Incredible, to augment the movie's "morning cartoon" style.
    • In The Simpsons, there's a deconstruction of this. Moe dated a Little Person named Maya that he met on the Web. He was so nervous about dating someone that was "different" (and thus offending her), that he ended up always making asinine comments about her height. Eventually, his comments about her height caused the demise of their relationship.

    The Tall

    While not nearly as common as mockery of short people, there's still a certain amount of mockery directed towards anyone over a certain number of feet. While often Positive Discrimination, mostly expect to see stuff like hitting their heads on light fixtures, driving a too-tiny car, and their head being cut off in photos of groups of friends/family. Also "fun" nicknames such as Stretch and plays on "The _____ Giant". For some reason seems to often have a funny-sounding voice, so may mix this with the "Speech Impediment" acceptable target. The tall and the generally big are also often depicted as being dumb, though there's no correlation between size and brains at all. A generally well-intentioned but particularly annoying stereotype is that height also lends an automatic athletic ability and predisposition, especially regarding basketball.

    Film

    • Space Jam made a joke when several very tall basketball players and one short basketball player are walking down the hall following a doctor. They walk through a door way... or at least the short one and the doctor do; the others hit their heads on the door frame.

    Live-Action TV

    • Lurch from The Addams Family.
      • Lurch is more of a Frankenstein-like monster than simply a tall man.
    • Robert from Everybody Loves Raymond is a running "tall" joke. While Brad Garrett is tall, he's been shown before in other roles without drawing attention to it (such as the mechanic in Seinfeld who steals Jerry's car); meanwhile Robert Barone is his only role in which he is shown to be Frankensteinishly enormous.
    • College football coach Hayden Fox on Coach frequently mocked Sitcom Arch Nemesis Coach Judy Watkins, and the players on her ladies basketball team for being tall, and, implicitly, butch. Hayden was a curmudgeonly Straw Misogynist Chew Toy who mocked the idea of women playing sports at all, while and coach Watkins was decidedly closer to earth; usually, this highlighted that tall women are labeled as boorish and ungraceful, but unattractive as well. He also made fun of his assistant coach, Dauber, for being tall.

    Real Life

    • Real Life Example: Stephen Merchant, known for collaborating with Ricky Gervais on The Office and Extras finds it quite unfair that being tall is apparently considered some kind of achievement and that jokes at the expense of the very tall like himself are perfectly okay while jokes about dwarves and fat people are frowned upon nowadays. He has gone over the drawbacks to being so tall many times in the past.
      • Which may be partially responsible for one of the most cringingly hilarious moments in the Merchant-written Extras, when Merchant's character Darren Lamb meets noted little person actor Warwick Davis and squeals, "Oh, look! A midget!" He later asks Davis, "Can I fit in your house?"
    • Actor Jared Padalecki of Supernatural gets this all the time, and not just from fans—the cast, crew, and writing team love to poke fun at his height. Among other things, director/producer Kim Manners has nicknamed him "Sasquatch," and Jensen Ackles once claimed in an interview that Jared makes him look like he's 5'9". He's clearly 6'5", but he claims he's either 6'3" or 6'4", probably out of insecurity about it. Jared also had a tendency to hunch when he walks, also probably out of insecurity.

    Western Animation

    • Nelson's sketch from the "22 Short Films About Springfield" episode of The Simpsons had one. Though the Very Tall Man does get his revenge on Nelson, something a lot of the town seemed to want, he's portrayed so goofy that there's not much payoff from it.
      • The man's voice is perhaps a side effect of genetic gigantism, so it actually adds to the payoff by driving home Nelson's unfair mockery.
    • In The Weekenders, Carver receives a love letter he later finds out is from a girl named Nona, who's quite tall, and Carver is biased about it, to the point of having nightmares about if they got together, culminating in her delivering a gigantic baby.
      • His friends aren't above it either, as when he tells them Nona is his secret admirer, they all hold their hands out and up and say "THAT Nona?".

    Web Original

    • One The Angry Joe Show crossover made fun of the (exaggerated) height differential between Joe and Handsome Tom.

    Speech-Impaired

    Film

    • Michael Palin played a comical stutterer in A Fish Called Wanda, which proved mildly controversial.
    • Pan's Labyrinth features the villain torturing a stutterer, though the villain is far too nasty to be acceptable.

    Live-Action TV

    Theatre

    • This is an old one, having been used by George Feydeaux in the 1900 French comedy "A Flea in her Ear"

    Web Animation

    • "Homestah Wunnah" from Homestar Runner. His impediment seems to be presented as part of his general Ditziness, but the only person who ever makes fun of him for it is Strong Bad, who makes fun of Homestar for everything.
      • Then there's Coach Z, who sports a strong accent that sounds like nothing on Earth. There's an entire cartoon devoted to the cast's attempts to get Coach Z to pronounce "job" correctly. Though in one cartoon, it's implied that, for some incomprehensible reason, Z is deliberately exaggerating his accent:

    Coach Z: Track or Trort!
    Bubs: C'mon, man.
    Coach Z: Okay, Trick or Treat.

    Western Animation

    • This is common in cartoons: Mush-mouth from Fat Albert, Elmer Fudd, Porky Pig, and Sylvester the Cat are prime examples.
    • Subverted with Keswick from Tuff Puppy, who speaks with a stutter but it isn't made the but of jokes. He's also recognized as a supergenius by both heroes and villains, with DOOM kidnapping him to help them.

    Black People

    Only in pre-Civil Rights America. Or when done by other black people for the sake of comedy. Racism against blacks in the media is generally considered unacceptable in contemporary America, and receives more attention than racism against any other group for various reasons. For most of America's history, blacks were considered an acceptable ethnic target (see Minstrel Show, Once-Acceptable Targets).

    White Anglo Saxon Protestant males

    Whites, being the vast majority of Americans, are consequently the group that is (historically and concurrently) the least discriminated against. This is more true of white males. Thus, when racial discrimination against white males does occur, it is often overlooked. In some circles, such racism is considered to be acceptable (see other, guilty white people).

    Advertising

    • If you're an American, do a little experiment: turn on your television and count how many commercials feature dopey, goofy, idiotic men and wise, capable, uberwomen.

