Sobre bruna boner leo

Depending on their mothers, they have looks that appeal to the multitude, or not. And that is the thing that makes all the difference — good looks — along with intelligence, and personal wisdom. Race is not an obstacle in America today.

Seven or eight years ago I worked for a short time with a young black woman in her mid-20’s. She was lighter than most blacks, but given that blacks have a wide spectrum of skin color that wasn’t surprising.

If you are curious or interested in, nothing wrong; if you are obsessed with or consider it determines, defines your being, behavior & identity regardless of your personal sense of self, then – wrong.

But when the point if the story is about race, rejection, acceptance and deception, casting people who cannot pass just makes everything crazy. I do not know how many people will have the patience to deal with a movie that fights against its own reason for being.

There are definitely plenty of lower profile aspiring actresses who would fit, but I guess a movie needs some star power.

That’s just sexual competition, not dislike of race mixing as such. They’re fine with it when it’s the other way around.

Back down South, each state had its own laws but even so, they all recognized that at some point, it got ridiculous and someone who was 31/32nd parts white was white. In other cases it was 7/8ths. In Louisiana, Homer Plessy was “of color.”

That’s a bizarre statement. I’ve never heard anyone here say anything like that. Certainly ‘a large number’ haven’t.

A person absolutely gets -50% of his DNA from each parent. SFAIK that is non-negotiable. Once you get past the parent/child relationship the degree of genetic relationship is up to a lot of luck. Siblings share 50% of their DNA on average but it can be much more or much less than that.

Though the “one drop” rule originated there. Perhaps due to pressure from White wives or concerns over inheritance (uniquely Napoleonic there until recently) with potential competing biracial offspring. Not sure if any actual valid study has been made on this topic (are biracial women more likely to be considered beautiful than non biracial, on average?). A forbidden topic?

I certainly don’t follow it, but I know enough about blacks and the role they play to draw the obvious conclusion.

Most of the time, putting on a play is a financially dicey proposition, so I’m in favor of making it easier on the people trying to entertain you by not holding acting companies to super high standards of realism in casting.

He seemed to think that it was loony to even imagine right here such a thing was possible in modern-day America. He’s probably right.

Plays are often put on by troupes or companies: a regular group of acting colleagues. They aren’t cast like a big budget movie with much care put into each part to get actors who would look right in the close-ups.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *