![]() ![]() ![]() Someone gets their nose broken and is tied to a flagpole in their underwear. A voice is described as "runty, asthmatic-sounding."īullying includes name-calling and physical fighting, digging nails into scalp, strangling. Many jokes about female facial hair and a character being bald. The same accent that the German soldiers always had in World War II movies," stereotyping all Germans as Nazis. A character is referred to as speaking with a "foreign accent. ![]() A Seminole reservation is solely described as a place that sells tax-free tobacco products. Roy asks a boy called Mullet Fingers if he's "an Indian" because another kid called Charlie Three Crows had been Native. ![]() Native characters are referred to as "Indians" by White characters. Reference to someone being "merciless" toward a student from Haiti. She's nicknamed "Beatrice the Bear" due to her size, while other characters are referred to as "beefy," "husky," and "pudgy," and an adult says to a child: "You look like a kid that enjoys a good pancake." Roy is referred to as "Cowgirl," both making fun of his Montana home and using a feminine term as an insult. Even Beatrice, who's physically strong, brave, and capable, goes home to make dinner for her dad. Gender roles are reinforced: Police, security, and construction workers are all men women are mothers and teachers, and an actress is lusted after by men. ![]()
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