    Film

    • Perhaps the ultimate shot at WASPs was Caddyshack, in the characters of the Lutheran Bishop Pickering and the WASP's WASP, Judge Smails, portrayed as only Ted Knight can.
    • The villainous Mayor in Michael Jackson's Ghosts short film, a fat, bigoted white man who picks on the mysterious Maestro for being different (i.e., being Michael Jackson), is a good example of this, and played more for drama than jokes. Jackson played both roles, the Mayor under heavy makeup.
    • James Spader has played a lot of privileged WAS Py villains, particularly in his youth, e.g. Pretty in Pink.
    • Trope is subverted in Lakeview Terrace wherein Samuel L. Jackson plays a racist crooked black cop, terrorizing a suburban interracial family.

    Live-Action TV

    Other

    • In a meta example, almost always the villain, nowadays, of any movie or TV series is going to be white, and especially WASP. Aliens, Avatar, Beauty and the Beast, Blazing Saddles, Die Hard, Commando, Gangs of New York, The Green Mile, The Karate Kid (original), The Next Karate Kid, The Lord of the Rings, Pocahontas, RoboCop, Shinning, Star Wars (at least with the human villains), Willow, and plenty more (feel free to add. There're plenty more examples). Bonus points for the most depraved villains, the rapists and child abusers, being WASP as well. The only aversions tend to be historically based stories wherein it'd be virtually impossible to cast a white villain. Additionally, the only characters portrayed as racist tend to be white, usually of the Neo-Nazi or KKK variety. Rarely, if ever, do heroes (especially not white heroes) battle against the New Black Panthers, Nation Of Islam, Brown Berets, or other non-white racist groups (though a black character kicking the shit out of a Klansman is pure catharsis).
      • An example of a Double Standard that favors members of a historically disadvantaged group over others, with little regard for character variations of individuals within either group. This is a subversion of early American media, wherein evildoers (especially rapists) were commonly cast as black men (played by white men wearing Blackface makeup, see Birth of a Nation).

    Western Animation

    • One example which can be considered particularly Egregious is that in Danny Phantom, where the parents of Samantha Manson are cast as WASPs, despite being Jewish.

    Games

    • Subverted in "The Witcher", with primary antagonist Azar Javed, an ambiguously brown man, and protagonist Geralt, a white guy. Double subversion actually - the primary antagonist is indeed a white guy.

    Blondes

    Comedy

    • Many blonde jokes were actually descended from Dumb Pole jokes. Some of course didn't carry over.

    Literature

    • Another subversive example is Karrin Murphy from the The Dresden Files books, tiny, blonde, cute, generally far more intelligent than Harry and can kill you six different ways before you hit the ground.

    Live-Action TV

    • Interestingly, The Suite Life of Zack and Cody has a smart blonde (Maddie) and a dumb Asian Airhead (London). This was because, originally, Ashley Tisdale was to play London (after all, she is a parody of Paris Hilton, a blonde). But early on, Disney realized that Ashley was better at playing Maddie, and Brenda Song (originally cast as Maddie) was better at playing London.
    • Aversion: the lead character of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which itself was created as a subversion of the "unnamed dumb blonde gets eaten by monster in dark alley" cliche of horror films. The title character is not always the brightest in the bunch, but that seems to stem more from impulsiveness than from genuine stupidity, as you can't be the Slayer for years on end and be a complete idiot, and she's generally pretty good at thinking fast on her feet, given the circumstances.
      • Albeit the same series had one of the definitive examples of blonde ditziness on television in Harmony.
    • Interestingly enough, another series that subverts the "dumb blonde" trope is Boston Legal, despite the fact that the majority of the long list of "Acceptable Targets" cliches above are played straight and usually for humor with great relish on the same show. In fact, lawyers seem to get a slight reprieve more often; blonde, capable lawyers show up in Law and Order, Law and Order Special Victims Unit, and Womens Murder Club, to name a few.
    • One of the earliest subversions/aversions on network TV would be Jennifer, Carlson's secretary on WKRP in Cincinnati. The creators of the show deliberately refused to cater to the "dumb blonde" stereotype, and wrote her as intelligent, witty, ambitious, and more than a touch sarcastic.
    • Ainsley Hayes from The West Wing is not only a "hot blonde" who is perfectly intelligent and capable, but she is also conservative on a show when almost the rest of the main cast is liberal, up to allowing her to make persuasive arguments on conservative issues. Although, her character is often defined by the other characters as "the blonde Republican woman". Donna Moss is a slightly more traditional example, although she is quite smart, just not as smart as Josh.

    Susan: And if Ritchie's strategy is what you say it is, won't Josh Lyman figure that out in five minutes?
    Amy: It'll take his assistant Donna five minutes. It'll take Josh half that time.
    Stackhouse: Really?
    Amy: Maybe a little longer because the Mets lost last night, and he'll need to focus.

    • More subversion: CSI: Miami has Calleigh Duquesne who is not only blonde, but fairly short, with a rather "little-girl" sort of voice - absolutely none of which affects her ability as an investigator.
    • Subversion: Sam Carter from Stargate SG-1 is something of an astrophysics genius.

    Music

    • Julie Brown's "Cause I'm a Blonde".

    Theatre

    Western Animation

    • Cornelia from WITCH. While a fairly calm and intelligent girl in the comic books, she became The Ditz for the television series. She liked her transformation because of the big breasts that came with it.

    The hairy

    Dense body hair, which is naturally quite common in men, is treated as something extremely repulsive and unhygienic that only gross individuals have. That is when it appears at all—generally men's chests shown on television are utterly hairless. A hairy-backed man suffers this more than most; for some women it's any sort of body hair at all. Then again, most people react to this in real life and often wonder why such people don't wax or go the whole hog.

    Advertising

    • An early-2000's ad for some phone service or whatever depicts an engaged couple who seem to be quite happy and in love up until the woman sees her fiance step out of the shower and reveal a wealth of back hair. We're apparently supposed to find it hilarious when she then uses her phone to call off their wedding on the spot.

    Anime and Manga

    • The village elder from Haré+ Guu, has a massive mound of chest hair that shakes like shrubbery when he moves. At one point Guu actually steals his chest hair and, much to his horror, wears it as an afro.

    Film

    • Played with in The 40-Year-Old Virgin; the movie also revealed the REAL reason for waxing your anything. It's not to look good for anyone-it's to entertain your friends, who are standing there watching.
    • In the film version of Stardust, lovable hero Tristan has loads of chest hair, visible whenever he undoes his top button.

    Literature

    • In an early Star Trek novel, McCoy tells a high-ranking Klingon that mint juleps will put hair on your chest. The Klingon recoils, deeply disturbed by the notion, contributing to an ongoing diplomatic incident.

