Tuesday, September 15, 2015

WHITE PRIVILEGE EXPLAINED THROUGH FILM CLIPS

Thought this was an appropriate post on the anniversary of the Birmingham bombing that assassinated those four young girls...I still love many of the films these clips came from, as I do all the old Westerns that bent over backward to salve the South's poor loser complex (and often contained this phrase)...but damn it was so obvious to me even as a kid how wrong this so common expression then was...

3 comments:

tpw said...

Insidious.

Curtis Faville said...

I must confess to having never seen any of the scenes in these movies. And to never having heard the phrase "free, white and 21" before.

It's possible I may have seen one as a child. There were a lot of old movies on television in the 1950's, but most of the dialogue went right over my head.

It's peculiar they'd use the phrase in a movie with Harry Belafonte. His indignation in the film would have to have mirrored his own personal rage then.

Perhaps even weirder is that the co-star in the film in question--The World, the Flesh and the Devil [1959]--was Inger Stevens, a Scandinavian beauty who would later secretly marry African American actor and director Ike Jones (in 1961).

Ironic.

Lally said...

you must be younger curtis, not only was it in the movies when i was a kid constantly but also in real life people would say it quite a bit...and as for Inger, ironic indeed...