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Let鈥檚 Talk 国产视频 the Fantasy That Was Pepsi鈥檚 Performative Protest

Kendall Jenner
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There鈥檚 this scene in Get Out where Bradley Whitford鈥檚 character says, 鈥淚 would have voted for Obama a third time if I could.鈥 Playing the seemingly harmless father of Daniel Kaluuya鈥檚 white girlfriend, Whitford perfectly portrays a certain kind of clueless white liberal whom most people of color know well. It鈥檚 the liberal who earnestly explains why The Wire is one of the best shows in television history to every black person they meet. Or the one who manages to mention, casually, in every discussion, how innovative, how raw Ta-Nehisi Coates or Haruki Murakami is.

Or the one who creates an ad depicting a generic sea of attractive, multi-racial millennials protesting some undefined injustice, starring鈥 Kendall Jenner of the Kardashian clan?

The brand of white liberalism that Jordan Peele pokes fun at in his directorial debut can be likened to the liberalism found in that incredibly tone-deaf Pepsi ad last week, a public gaffe that could only be usurped in a contest of mark-missing by Press Secretary Sean Spicer, who this week , very erroneously, that Hitler never used chemical weapons鈥攈is attempt to denounce the recent gas attacks carried out by Bashar al-Assad鈥檚 regime in Syria.

While there are countless articles and tweets out there describing the two-and-a-half minute ad, it鈥檚 worth hashing out where, exactly, it devolved from cluelessness to the sort of menace tightly stitched into the DNA of Get Out. The commercial begins with a hoard of young, diverse protesters pop-locking and posing down a street. What they鈥檙e protesting, we don鈥檛 really know. All we see is that they鈥檙e carrying Pepsi-blue signs that say, 鈥淛oin the conversation.鈥 Maybe they鈥檙e angry at the FCC鈥檚 decision to. Or at the grim reality that the Supreme Court is about to get . But this is performative protest鈥攕o who cares!

Enter the world鈥檚 most famous paid protestor, Kendall Jenner. The protest (and a cute boy, because protests are really just live versions of Tinder, apparently) catches her eye, and she decides to live boldly and leave her photoshoot, handing her blonde wig to the . As Skip Marley鈥檚 鈥淟ion鈥 plays over the joyous protest, Jenner grabs a Pepsi and breaks from the crowd to offer the sugary peace offering to the incredibly symmetrical line of police watching the protest. The image, of course, conjures the when Ieshia Evans stood, alone, against a line of militarized police in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Except instead of being met with handcuffs, Jenner is met with joyful cheers from the crowd of protesters behind her as the police officer cracks open the can of Pepsi.

How refreshing. I guess we鈥檙e to assume that, in the following moments, world hunger ended or that the United States formally apologized for slavery, Jim Crow, or the War on Drugs鈥攕omething along those noble lines

There are many implicit messages conveyed in the ad that are worthy of criticism, from the use of to peddle Pepsi to the idea that a who鈥檚 never expressed one iota of nuanced political thought should be the focal point of an ad that is, likely, supposed to be about marginalization. But what struck me as I watched鈥攁nd re-watched鈥攖he ad before it inevitably got was the earnest feel of the entire affair. it was that whoever sat in the writing room or in the director鈥檚 chair genuinely thought this was a great idea.

And that鈥檚 the bigger problem.

As the Washington Post鈥檚 global opinions editor, the ad 鈥渞epresents a pervasive and persistent white liberal fantasy of US protest politics that trivializes the long and oftentimes dangerous work of resistance and protest.鈥 She goes on to say that, at the same time, this fantasy 鈥渕arginalizes people of color who often are the drivers of such protests, at great costs to their lives and livelihoods.鈥

This shiny, fictionalized version of resistance has been especially apparent since the election, implicit in everything from to the. It inspires performances of 鈥渨okeness,鈥 carefully configured to earn brownie points from people of color鈥攁nd see right through the empty gestures. It spawns clever signs and Facebook statuses, neatly manicured not to challenge ignorant relatives. It creates a feminism that is easily claimed by celebrities who have other than admit that they forgot to that one time鈥攊n other words, they don鈥檛 have any hair, er, skin in the game

And while this fantasy existed long before Trump took over the White House in January鈥攅videnced in the widespread disapproval of actual protest in the wake of incidences of police brutality鈥攊t鈥檚 hard to think that the Pepsi ad wasn鈥檛 inspired, at least in part, by the images produced by the influx of first-time protesters into the 鈥渞esistance,鈥 whose only real engagement with protest before had probably been filtered through . This performative protest is easily commercialized and consumed, because it鈥檚 never had any grounding in reality鈥攊t can be put on, and taken off, just as easily as Jenner鈥檚 wig.

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Rachelle Hampton
Let鈥檚 Talk 国产视频 the Fantasy That Was Pepsi鈥檚 Performative Protest