    Live-Action TV

    Professional Wrestling

    • If you're a hairy pro wrestler, either you're a savage, an unhygienic boor... or Shawn Michaels, who only gets away with it because he's a living legend at this point. Otherwise, you have a career worth of "Shave your back! Shave your back!" chants to look forward to.

    Real Life

    • Fedor Jeftichew, better known as "Jojo the Dogfaced Boy," based his entire career on his hypertrichosis.
      • In Transylvania 6-5000 the wolfman is actually a man suffering from generalized hypertrichosis. Note: Hypertrichosis has been informally called the "werewolf syndrome."
    • Subverted by Pierce Brosnan in... well everything.
    • Ryan Giggs has expressed regret about his shirt-stripping goal celebration in 1999 due to the subsequent mocking he received over the reveal of his chest rug.
    • Robin Williams is notoriously hairy and he knows this, and pokes fun at it at every opportunity in his stand up.
    • Jon Stewart, especially earlier in his career (and on The Daily Show, before Growing the Beard), relied on Self-Deprecation when losing comedic momentum. He often brought up his height (about 5'6") and body hair, with the essential point of, "I'm a monkey." This was also a go-to defense when interviewees brought up his fame/sex appeal, walking the line between "Aww, shucks" and "You're wrong."
    • Jeffrey Hunter was no more than moderately hairy, but when he starred in the 1961 movie King of Kings, the crucifixion scene had to be re-filmed because test audiences were repelled by the idea of a Jesus with any body hair at all.

    Bald people

    Corrupt Corporate Executives like Lex Luthor, losers like George Costanza, and let's not even start about Nazi skinheads. And Jeffrey Tambor's character in the SpongeBob SquarePants movie. For some reason, however, this doesn't apply if you're also black, even if you're not a Bald Black Leader Guy. Perhaps this is because blacks are seen as much more likely to shave their heads as an intentional hairstyle rather than male pattern baldness than white people are, and this trope only seems to apply if you've actually lost the ability to grow hair. See also Bald of Evil.

    Advertising

    • The guy who's using Brand X? Usually bald.

    Film

    • Can I get a Graf von Orlok?
    • Potter in It's A Wonderful Life was a collection of villainous characteristics: bald, rich, and in a wheelchair.

    Literature

    • Played with in Roald Dahl's Matilda. Mr. Wormwood declares that a thick head of hair is a sign of intelligence. When Matilda points out that Shakespeare was bald, Mr. Wormwood displays his ignorance by asking "who?"
      • Although playing it straight in Dahl's other novel, The Witches. The eponymous Witches are as bald as eggs.

    Live-Action TV

    Real Life

    • Another notable exception is Jason Statham.
    • Averted by Yul Brynner.
    • Ditto for the Dwayne Johnson a.k.a. The Rock. Rather than try to fight his receding hairline, he instead shaves it all off and looks far more Badass for it.

    Humans, when compared to other intelligent races

    Every Intellectual Animal and Sufficiently Advanced Alien knows that Humans Are the Real Monsters.

    Live-Action TV

    • 3rd Rock from the Sun had an episode where Dick learns about tolerance and explains at the end that no one is "better" than anyone else, just different. The rest of the aliens burst out laughing at the idea that they're no better than humans.

    Video Games

    • In the trailer for Portal 2's multiplayer campaign, GLaDOS says "These next tests requires co-operation. Consequently, they have never been solved by a human".
      • This idea is elaborated in the promotional short "Bot Trust." The clip starts with a little animation of two humans entering a test chamber; one quickly shoves the other into a fire pit for no apparent reason. The narrator concludes that "Our data clearly shows that humans cannot be trusted. The answer? Robots!" Cue the montage of the two co-op robots, Atlas and P-Body, working together through "a regimen of trust exercises." At the end the narrator announces that these "inspiring artificial bonds" will be put to the test... and cuts to P-body shoving Atlas into a fire pit for no apparent reason. What did this accomplish? The robots gave them a whole six extra seconds of cooperation. Good job robots.

    One's Own Race and/or Culture

    Make fun of those who look different, and you'll be labeled a racist. But if it's your own race, then it is perfectly acceptable. Note that here, the one taking the shots is not required to limit themselves to their own group in all circumstances. And, of course, if the mocker is of mixed races, that's more races to mock.

    Virtually all forms of ethnic targets for the sake of comedy are considered acceptable when the person making the statement belongs to the targeted ethnic group (see: George Lopez, Chris Rock, etc.). The same sort of 'intra-ethnic' targeting is almost uniformly considered less acceptable outside of comedy (example: Herman Cain). See Boomerang Bigot for more details.

    Comedy

    • Carlos Mencia's entire schtick. Oddly, his early stand-up acts stress his Honduran heritage, even containing a bit about how nobody recognizes that fact and simply labels him Mexican in California, Puerto Rican in New York City, or Cuban in Florida. By the time he got his own show on Comedy Central, he self-identified as a Mexican, or, more often than not, a "beaner."
    • Compared to Sarah Silverman, Mel Brooks is so politically correct.
    • A number of black comedians have making fun of black people as the linchpin of their stand-up act. Chris Rock is probably the most prominent of these, but he's far from the only one. He is changing, though. While he used to split his time between making fun of blacks and making fun of whites, as his act has progressed it's gradually changed from "White people screw with black people, and black people aren't helping the situation" to more purely white-themed jokes. He ditched a lot of the jokes blaming black people for "the situation" around the same time he noticed just how much his white audiences were enjoying his "The difference between black people and niggers" bits, though it was also partially him dropping very old material.
      • This is nothing new: Richard Pryor indulged in this to the extent that most of his albums in the 1970s included the N-word in their titles, and earlier comedians such as Redd Foxx (oh yeah, he was raunchy, in the day) and Moms Mabley also made considerable fun of black people.
    • Russell Peters gets away with all sorts of race jokes because he - despite his name - is East Indian.
    • The Axis of Evil Comedy Tour is entirely based on this principle. Not only do the Middle-Eastern comics make ample fun of themselves, they also take plenty of shots at Jews and other minorities.
      • It's worth noting that most of the "shots" eventually end with a punchline about Middle Easterners (Ahmed Ahmed's "Jews yell into the phone" is part of a long riff on how Jews and Arabs are the same, Maz Jobrani's Asian Drivers reference ends with a punchline that's ultimately on Middle Easterners), so there's a lot of overlap with N-Word Privileges. Interestingly, Jobrani has claimed that he receives complaints after shows when he doesn't tease other ethnic groups - by people from those ethnic groups who feel ignored!
      • Ahmed Ahmed also sharply inverts this with a joke about how even after 9/11, Muslims were still only the fourth most targeted group for hate crimes, after blacks, gays and Jews. "So... what do we have to do?"
    • Brian Regan compared himself to a friend of Italian descent who does not actually speak the language but says Italian food names in the most Italian way possible. Being of Irish descent, Brian says "Corned beef and cabbage! It's magically delicious!" with an Irish accent, and then he proceeds to fake river-dance off the stage.
    • Lenny Henry started out in the 70s doing racist jokes. Even though he's black, it wasn't deemed very cool.
    • Paul Sinha, who's Asian-British and gay, plays with this.
    • Sacha Baron Cohen, who is Jewish, plays an anti-Semitic character, Borat. The point of the shtick is to make fun of anti-Semitism, not Jews, but it's debatable how much a non-Jewish comedian could have gotten away with routines like "Throw the Jew Down the Well."
      • It's debatable how well Sasha Baron Cohen got away with it as well. Most found the anti-Semitic segments incredibly uncomfortable, which was arguably the point, but many felt they were too raw even for self mockery.
        • Since the Borat movie was well-received critically and commercially, it is probably safe to say most people found the humor at least somewhat acceptable. It wasn't without controversy, but the majority of viewers seemed to get it.

