• Not directly relevant but whenever I consume Indian media, I’m struck by how utterly foreign it feels. I watch a Chinese show? I see where it comes from. Mexican? Through line found. French? I understand the satire. Indian social norms and cultural development seem either so idiosyncratic or novel that they sincerely take me out. They, as a people and a nation, befuddle me in such a unique way. This isn’t a critique, just someone looking from the outside with curiosity and confusion.

    • Lath@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      You’re seeing India as a whole, but you gotta split it into pieces. It’s a melting pot of ethnicities that exist disharmoniously. Unlike China where the Han Chinese pretty much wiped out most of their extended family over the course of centuries by way of brutal warfare and discrimination, India managed to retain some familial morality where everyone lives together while hating each other.
      It’s a similar, yet different path of evolution.

      China - There is no war in Ba Sing Se.
      India - Bloody bitch bastard bloody
      USA - Murika, fuck yeah!

      And yes, I am talking out of my ass.

    • 11181514@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Chinese media: everything is perfect in an uncanny valley sort of way

      Mexican media: drugs, Jesus, boobs, or cartels

      French media: like a student film with a budget

      Indian media: this guy just punched a car so hard it turned into a transformer, then he turned into a transformer, then they fought and now everyone’s dancing

    • morphballganon@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      This is precisely why Ms. Marvel felt so weird to me. I felt like certain parts kept those novel ideas, and other parts were adjusted for an American audience, and the two didn’t mesh at all.