It's not hard to grasp why festive films divide audiences and stir up debate, as many present a one-note image of Christmas.
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. The United Kingdom is not the first place ...
There isn’t a shortage of British stereotypes, from the drinking of endless cups of tea to their self-deprecating humour and all the apologising, complaints about the weather, and more; the list could ...
As the lights of hundreds of cars, carrying God knows how many intoxicated New Years drivers, sped by me at 4 a.m. just a few hours after the ball dropped in Times Square, I began to think about how I ...
Ah, Friends. A beloved American sitcom that has captured the hearts and souls of the British population since its creation in 1994 — including me. So much so that I nearly wrote a strongly worded ...
The post Bloc Party’s Kele Questions British Stereotypes in New Song “Melanin”: Stream appeared first on Consequence of Sound. Under his first-name-only moniker Kele, he dives into the idea of race ...
When it comes to South Asian representation on TV, there's always a risk that writers will fall into the trap of perpetuating stereotypes – think terrorists, young women controlled by their families ...
Red London buses, the bumbling Brit and the over-zealous American, and endless messages of goodwill and cheer: Christmas movies are often guilty of presenting a very one-note image of the festive ...