Hot and Bothered: The Weird New Fetish for Historical Racism Porn

By Steve Sailer

06/08/2015

One of the stranger developments of the last decade or two is the emergence of a widespread public taste for historical racism porn: the younger generation gets titillated in a quasi-sexual fashion by depictions of things in the past that set off their Warning: Problematic brain alarms. You can hear it in movie theaters with young audiences: in a period piece, when a bad person says something racist or sexist, the teens react with the same gasps and titters as 1970s teens did when an actress took her top off.

Not surprisingly, clickbait sites such as The Atlantic Monthly cater to this 21st Century fetish by searching out Inappropriately Fraught media moments from the past. For example, somebody at The Atlantic named Lenika Cruz met her content generation quota by reviving a Tsk-Tsk frenzy that had been launched in 2012 by Buzzfeed over fast food ads from around 1976:

‘Dinnertimin’ and ‘No Tipping’: How Advertisers Targeted Black Consumers in the 1970s

In an attempt to reach African American customers, many U.S. businesses began integrating their commercials — often by relying on fraught stereotypes.

But the way many agencies went about this demonstrates how little they understood about their target demographic — and the results, like so many vintage ads, appear deeply misguided to modern audiences. To McDonald’s, for example, appealing to African American consumers specifically meant, in part, ads such as “Makin’ it” and “Dinnertimin,’” which made extensive use of “g-dropping.”

SJW’s have been getting hot and bothered over this ad that ran in Ebony and Jet in August 1976 for the last three years. NPR’s CodeSwitch responded to this ad in 2014 with:

Wow. Just. Wow.

A few facts, however:

Mr. Burrell was a big deal in the marketing industry. I can recall the market research firm I worked for in Chicago in the early 1990s putting out a press release boasting that they had talked him into joining our Board of Directors.

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