    Film

    • The Rush Hour movies are big offenders here. In the second movie, Chris Tucker punches Jackie Chan by accident while fighting Chinese Triads and says, "All y'all alike!" This is only justified by the fact that Jackie Chan makes fun of Asians often, so giving Chris Tucker just one line does little harm.
    • Mel Brooks could not have gotten away with half the stuff he did if it wasn't for the fact that he himself is Jewish.
    • Joel and Ethan Coen. Miller's Crossing.

    Live-Action TV

    • M*A*S*H beat them by a few decades, and used it in a bit of satire; a 'Korean' (played by Pat Morita), on asked about someone, reported that 'all you [white] folks look alike to us'.
      • Studies have shown that it's common for a person of any race to have trouble distinguishing members of any other race {citation needed}. It is theorized that this is because when confronted with a person of obvious differences, such as a different skin color or a differently-shaped nose or face, most people will focus on those major differences, and will have trouble distinguishing the details, such as shades of skin color or slight variations in shape of nose or face. So, this may have been more Truth in Television than the writers intended.

    Music

    • "Weird Al" Yankovic's album Straight Outta Lynwood contains "White & Nerdy," a song that pokes fun at white people. The music video even contains Donny Osmond doing some extremely dorky dancing. This would be completely unacceptable if Al were not white.
      • ...or nerdy, for that matter.

    Web Original

    Western Animation

    • This is played with, lampshaded and subverted many times in The Boondocks. The first example is when Uncle Ruckus sings "Don't trust them new niggers over there" and is applauded by a crowd of WASPs because "It's OK if one of them says it."

    Granddad: That's what I'm talkin' about right there! We don't use the n-word in this house!
    Huey: Granddad, you said the word "nigga" 46 times yesterday--I counted.
    Granddad: Nigga, hush!

    Real Life

    • The Harlem Globetrotters, famous trick basketball players have an opponent team called a variety of names who are "Jobbers", a bunch of players who are required to go out and be the goofy white dudes who are flummoxed and utterly shown up by the Jesters of Basketball, generally simply standing around looking stupid while the Globetrotters perform. But both the aforementioned teams were owned by white men. In the early days the focus was less on basketball and more on comedy set-pieces and clowning acts, but since the late 70's, the exhibition games have become competitive with the addition of collegiate all-stars to the Generals roster.

    Irish-Americans

    Cast as being in the seat of white privilege (which means, of course, that they're Catholic Celts who are considered WASPs), and still obsessed with their heritage and worse days that may or may not have existed. Ironically, this opens the door to the old Nash stereotypes like untenably large families, alcoholism, and elaborate wakes, since rather than even making fun of the stereotypes, it's making fun of the self-serving reification of the stereotypes.

    Film

    • There's also the scene in Blazing Saddles where the town will accept every racial minority except the Irish. Admittedly, this is an aesop about racism, but still...
    • A character in The Commitments explains that it is appropriate for an Irish band to play Soul Music, because the Irish are "the niggers of Europe".

    Real Life

    • The reason that Mrs. O'Leary and her cow were blamed for the Great Chicago Fire was because as a woman and an Irish-Catholic, she was an easy target.

    Western Animation

    • The Simpsons has made a few jokes based on the Irish being Once-Acceptable Targets. It's tough to think of Bart's revelation that Whacking Day was originally "an excuse to beat up the Irish" being done with most other groups.

    Old Irishman: 'Tis true. I took many a lump, but 'twas all in good fun.
    Grandpa: Last time those meteors came we thought the sky was on fire. Naturally we blamed it on the Irish. We hung[sic] more than a few.
    Kent Brockman: All this drinking, violence, destruction of property... are these the things that we think of when we think of the Irish?
    Milhouse: Look out Itchy, he's Irish!

    Roma A.K.A. "Gypsies".

    They're backward, colorfully dressed nomads with funny accents. They're mysterious, if they aren't outright tricksters and thieves. Often able to use magic of some kind. Little do most people know that they're continuing the ancient European tradition of discriminating against the Roma, which was at its height around the Holocaust. Indeed, hating on Gypsies is shortform for "Eastern European out-of-touch hick".

    Comedy

    Film

    • Brad Pitt's fighting gypsy in Snatch. Not actually a Roma, but an Irish Traveller.
    • A very unfortunate portrayal of Roma in See No Evil (aka Blind Terror).

    Literature

    • Frex in Stephen King's Thinner.
    • A big part of the backstory of the Cal Leandros books includes the Leandros brothers' Roma heritage. Their mother was an abusive and alcoholic monster (metaphorically speaking), none of which is directly blamed on her being Roma, but it doesn't help that she engaged in a lifestyle that matches the worst of the anti-Gypsy stereotype (fortune-teller, scam artist, thief and jailbird). Worse are the Sarzo clan and their witch of a matriarch, Abelia-Roo (especially in the fifth book). We're told that, of all of human society, only the Roma are aware as a society of the non-human inhabitants in that particular universe. This trooper loves the books, but is made uneasy by the portrayal of an entire ethnicity as 'superstition'-savvy and immersed in the guardianship of arcane lore and dangerous magical objects.

