grail
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2002
- Messages
- 1,316
- Reaction score
- 7
actually,
the way i understood it, the reason Speedy Gonzalez got back on the air is because there were certain key figures in the hispanic community that pointed out, very loudly, that Speedy was not the negative stereotype that Cartoon Network percieved him as being percieved to be.
botton line, they THOUGHT they were being sensitive to a section of the community. that same section decided that doing so was an incorrect action, and their leaders went to the source and affected change. Speedy is back on the air. petitions had nothing to do with it.
when it comes down to it, the only reason the Speedy thing worked is because CN was only trying to do the right thing in the first place. remember, somewhere up the line, Ted Turner's on their owner list...he's still living down that whole "Tomahawk Chop" thing.
the point is, Das Goot is right, petitions don't work. i have yet to see one EVER having an actual impact, though i've seen many of them claim victory when someone else forces the same decision that the petition was trying to get accross. most places won't even READ petitions...especially ones that come from the internet because they're too easy to fake. it wouldn't be too hard for one of us to run a crawler, collect email addresses (just like SPAMmers do), and use those addresses on the petition. they're just not an effective tool. you want change? call. write letters. make as many contacts as you can, and present a well-thought out and defined case. tell them WHY it's a good idea to listen to you. what's in it for them. that's what they want to hear. petitions are probably deleted as soon as they come in.
just my opinion...
oh, and no fair blasting the guy who came in and said "you sure this is a good idea" just because he's saying the same thing that others have said. sometimes, when the world's against you...it's because the world's right...but that's just my opinion too...
the way i understood it, the reason Speedy Gonzalez got back on the air is because there were certain key figures in the hispanic community that pointed out, very loudly, that Speedy was not the negative stereotype that Cartoon Network percieved him as being percieved to be.
botton line, they THOUGHT they were being sensitive to a section of the community. that same section decided that doing so was an incorrect action, and their leaders went to the source and affected change. Speedy is back on the air. petitions had nothing to do with it.
when it comes down to it, the only reason the Speedy thing worked is because CN was only trying to do the right thing in the first place. remember, somewhere up the line, Ted Turner's on their owner list...he's still living down that whole "Tomahawk Chop" thing.
the point is, Das Goot is right, petitions don't work. i have yet to see one EVER having an actual impact, though i've seen many of them claim victory when someone else forces the same decision that the petition was trying to get accross. most places won't even READ petitions...especially ones that come from the internet because they're too easy to fake. it wouldn't be too hard for one of us to run a crawler, collect email addresses (just like SPAMmers do), and use those addresses on the petition. they're just not an effective tool. you want change? call. write letters. make as many contacts as you can, and present a well-thought out and defined case. tell them WHY it's a good idea to listen to you. what's in it for them. that's what they want to hear. petitions are probably deleted as soon as they come in.
just my opinion...
oh, and no fair blasting the guy who came in and said "you sure this is a good idea" just because he's saying the same thing that others have said. sometimes, when the world's against you...it's because the world's right...but that's just my opinion too...