You’re a bit late with this argument. Television and especially commercials are full of people without perfect bodies, actors who look much more like the average person on the street. This is absolutely the Golden Age for ordinary looking people on screen. To my knowledge, nothing approaching this level of ordinariness has ever existed on screens at any time since movies were invented. Nor do I see any evidence that they are primarily being laughed at.
The Endless vary according to culture. Death was only White in the comics because the primary audience of the comics in the nineties were White Americans. Thirty years later, the audience has changed–and indeed, if you go back and look at the old comics, Death may no longer look like a White girl to you in those comics, either. Her appearance depends on whether you’ve changed.
These racist criticisms of casting are always the same: “I don’t normally criticize race in casting, here are some decisions I didn’t criticize and that proves racism doesn’t motivate me here, but here are my racist reasons for criticizing this decision.”
Yawn.
If you say so. My experience certainly does not match yours.
I haven’t seen anyone who looks like this or even this actually cast in a role.
Did you actually watch the Late Show intro that I linked to?
Do you understand the difference between “primarily” and one counterexample?
As for your images, how about Googling Kate on This is Us? And here’s an article, Critic’s Notebook: TV’s Fat Women Are No Longer a Joke, that has so many examples it doesn’t even need Kate.
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If I were in charge, I would have everyone who whined about “woke movies” watch 1954’s Salt of the Earth. It might make their heads explode.