    Live-Action TV

    • Discrimination against Travellers was basically the entire point of The Riches.

    Music

    • In the Hilary Duff song "Gypsy Woman", "gypsy" is the adjective used to describe the woman who her father left her mother for. Given that the woman was not Roma, the reasons are unclear though, possibly because of her job as a flight attendant (referencing the second "nomad" stereotype), or because of a gypsy curse. What makes this especially insensitive is the WWII reference in the beginning of the song, the Roma being heavily persecuted by the Nazis during the war.

    She can rob you blind with just one look, from those eyes
    Out of all the thieves that trained her, none of them could tame her.

    • Shakira's song Gypsy, but only in the English version with lyrics like "I might steal your clothes and wear them if they fit me." The original Spanish version Gitania just paints Roma as being friendly and free-spirited people.

    Real Life

    • Not acceptable in Central Europe. Around here, the word "gypsy" is as taboo as "Neger", which is a somewhat milder form of "nigger". Which is to say, old people still use it out of habit, but it's otherwise not acceptable.
      • Or rather, it's not supposed to be acceptable in Central Europe but since casual racism against Roma is unfortunately very common, most people still use it. Even in government positions.
      • Considering the massive amount of Czech skinheads, any Roma jokes make you seem like one. These are the skinheads that have swastika tattoos, by the way. Yeah. "Acceptable" not so much.
    • Thoughtlessly rampant in the US, where even the most liberal people will make casual jokes about selling babies to the Gypsies. It's interesting to note though that The United States has the world's largest gypsy population.
      • It's still unfortunately standard on the JREF forums to refer to fake fortunetelling ripoffs by the generic term "Gypsy scams".

    Arabs

    Except, ironically, just after the 9/11 attack.

    Comedy

    Comic Books

    Film

    • True Lies, in which Arnold Schwarzenegger battles a group of Arab terrorists who are plotting a nuclear attack. Made slightly less offensive because one of Arnold's anti-terror colleagues is an Arab-American chap named Faisil, who is portrayed as being a Nice Guy and occasional Badass.
    • Back to The Future features Libyan terrorists who try to shoot the heroes. The "language" they speak in the film is absolute nonsense and in no way resembles the language actually spoken in Libya.
      • The series doesn't only pick on "acceptable" targets. The first film features stereotypical African American characters (Goldie Wilson and Marvin Berry), and in the second movie Marty's screaming boss embodies a Japanese stereotype. This type of cheap racial humor was still common in the 1980s, even though ironically the first movie was trying to celebrate racial progress.
    • The Siege, in which Arab terrorists attack New York, after which Arabs are rounded up into concentration camps. However, the movie is quite Anvilicious about averting this trope, with even the Well-Intentioned Extremist General Ripper responsible for the said round-up making a speech against instituting martial law. It also contains Harsher in Hindsight: The Mysterious Informant is not only a liar, but also The Mole. Remember, this film was released four years before the second Gulf War.
    • The Delta Force centers around a plane hijacking by a group of Lebanese terrorists (probably based off the real-life 1985 TWA Flight 847 hijacking).
    • Iron Man attempts to avert this trope by saying that the terrorist group includes people who "speak many different languages -- Arabic, Farsi, Dari, Urdu, Russian, Hungarian (!)..." However, all the terrorists shown onscreen are brown (although some are undoubtedly supposed to be Afghan, not Arab). And the main terrorist henchman speaks Arabic in all his scenes and is played by an Arab (though Urdu is spoken in some scenes, and is a realistic choice for a multi-ethnic group)...so the attempted aversion doesn't really work.
      • Perhaps a subversion later on when Iron Man actually saves innocent Middle Eastern citizens from the terrorists. There's also the nice prisoner who helps Tony build his suit. A bit of a Magical Negro in a few ways, but his Heroic Sacrifice (aka he walks into a group of armed men with basically no chance for survival) is made more interesting when he reveals that he's actually trying to get himself killed so that he can be with his dead family again.
      • It should be noted that in the original comic book Tony's captors were all Vietnamese (it was published around the time of The Vietnam War) including Professor Yinsen, who, yes, helps Tony to build the armor and makes a Heroic Sacrifice to save him. (Note: Yinsen is most definitely a Chinese name, not a Vietnamese one)
    • Raiders of the Lost Ark has lots of swarthy Arabs in turbans who keep trying to slice Indy up with their swords. Somewhat averted by the character of Sallah, Indy's trustworthy Egyptian friend...who is played by a Welshman.

    Indy: "These Arabs don't care if we kill each other."

      • The Last Crusade seems to be a better aversion, though, as most Arabs there are actually trying to stop the Nazis from getting their hands on the Holy Grail. They do appear to be villains in an earlier scene, though, and Indy beats some of them up.
    • The Sheik, the 1921 silent movie starring Rudolph Valentino, depicts the title character as a Noble Savage who wins over the virginal European heroine with his violent passion. Averted since the end of the movie reveals that he's actually European, not Arab (thus making the romance acceptable). It's worth noting that in the original novel, the sheik rapes the heroine, thus making her fall in love with him. In the movie's sequel, Son of the Sheik, Rudolph Valentino's character does actually rape the female protagonist, and by the end of the movie they're happily in love.
    • Hidalgo includes untrustworthy Bedouins who try to double-cross the hero so he loses the big horse race. It also features an oppressed Arab woman, the sheikh's daughter, who is being forced into a marriage to her cousin.
    • Rules of Engagement. In this movie, American Marines open fire on unarmed Yemeni civilians at the American embassy in Sana'a (Samuel L. Jackson gives the order to "Waste the mother#@&%ers!"), killing women and children. In the end, though, it turns out that the civilians were no better than terrorists themselves—they all, even a four-year-old girl, fired on the Marines first! So the whole movie is a justification for killing Arab civilians, even women and kids—because they're not actually innocent civilians, they're terrorists too.
    • Subverted in The Long Kiss Goodnight where the dead Arab is the scapegoat of the film's evil CIA operatives staging a terrorist outrage to increase their budget.
    • Somewhat averted by Lawrence of Arabia where the Arab characters are generally heroes. Only somewhat, because every major Arab character (except the one played by Omar Sharif) is played by a Westerner, and the fact they are unable to overcome their tribal differences in Damascus, allowing the British and French to take over from the 'children.'
      • That was also kind of what really happened: the various factions were unable to agree on anything and couldn't present a unified front to the League of Nations.
      • Yeah, but the movie also portrayed the British and the French as beings complete racist bastards who only care about Arabia as being a part of their empires. All the factions in the movie were bastards, to some extent.
    • The movie version of Tom Clancy's The Sum of All Fears replaced the book's Arab terrorists with Neo-Nazis, the former apparently being considered cliche. Then 9/11 happened while the film was in production.
    • This happens in Soul Plane, a movie where everybody is game. The scene shows a man, without showing his face at first, walking through the aisles. As he's passing by, flight attendants and passengers stop and stare at him in fear or disgust (while the theme for Jaws is being played mind you). When he finally reaches his seat, he's revealed to be a Middle-Eastern man in a turban. As soon as the poor guy sits down, he suddenly gets harassed by two employees and is called "Osama" by one of them. Of course, it's all Played for Laughs.

