I’m asking because as a light-skinned male, I always use the standard Simpsons yellow. I don’t really see other light-skinned people using an emoji that matches their skin tone, but often do see people of color use them. Maybe white people don’t naturally realize a need to be explicit with emoji skin-tone or perhaps it’s seen as implicitly identifying or requesting white privilege.

  • Is there a significance to using skin-tone emojis, and if so, what is it?

  • Assuming there might be a racial movement attached to the first question, how does my use of emojis, both Simpsons yellow and light-skin, interact with or contribute to that?

Note: I am an autistic white Latino-American cis-gendered man that aims to be socially just.

Autistic text stim: blekh 😝 blekh 😝 blekh 😝 blekh 😝 blekh 😝 !!

  • DefederateLemmyMl
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    75 months ago

    yellow skin tone is clearly adjacent to whiteness and this was well established before aughts.

    Not it was not and it still isn’t. The reason we think of the Simpsons as white is because the context makes it crystal clear that they’re a typical white suburban family, not because of their color. If Matt Groening had made Simpsons green, purple or blue we’d still think of them as white, and at the same time smileys and later emojis would still be yellow. At best there is some parallel evolution here in the sense that both Matt Groening and Harvey Ball both chose yellow for the same reason: because it is perceived as a bright happy color.

    If you then associate yellowness exclusively with whiteness that’s purely a you thing, and honestly I find it pretty fucked up to see racial connotations like this in the most innocent things. Stop projecting your own prejudices.

    emojis caught widespread support in the mid/late aughts

    My argument is that bright yellow smileys have their own cultural lineage dating back to 1963, and it has nothing to do with skin color or race. Using these yellow smileys to express emotion in computer programs has been a thing since at least the mid nineties, not the mid/late aughts as you claim. The reason that it only appeared in the mid nineties and not earlier is technological and cultural. It has to do with the developing graphical and networking capabilities of computers around that time, and because smileys were popular in other aspects of culture around the same time. It has nothing to do with The Simpsons or other supposedly white cartoon characters.

    • @[email protected]
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      5 months ago

      Not it was not and it still isn’t.

      It is. Everyone, if they are being honest, knows that Springfield is mostly white. Everyone knows that when a famous white person makes a cameo, and is white, they are yellow and no one is confused as to who it is, or if they are trying to make some racially ambiguous version of that famous person. It’s not just me: everyone gets it.

      The reason we think of the Simpsons as white is because the context makes it crystal clear that they’re a typical white suburban family, not because of their color.

      If they had given them brown skin, but changed nothing else, would you still be saying it’s “crystal clear that they’re a typical white suburban family”? Of course not. Let’s not be absurd here. Obviously the choice of skin color plays a role in that interpretation.

      If you then associate yellowness exclusively with whiteness that’s purely a you thing,

      The funny thing is, I didn’t. It was never a thought that cross my mind. You know why? Because I’m white and it represents me. It wasn’t until I saw people start using the non-white ones that I started to realize my privilege in emojis. It wasn’t until I had a discussion about race and the Simpsons yellow did I realize how white that yellow actually is.

      My argument is that bright yellow smileys have their own cultural lineage dating back to 1963

      Yeah, but at no point have you established that this this history is non-white, or that the success wasn’t the result of being white-adjacent. You just say that because they choose yellow for non-racial reasons, well then yellow can’t be seen as white. But there is a logical leap here. I’ll just come back to my point that their success might even have to do with being white-adjacent.

      • DefederateLemmyMl
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        25 months ago

        white-adjacent

        You keep using that word as if it will somehow transform the color yellow into white and make your argument for you. It won’t happen. It’s yellow, and not just pale yellow but an extremely saturated and bright version of yellow. It is clearly not a natural skin tone of any race unless that person is very ill.

        If you look at a white person’s skin tone, it’s not a saturated color and the hue is certainly not yellow. If anything, it’s pink. How you can arrive at “yellow = white-adjacent” just boggles my mind. There are literally billions of people on this planet who are not white and whose skin tone is closer to the yellow of a smiley face. You can call any color with sufficient luminosity white adjacent then. Bright blue: white-adjacent. Bright red: white-adjacent. Bright green: white-adjacent. Wee look at all those white-adjacent colors:

        Anyway, I’m done with this discussion because I find you truly insufferable and I no longer want to spend my energy on it. If I can give you one piece of life advice: go find something worthwhile to get up in arms about.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          You keep using that word as if it will somehow transform the color yellow into white and make your argument for you.

          I’m using it because it describes what I mean. It’s the same reason they chose it for the Simpsons: it’s close enough to being white so there is no confusion as to what race they are. (Also, don’t think it isn’t glaringly obvious that you avoided my question)

          Anyway, I’m done with this discussion because I find you truly insufferable and I no longer want to spend my energy on it. If I can give you one piece of life advice: go find something worthwhile to get up in arms about.

          It was a good conversation until this point, it’s sad that when backed into a corner you were unnecessarily an asshole about it.

          But the funniest part about this is that it was the top level comment, that I responded to, that was “up in arms” about there being multiple skin tone colors. Even going so far as to call it “idiotic.” I just pointed out that I don’t believe it is as neutral as they were making it out to be, and explained why some non-white people might not feel represented by it. You then jumped in to attack me based by falsely claiming I said it was based off of the Simpsons.

          If anyone is “up in arms” about shit here, it’s you and the top level commentor, not me.