#BlerdSquad
1. Attempting to reconcile two very distinct cultures which is, often times, difficult.
Fox / Via haleighpope.wordpress.com
In other words “too black for the nerdy kids, but too nerdy for the black kids.”
2. When people realize you’re not the “cool black kid” of lore.
Fox / Via crushable.com
Sorry guys. My input on what’s going on in hip-hop culture is severely limited.
4. Dealing with the people who expect you to always have strong feelings on the casting of traditional superheroes as POC.
FX / Via giphy.com
5. And when they realize you actually like the original Peter Parker, they treat it as if you’ve disrespected your people.
Warner Brothers Pictures / Via zap2it.com
Just because I don’t care that the next Spider-Man is black doesn’t mean I don’t support the cause, people.
6. The realization that there are not a lot of POC options to cosplay as.
Homegrown Pictures / Via youtube.com
8. Having to call out people for making racist slurs on Xbox Live is just a typical day.
NBC / Via youtube.com
9. Not to mention the racist remarks on online forums and in fan chat rooms.
20th Century Fox / Via giphy.com
10. And you always have a weird sense of camaraderie with any other POC at conventions.
ABC / Via youtube.com
11. You have to bite your tongue when people insist that historically, black people wouldn’t be in things like Lord of the Rings.
USA / Via Netflix.com
12. Or assume that the black character in a series must be your favorite.
Tyler the Creator / Via wifflegif.com
13. Then there are those times when you read a novel and imagine a character as a POC…
NBC / Via pandawhale.com
14. … but then you watch the movie and realize they’re actually white.
Universal Pictures / Via imgarcade.com
15. Or worse, when you know a character’s a POC, but the movie casts them as white anyway.
BBC One / Via christandpopculture.com
16. Then you notice that every main character in a video game is white.
Fox / Via gifhunterress.tumblr.com
17. POC superhero figures were so few that seeing them at all made a huge impact on you as a kid.
NBC / Via bustle.com
18. Which made meeting your childhood POC idols the greatest treat because of how much they made you believe that you could be special, too.
19. It’s always upsetting when you watch all the POC die or leave your favorite show.
USA / Via Netflix.com
20. And you’re reminded, yet again, how much representation actually matters.
ABC via moviepilot.com
ABC via moviepilot.com
21. But you can’t deny the comradeship that comes with being a part of the blerd community.
Fox / Via jennawaterford.tumblr.com
Thumbnail photo credit: Warner Brothers Television via http://starcrush.com/then-now-alfonso-ribeiro/
Read more: http://www.buzzfeed.com/moniquesteele/realities-of-being-a-black-nerd
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