    Professional Wrestling

    • Believe it or not, TNA Wrestling actually manages to avert it, and subvert it. The aversion comes with Raisha Saeed, burqa-clad wrestler/manager who was one of the most powerful women in TNA's "Knockout" division (thanks largely to her association with the unstoppable Awesome Kong), though she's an example a long running tradition of mysterious Arab Heels, its more flattering than a terrorist angle. The subversion comes with "Sheik Abdul Bashir", who would seem to be the epitome of that standard "terrorist" stereotype, what with the angry rhetoric and the comments about holding the X-Division title "hostage"... but only if you ignore his introductory vignettes, which established him as a former Iranian-American businessman who lost everything after 9/11 due to runaway hatred of Middle Easterners, and then decided that he would make himself into the very personification of American fears as the ultimate revenge. Said vignettes even established that Abdul Bashir isn't even his real name; that would be Shawn Daivari.
      • Daivari himself also portrayed the childhood friend of a Double Subversion in Muhammad Hassan. Hassan was introduced and constantly described as an American-born of Arab descent who was just as appalled by 9/11 as "we" were, but became the victim of racism from those who didn't want to know him. The double subversion came when irony bit HARD on the character, as the fans didn't want to know him and booed him for his race. The writing team quickly applied Flanderization like there was no tomorrow and turned him into the evil Arab the fans wanted to think of him as, culminating in choking an opponent out with a piano wire garrotte while Daivari was carried out as though a martyr by a bunch of people in ski masks, thus taking what might have been one of the most interesting characters ever and making him the most offensive. Irony kept biting when the WWE taped that particular scene on 4 July 2005 for a show to air on 7 July, meaning it was already in the can when London got attacked. Everyone in the media, including those who really should know better, said the WWE was capitalizing on the terrorist attack, and Hassan's career was over before it ever started.
      • Raisha Saeed actually an example of a long used "Mysterious Arab" type heel.

    Real Life

    • There are several different Arab stereotypes: most obviously, the terrorist stereotype, but there's also the barbaric savage stereotype, and the oppressed woman stereotype.

    Web Original

    • This video demonstrates nearly every portrayal of Arabs as either a) terrorists, b) religious fanatics, c) America haters, or d) all of the above in film over the past 30 years.

    Western Animation

    • Disney's Aladdin. The original lyrics to "Arabian Nights" started this way: "Oh, I come from a land, from a faraway place/Where the caravan camels roam/Where they cut off your ear if they don't like your face/It's barbaric, but hey, it's home!" Then there's Jasmine, a princess who dresses like a harem girl. It's also worth noting that the good characters have more Western-looking appearances (Aladdin was actually modeled on Tom Cruise), and generic American accents, while the evil Jafar has more Semitic features and an evil British accent.
      • The line about "cutting off your ear" was later replaced by "Where it's flat and immense and the heat is intense."
    • Transformers Generation 1 had Carbombya, an obvious jab at Libya.
    • Looney Tunes had Hassan, a bloodthirsty Arab with a huge sword, whose lines all essentially consisted of some variation of "Hassan chop!"

    Tatars, Mongols, Huns...

    If we'll go with European tradition, these apparently were Barbarian Tribes existing only to Rape, Pillage and Burn. And specifically Mongols give us Hordes From the East or simply "The Horde" which is the same but more. Little things like what exactly most of their enemies did just before being trampled into dust usually are omitted. Of all nomads only Scythians are exempt from Demonization while having mildly romantic/heroic aura much like early Arabs.

    The word "Tartar," itself, may be derived from "Tartarus," a hellish Greek underworld (according to the OED, though this is speculative at best). Its usage is therefore deprecated in favor of the more accurate "Tatar."

    Video Games

    • In Total War Mongols is a faction which appear from thin air and attack everyone without any discernible reason.
      • They're trying to conquer the world. Conquering the world, or putting oneself in a better place to conquer the world, is the only reason why anyone does anything in Total War.

    Iranians/Persians

    Often portrayed similarly to and confused with Arabs.

    Film

    • Not Without My Daughter.
    • Clueless has a brief reference to the "Persian mafia" - a poke at Los Angeles Persians, which would be a subset of Iranian/Persian Acceptable Targets. (The stereotype of Los Angeles Persians is often an Acceptable Target for Iranians as well, so a lot of Iranians thought the Clueless reference was hilarious.)
    • 300. Yes, you can make the case that it was told from the perspective of an Unreliable Narrator, but there are a lot of other ethnic groups that a major Hollywood movie simply could not get away with depicting as faceless, soulless, subhuman depraved monsters. More likely the film would never have seen the light of day.

    Real Life

    • Even more ironically lumped in with Arabs, because they really look down on Arabs. Many Iranians strongly identify themselves as Caucasian (the whole "Aryan=Iranian" thing); and some Iranians stereotype Arabs as "lazy, violent hicks" in much the same way that New York Italians view Southerners (or British Protestant attitudes toward Irish Catholics). The stereotype of "civilized Persians" versus "desert-dwelling Arabs" is in fact a Forgotten Trope.
    • In Finland, the stereotype is that they own a pizza or kebab place with broken Finnish in speech and menus. To be honest, many pizzerias and such are run by immigrants.

    Stand Up Comedy

    • Played with by Iranian comedian Omid Djalili, who discusses how media bias causes difficulty with differentiation for the west; he does so by explaining that describing a cat as "Persian" (i.e. beautiful, exquisite, well-bred), and describing a cat as "Iranian" (i.e. must have a bomb underneath it!) will generate contrasting opinions due to the double standard regarding the similar cultures.

