Relate to what? Their "blackness"? Being "trans"?subsub wrote: ↑Mon Aug 28, 2023 8:05 pmNot a question of them "only being interested" in watching something if people like them are featured; I suspect it's more that if they do happen to see someone on screen they can relate to, it encourages a more inclusive society rather than a cliquey closed shop.
Tiger Woods is a classic example: golf was seen 100% as a white man's sport; then he came along and encouraged a whole wave of black kids to take an interest in golf.
They may have watched it before, but Woods' success gave them a role model (his extra-curricular activities notwithstanding etc)
It depends on the context. Neighbours is fiction, so why should the writers feel obliged to include minorities because diversity says so?
It's sad that everything has become politicised, including sport. Golf is a "white man's game." Isn't that racist, sub? Does it matter what colour Tiger Woods is?