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    <title>jordanpeele &amp;mdash; Strange Vistas</title>
    <link>https://strangevistas.com/tag:jordanpeele</link>
    <description>Writing about movies, anime, books, and media</description>
    <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 01:44:15 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title>Ebonics</title>
      <link>https://strangevistas.com/ebonics?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Get Out&#39;s main character, screaming&#xA;&#xA;Catherine Keener, wearing her best shark face, is the scariest thing about Get Out.  She looks just like my mother.&#xA;&#xA;Trust a white guy to make a black horror movie write-up all about him.&#xA;&#xA;Here&#39;s the issue, though. There&#39;s cultural and personal nerves I feel comfortable playing for fiddles. I am all for expounding about what writing says about the writer. But it should tell you how clearly Get Out comes from a place of being black in the U.S. that I don&#39;t feel like talking about that aspect of it at all.&#xA;&#xA;Chris Washington and his girlfriend Rose travel to her family&#39;s countryside estate. She&#39;s white. He&#39;s not. Even as an educated black man who - by all appearances - can make a decent living out of art, he&#39;s self-conscious about that difference. They have to call a cop to report an accident and there&#39;s a defensiveness to him, a desire to comply, that Rose tries to shake him out of.&#xA;&#xA;Then they meet her parents. Wealthy, successful, old money on top of everything else. They doth protest too much about being hip with their daughter dating a black guy. I mean, how could you think they mind? Look at them. They even treat their (too agreeable) black servants like family.&#xA;&#xA;And then there&#39;s the social event. Rich family friends stopping by for barbecue. More old white people who just want to talk to Chris, explain how they are fine with there being a black guy among them, curious about what being black in America is like.&#xA;&#xA;It&#39;s enough to make a brother want to disappear into the furniture.&#xA;&#xA;So is Get Out a horror movie first and a social message second? Is it an argument against racial discrimination put together in a suspenseful way? Is it a black writer-director following the dictum of writing what you know?&#xA;&#xA;All of the above and then some. It&#39;s a story born out of the horror of being treated differently because of a cosmetic difference, the tendency to agree with your abuser to avoid triggering even worse treatment, the knowledge that you aren&#39;t welcomed (or possibly even considered human) in your own country. I would never have expected this skill for terror to lurk under Jordan Peele&#39;s comedy. It touches a cultural nerve. It is suspenseful and tense on its own right, but if you&#39;re black in America, it&#39;s probably horrifying.&#xA;&#xA;small&#xA;#horror #jordanpeele #allisonwilliams #getout&#xA;/small]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://media.strangevistas.com/get-out-720.jpg" alt="Get Out&#39;s main character, screaming"/></p>

<p>Catherine Keener, wearing her best shark face, is the scariest thing about <em>Get Out</em>.  She looks just like my mother.</p>

<p>Trust a white guy to make a black horror movie write-up all about him.</p>

<p>Here&#39;s the issue, though. There&#39;s cultural and personal nerves I feel comfortable playing for fiddles. I am all for expounding about what writing says about the writer. But it should tell you how clearly <a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5052448/" rel="nofollow"><em>Get Out</em></a> comes from a place of being black in the U.S. that I don&#39;t feel like talking about that aspect of it at all.</p>

<p>Chris Washington and his girlfriend Rose travel to her family&#39;s countryside estate. She&#39;s white. He&#39;s not. Even as an educated black man who – by all appearances – can make a decent living out of art, he&#39;s self-conscious about that difference. They have to call a cop to report an accident and there&#39;s a defensiveness to him, a desire to comply, that Rose tries to shake him out of.</p>

<p>Then they meet her parents. Wealthy, successful, old money on top of everything else. They doth protest too much about being hip with their daughter dating a black guy. I mean, how could you think they mind? Look at them. They even treat their (too agreeable) black servants like family.</p>

<p>And then there&#39;s the social event. Rich family friends stopping by for barbecue. More old white people who just want to talk to Chris, explain how they are fine with there being a black guy among them, curious about what being black in America is like.</p>

<p>It&#39;s enough to make a brother want to disappear into the furniture.</p>

<p>So is <em>Get Out</em> a horror movie first and a social message second? Is it an argument against racial discrimination put together in a suspenseful way? Is it a black writer-director following the dictum of writing what you know?</p>

<p>All of the above and then some. It&#39;s a story born out of the horror of being treated differently because of a cosmetic difference, the tendency to agree with your abuser to avoid triggering even worse treatment, the knowledge that you aren&#39;t welcomed (or possibly even considered human) in your own country. I would never have expected this skill for terror to lurk under Jordan Peele&#39;s comedy. It touches a cultural nerve. It is suspenseful and tense on its own right, but if you&#39;re black in America, it&#39;s probably horrifying.</p>

<p><small>
<a href="https://strangevistas.com/tag:horror" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">horror</span></a> <a href="https://strangevistas.com/tag:jordanpeele" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">jordanpeele</span></a> <a href="https://strangevistas.com/tag:allisonwilliams" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">allisonwilliams</span></a> <a href="https://strangevistas.com/tag:getout" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">getout</span></a>
</small></p>
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      <guid>https://strangevistas.com/ebonics</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 02 Jul 2018 09:57:45 +0000</pubDate>
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