    Slavs, especially the Russians

    Because of the Soviet Union a little thing called the Cold War, and a good deal of old Czarist Russia, the peoples of Eastern Europe are widely mocked or cast as villains in action films because of the Cold War. Often portrayed as outwardly cold or immoral for their part in the former Soviet Union. Icy relations with the West are slowly seeing the resurgence of old stereotypes.

    Real Life

    • In fairness, there are a lot of other Slavs and Eastern Europeans (Hungarians/Magyar and the Estonians aren't Slavs but get mistakenly lumped with them) who don't have very positive views of Russians, either.
      • But on the other hand, there are quite a lot of Russians who don't have very positive views of the other Slavs, especially the Baltic ones. There is that "Estonians are slooo-ooo-oo...oow" joke, also all that business with the demolition of Red Army monuments (World War 2 is a very touchy subject around Russia). And the words "хохол" and "москаль" respectively are what Russian and Ukrainian lowlifes use to refer to each other.
    • The Canadian Prairies had a huge influx of Ukrainian immigrants during the 1890s onward and received discrimination early on, but since then are merely the butt of the joke. It's now to the point where nearly everyone in rural Alberta and Saskatchewan has some Ukrainian descent and whenever someone does something stupid people will say "That's the Ukrainian in them.".
    • All the countless "Dumb Pollock" jokes. Even more so in that "Pollock" is an ethnic slur for Polish people, and Polish-Americans, but rarely are people called on it the same way as if they had made "Nigger" jokes.

    Video Games

    • Team Fortress 2 gives us Heavy weapons guy; a huge, loud berserker who's been described as 'a big shaved bear that hates people.' He's... a little unhinged, with the habit of talking to inanimate objects and naming his monstrous weapons.
      • To be fair, all the characters in TF2 are outwardly dysfunctional and fill stereotype of some sort or another, revolving around Rule of Funny. Interestingly, Heavy is made to sound a lot more intelligent in the Russian dubs, which implies he may not be stupid at all, he just doesn't speak very good English, which is also implied by his bio.

    Hispanics and/or Latinos

    This group has become a growing accepted target in the United States due to the growing amount of immigration of these people. They are usually portrayed as being incredibly poor and will usually be sorted in the same class stereotypes as some African-American groups resulting in many conflicts (ex. gangs). This is often portrayed in dramas dealing with high schools in urban high crime areas such as Dangerous Minds.

    Comedy

    Film

    • Toyed with but ultimately subverted in the 1999 film Bowfinger. Bobby Bowfinger (Steve Martin) gets his film crew by hustling illegal Mexican immigrants into the back of his van. By the end of the movie, the men have learned all about film-making and are now respected and highly successful professionals.

    Live-Action TV

    Western Animation

    • In comedy, Hispanics are often portrayed as lazy and willing to work low paying jobs. Many episodes of South Park feature hispanic men speaking English in a slow-witted lazy kind of matter. In the episode "D'ykes" a group of Hispanic men are recruited for several jobs from spying to substitute teaching. In another episode a sleeping Mexican janitor is mistaken for a wax sculpture while he is sleeping in a room displaying wax figures of people from different ethnicities portraying their stereotypes.
      • Subverted when they have the day laborers competently teaching long division, and when the kids admit that the workers are teaching them more that their actual teacher would have.
    • If the character is female, they may be portrayed as slutty and seductive. Ex. Adrian in The Secret Life of the American Teenager.
    • Subverted with Isabella Garcia-Shapiro (Whatcha doin'?) from Phineas and Ferb. She's also Ashkenazi Jewish.

    Filipinos

    Tend to be mocked because of "not really being Asian" due to the fact that Filipino Culture has far more Western influences (due to three centuries of Spanish control and a few highly-influential decades of American rule and influence) than Eastern Asian ones. This thought was essentially summarized in the line of a Mad TV sketch: "He's not Asian, he's Filipino!" Then there are all the jokes about Filipino foreign workers caricatured as being practically everywhere. Not to mention all the mail-order brides and prostitutes jokes that always seem to pop up. Plus the fact that young Filipino boys are now seen as a kid of catch-all for what gay men are supposed to be into.

    The Japanese

    Not even close to what they once were, but there are still some bad feelings towards them in America for WWII, despite all the trade. Parodies of the Japanese tend to be a bit more subtle than the "I am honolable reader of Japan" of yesteryear, focusing more on superintelligent nerds who can't get girlfriends to save their lives. Of course, Japan's neighbor, China, has much, much worse feelings towards them for their actions in the Sino-Japanese wars.

    From the American entry into World War II, through the Vietnam Conflict, pejorative depictions of East Asians in general have been socially acceptable in America, especially of the Japanese and Vietnamese (though the average American was\is unlikely able to determine what country an East-Asian person hails from based on appearance alone.) Since the end of the Vietnam war, with America developing stronger ties with East Asian nations (especially the reformed Japan), such representations in the media have become rare outside of comedy and satire.

    Anime and Manga

    • An example of self-irony: In Oh! Family, the chronicles of the Californian family Anderson, a Japanese girl visits the family and is constantly lampooned for being overly polite, shy and always smiling.

    Film

    • The Asian gangster in The Hangover. Not only does he have a a stereotypical Asian accent, but he's a sneaky, evil, bastard. Played for laughs of course, but still.

    Real Life

    • Somewhat ironic, as the Chinese are similar to the Japanese in terms of acceptable stereotypes. While the buck-toothed coolie and the Fu Manchu Diabolical Mastermind are no longer popular, Chinese are (also) often portrayed as glasses-wearing superintelligent nerds. The portrayal has also evolved somewhat, and may now include either sweatshop wage slaves toiling away for pennies (for low-status characters) or a secret Corrupt Corporate Executive plotting to buy the United States the rest of the world.
    • Japan's relationship with the Western world has improved vastly since the end of World War II, thanks largely to Japan's soft power in the fields of entertainment, such as anime, cuisine, and video games which are widely embraced and loved in places like America. However, there are still a few points of friction which remain, the biggest being whaling and how Japan has no compunction against killing whales in the name of "scientific research." This remains the issue where the Japanese still receive the most vitriolic hatred, but it's hard to escape an uncomfortable feeling that racism is in play, because Norwegians don't seem to attract anything like the same vitriol, despite their whaling industry and consumption of whale meat.
    • All Asians, in fact, are pretty acceptable targets in Hollywood.
    • You can portray Asians as sneaky evil bastards and nobody will call you out for racism on it. Recently, Tom Clancy has practically made it his career.
    • Post a particularly strange screenshot from some obscure video game and watch the people overtrumping each other with "WTF Japan?" and "Japan needs therapy" comments. Because, y'know, every single Japanese is a tentacle-loving sexual deviant, right?

