Black Lecturer Won't Let Daughter See 'Barbie,' Blames Whiteness
‘Barbie’ Not Black Enough? Professor Goes Viral For Not Taking Daughter To See The Film Due To “Whiteness”
Written by
Keenan Higgins
Published on
August 4, 2023
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Source: Jaap Buitendijk / Jaap Buitendijk
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Source: Warner Bros. / Barbie The Movie

Source: Warner Bros. Pictures / Warner Bros. Pictures
So, let us know: is #BarbieSoWhite, or do you only see the world in pink? Sound off with your thoughts, and take a look at how some reacted to this viral Barbie story on social media below:
1. My daughter and I just discussed this . Most barbies were just dipped in Blackface . Imo didnt represent our bodies types, or features .
via @locz4me
2. Who is racist now. Too much whiteness? Your daughter doesn't see white or black. She sees fun and what makes her happy. YOU, Sir, are the problem. She will be what YOU teach her.
via @RalphMo84775072
3. I walked out of the Barbie movie after ten minutes and hid in the bathroom (mens). I couldn’t handle the glaring whiteness. It was offensive.
via @JebraFaushay
4. How sad for the child 🙁 While everybody is entitled to their opinion, should University professors be held to higher standards when voicing possibly divisive stances that objectively add nothing of value other than their own prerogative? Honest question.
via @AThorn111
5. Whiteness?? Perhaps he meant Pinkness? The Barbie movie looks like a barfed up bottle of Pepto-Bismol
via @GoForDawn
6. CAN'T be the Only reason he didn't take her. But a good reason, nonetheless.
via @BobalooBlue
7. No imagine if a white professor had said he wouldn’t let his daughter see the black panther because when he saw the previews, he was overwhelmed by blackness. He would be placed on leave immediately by the University. Why are we accepting this double standard?
via @damsell_scott
8. i have not seen the movie yet, but from what iv gathered it seems very white feminist/corporate feminist. which will always be confusing to me as a black woman, because it seems like whiteness is still a power structure in barbie land, but u cant have whiteness without patriarchy
via @mielicy
9. I don’t understand why the author would even consider taking a three-year-old to a PG-13 movie. And why write a review of a movie you’ve never seen? Barbie is not a children’s movie.
via @handmadekathy
10. Whoomp, there it is…
via @nela_minded
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