Pity Teri Hatcher? Yes, indeed
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RINA JIMENEZ-DAVID has written an exhaustive article detailing how Teri Hatcher’s life will “be hell from now on” considering her character’s comment on the show. I wonder, has the latest season of “Desperate Housewives” even reached the Philippines? But again, that shouldn’t matter. Or should it? Should it really matter to look at the context of the joke before passing judgment? After all, it’s the context that determines whether something is funny or insulting. Take for example the movie “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan,” which can be seen as insulting, incredibly anti-Semitic, and sexist. But as Sacha Baron Cohen (who happens to be a devout Jew) pointed out, if you look at the context of the jokes and the movie itself, you will soon realize that the jokes are there to poke fun at American society and their prejudices and not against women or Jews.
A lot of comments have been already said about this controversy, but here is what I think the context is about and why I think ABC really didn’t meant to offend anyone. First of all, my mom, just like a lot of Filipinos here in Canada or in the US, is a nurse who was educated in the Philippines. Despite this, I honestly think the comment was taken out of context.
If you actually look at the context of the joke, the comment was supposed to poke fun at the image of the American (not Filipino) medical student who got rejected by all American medical schools — due to low grades or horrible MCAT results for example — so they end up studying overseas. The writers could have chosen any country but decided with the Philippines as an afterthought. I’m sure if they chose any other country, say India or Mexico, not only will this not be a big deal, but I bet most will find it funny. In the US, it is usually thought of that if someone cannot get into an American medical school and they really want to be a doctor, they usually end up studying overseas where admission regulations tend to be not as competitive. It wasn’t about Filipinos (the doctor in the scene was white) but American med students who could not get into a US medical school.