    Boers/Afrikaners

    Portrayed in a manner bordering on that of the Evil Albino (which isn't even accurate, since many Boers have fairly swarthy complexions due to many generations of living in a semi-tropical climate), and shown to be racist tyrants who hate and oppress any black or brown people they come across.

    Comedy

    • Why did the South African cross the road? APARTHEID!

    Film

    • Subverted, or maybe inverted with District 9. While it's about an alien version of apartheid, pretty much all of South Africa is prejudiced against the extraterrestrials. The hero is also an Afrikaner who pulls a Heel Face Turn.
      • The movie's not about apartheid. It's actually about South African immigration. For the most part this trope is played straight, since we're talking about the main Afrikaaners in the movie, most of whom are Evil Businessmen, Sadistic Scientists, and Gun-Toting Maniac Racists. But a careful bit of attention to the in-story "logic" behind the Nigerian gangsters and you uncover several Unfortunate Implications. For instance, if Prawns represent sympathetic immigrants and a good many immigrants in the country are Nigerian but your Nigerians are Exclusively Evil then you're entering ugly territory.
    • Lethal Weapon 2 has psychotic blonde villains.

    Literature

    • Deconstructed in Toeckey Jones' book Go Well, Stay Well, about a white South African teenage girl who feels morally superior to Boers because she's Anglo-Saxon. She maintains this image for a while, even after she starts dating a non-racist Boer boy.

    Music

    American Indians

    Generally portrayed as either Always Male sex objects, wise mystics in tune with the earth, or greedy casino owners. They also like to assert themselves as the true Americans and call regular Americans as intruders.

    Germans

    World War II ended over sixty years ago, but the occasional German or German-American is portrayed with Nazi-esque (or even Imperial Prussian-style) mannerisms, if not portrayed as an outright villain. See also Germanic Depressives, and the Positive Discrimination version, Germanic Efficiency.

    Film

    • Hans Gruber in Die Hard is a gleeful send-up of cruel-but-effete Nazi stereotypes (played by an Englishman, obviously).
    • Wolfe Messer in Cannonball plays so many German clichés so straight that it seems to be okay to blow him up and make him the first character killed in that movie.

    Live-Action TV

    • Often seen as a meta-example, wherein a character portrayed as a Jerkass mistreats Germans: don't mention the war!
    • Allo Allo: although it mixed its sadistic perverts with its bumbling but affable Germans.

    Video Games

    • Again, Team Fortress 2: the Medic is a overtly sadistic German doctor, coming from Stuttgart 'in an era where the Hippocratic Oath had been downgraded to an optional Hippocratic suggestion.'

    Western Animation

    Italian-Americans

    Old stereotypes would have them as either mobsters or the wives/daughters of mobsters. These stereotypes still crop up from time to time, but they've mostly faded out... only to be replaced by the stereotype of the "guido" in the last few years. Thanks to MTV's Jersey Shore, having an Italian surname is an easy way for people to view you as a drunken, hard-partying, orange-skinned douchebag. If you're male, it's assumed that you use steroids, and if you're female, it's assumed that you're a slut. But hey, at least they make some great food.

    Real Life

    • Also, wasn't the "greaser" subculture of the 1950s largely their creation?

    Products of incest

    Yes, real-world incest is a horrible thing, and inbreeding does increase the odds of recessive alleles doubling up in the offspring. But demonization of incest tends to spill over onto any resulting next generation, creating an expectation that such children will invariably be mentally or physically impaired, if not a Cannibal Clan in the making.

    Film

    • A major aversion in Chinatown too bad it's the pedophile, incest-minded father-grandfather that wins.

    Jamaicans

    Even though the Jamaican stereotype of a dread-locked pot-smoking Rastafarian on the beach, mon, is usually Played for Laughs, it does get extremely annoying. It is quite common for someone from Jamaica to go abroad and be asked if they live on the beach, have air-conditioning, or if they use knives and forks. Really.

    • Also these stereotypes even spread to other Caribbean countries, due to Americans (and many others) not knowing much about countries other than Jamaica and maybe Bahamas.

    Western Animation

    Curly Haired-People

    This one probably has its roots in racism. Dead-straight hair is only naturally found in some Caucasian and East Asian ethnicities. Afro-textured hair has the most stigma attached to and its often referred to as "nappy" hair. Averted in '80s Hair (theatre).

    Film

    • Chris Rock's film Good Hair excamines how Afro-textured hair is negatively portrayed in the media, and how many women with it use damaging hair relaxers and products to straighten it.
      • Naomi Campbell has recently lost part of her hair because of years of hair relaxers.

    Live-Action TV

    • On British BBC drama Grandma's House Adam calls Simon a "natural pube-head".

    Real Life

    • Among the younger generations many girls straighten their hair day after day after day, and are probably going to damage their hair until that particular section of their hair grows out.
    • Curly Hair being straightened is often one of the things portrayed in an Unnecessary Makeover.
      • Unnecessary nothing, straightening hair makes it about 500 times easier to manage. Curly, it's ALWAYS knotted and frizzy, no matter what, straight it's a great deal less of both.
      • Granted, but straightening in these makeovers is typically done to enhance the subject's "beauty," while the practical concerns of caring for curly or frizzy hair aren't mentioned.
    • Some workplaces still require black women to straighten their hair, because natural hair is considered "off-brand"

    The Scottish

    Much like the Irish, they are portrayed as drunk and violent, with emphasis on violent. Expect anyone from Scotland to use weird insults, insist on wearing kilts, play bagpipes, and to be very aggressive. If they're portrayed positively, expect them to be loud, and your typical Proud Warrior Race Guy

    • The Scotsman, known only as The Scotsman, from Samurai Jack
    • Fat Bastard from the Austin Powers movie
    • Willie, though it is worth noting the Scottish seem to love him, and there's a debate there over whether he's from Aberdeen or Edinburgh
    • One Bugs Bunny short featured your stereotypical, kilt wearing Scotsman.
    • Gutsy Smurf from the live action Smurfs movie
    • YMMV, but one background in Street Fighter was set in a Scottish Distillery, which prominently featured a kilt wearing Scott.

    She: No, I had not heard about this.

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