• Nepenthe@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Hopefully the latter. Thinking someone is attractive, I get, and being sad about it isn’t the kind of thing people can control.

    Unfortunate that I even have to question the meaning, because there absolutely are people on other platforms who are quite loud about their belief that only a real actor who is X in real life should play a role about X. Which is…not entirely how acting works.

    I didn’t want to think an idea so far left it became discriminatory would make its way to the fediverse so quickly, but I wish that chance was zero.

    • Damaskox@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      only a real actor who is X in real life should play a role about X

      I personally don’t mind these kinds of aspects being or missing in an actor’s personality/characteristics.
      If I don’t know what something looks like authentically, acting whatever while acting to be “it” seems good enough for me 😁 And if someone not being something acts authentically anyway, that’s good too!

      Exterior resemblance has a bigger impact on me.
      An example: It feels a bit weird how Disney’s new mermaid movie has a different-colored main actress compared to the animation. I know it’s important to bring all kinds of people to the mix but…I kinda got used to what Ariel originally looks like.

    • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      only a real actor who is X in real life should play a role about X. Which is…not entirely how acting works.

      I just have to assume that these people never watch any fantasy or sci-fi, since it’s gotta be a real birch finding elves and aliens and centaurs and death robots and orcs and lizard people.

      Like… it’s literally called acting. In a sense, their entire job is to lie (convincingly) about who they are.