This probably doesn’t count: in, “A Christmas Story,” the family goes out to eat when the hillbilly neighbor dogs destroy their turkey. They go to a Chinese restaurant. The restaurant is in a defunct bowling alley. The neon sign out front has the “W” burnt out; it says BO LING. Is that the name of the owner? It was several years before I really caught on.
Why not Pietà Barbie with a weeping, blue and white-draped Barbie holding the bloody loincloth-clad Ken across her lap? Or maybe a modestly crucified Barbie?
What’s humorous is the people complaining about this. First it was “Why does Barbie have to be White & blonde! Racist!” Now it’s “Why is Barbie celebrating a different culture? Cultural appropriation!”
Supposedly the style of Americanized “Chinese” food you find any every Chinese restaurant in the US is becoming popular in China. Except over there it’s marketed as “American” food.
I once bought a pair of swim trunks at a touristy store in Costa Rica after my other pair got torn. They were emblazoned with the words “1952 SPORTS”. I have no idea what, if anything, was significant about the year 1952 in the world of sports.
Actually your SPORTS had reminds me of a shirt The Onion used to sell in their online store. It read “The sports team from my area is superior to the sports team from your area.”
Le Palace, the most upscale strip club in Panama City, which is a few blocks from my house, outfits its doormen as Canadian Mounties. It’s certainly incongruous to see them standing next to the palm trees by the door. They evidently do it in imitation of Crazy Horse, the famous cabaret in Paris.
I’m wondering where the idiotic “3,000-year-old tradition” comes from. I found this article saying that it was started by the Aztecs 3,000 years ago (the Aztec’s known history goes back around 800 years.) could that be the source the NYT used for the date, or is someone else claiming to know about North American cultural celebrations continuing unbroken for 3,000 years? Because to me that sound a lot more offensive than a Barbie doll.
Much of the discussion is about food viewed through the prism of another culture.
But it reminded me how universities are becoming more politically correct. One example was when yoga classes were cancelled at the University of Ottawa because they were complaints that this was “cultural appropriation”. Seems more like cultural diffusion to me. You probably don’t want to get into academic discussions of Hallowe’en costumes.
Then if the problem is perceived commercialization, they should go shopping in New Mexico. Shops have been making money off Day of the Dead stuff for ages.