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Lifesaboxofgardens t1_iydgds7 wrote

White guys named Mike can't be shark experts? This headline is something else lol.

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Liesthroughisteeth t1_iydh03w wrote

Most of these shows also help spread myths about the danger of sharks, making them out to be much more dangerous than statistics show. In effect these junk shows help demonize an animal where things like catching them and killing them for entertainment and killing them just for their fins has become acceptable.

People are the real danger and the blight on this planet....not the animals.

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CatFoodBeerAndGlue t1_iydhttt wrote

Maybe read the article before commenting.

>Nor does Shark Week accurately represent experts in this field. One issue is ethnicity: Three of the five most-featured locations on Shark Week are Mexico, South Africa and the Bahamas, but we could count on one hand the number of non-white scientists who we saw featured in shows about their own countries. It was far more common for Discovery to fly a white male halfway around the world than to feature a local scientist.

>Moreover, while more than half of U.S. shark scientists are female, you wouldn’t know this from watching Shark Week. Among people who we saw featured in more than one episode, there were more white male non-scientists named Mike than women of any profession or name.

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Lifesaboxofgardens t1_iydia1z wrote

I was quite literally just pointing out that it is funny to me that white guys named Mike are catching strays in this headline. It was pretty obviously meant to be inflammatory clickbait so it's doing its job, not everything has to be so serious.

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jogoso2014 t1_iydirn6 wrote

Yeah but they got sharks in it.

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orr250mph t1_iydjwex wrote

Sharknado is the goto shark documentary.

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WalkerSunset t1_iydnvvk wrote

Only reason I watched any of Shark Week was Kari Byron in a bikini on the Mythbusters Shark Week episodes.

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OperativeIvory t1_iydoo24 wrote

Shark Week was an actual show? What? I just thought it was just a euphemism.

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gleaming-the-cubicle t1_iydr9pc wrote

From the text:

>Nor does Shark Week accurately represent experts in this field. One issue is ethnicity: Three of the five most-featured locations on Shark Week are Mexico, South Africa and the Bahamas, but we could count on one hand the number of non-white scientists who we saw featured in shows about their own countries. It was far more common for Discovery to fly a white male halfway around the world than to feature a local scientist.

>Moreover, while more than half of U.S. shark scientists are female, you wouldn’t know this from watching Shark Week. Among people who we saw featured in more than one episode, there were more white male non-scientists named Mike than women of any profession or name.

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KumagawaUshio t1_iydra49 wrote

What so the issue is they flew in English speakers for a documentary targeted to English speakers rather than use subtitles? how is that a problem.

The Bahamas is a country with a smaller population than a mid size town in some countries so considering how that even in the USA shark specialist scientists aren't that common even in a country with over 80,000 times its population.

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HortonHearsTheWho t1_iydrfl4 wrote

You don’t actually have to be of the local ethnicity to be a zoological expert in local fauna. Just like you don’t have to be of a certain race to be an expert in virology, astronomy, etc. Seems weird to insist your scientists fill certain race quotas.

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CorporateSympathizer t1_iydrl99 wrote

>People are the real danger and the blight on this planet....not the animals.

Assigning traits of "innocence" to animals is also flawed though.

Animals can and will exploit their surroundings to the point of exhaustion when given the chance - for example when they're introduced to an environment that hasn't adapted to accomodate them.

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LiveFromNewYork95 t1_iydtnam wrote

Ok. Honestly, I will always contend that Shark Week is really only popular because people like to reference that one line from Step Borthers. But like, is it a secret that it's kind of whatever on the educational factor? I've never once heard someone reference something learned from Shark Week. Most years it's just like "Gronk was supposed to catch a touchdown while be defened by an actual great white shark but it turns out they just did a bunch of simulations"

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Redsox19681968 t1_iydudjz wrote

“Human Week” would be a lot scarier to watch

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EcstatMec t1_iyduzea wrote

Because attacking a demographic is always a good way to get people all riled up (like how nazis constantly claim the world is run by nefarious jews), and "white males" is the one demographic that is universally accepted as okay to attack.

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Jackattack736 t1_iydyxol wrote

Lol your point about languages is a bit moot seeing that the official language of The Bahamas is English. Subtitles wouldn't be needed.

As to if there are any Bahamian shark scientists, that I have no idea about

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LarryPer123 t1_iye3oit wrote

Problem Solved :

The race and Hispanic origin distribution of the people with the name MIKE is 78.3% White, 6.2% Hispanic origin, 10.6% Black, 2.8% Asian or Pacific Islander, 1.5% Two or More Races, and 0.6% American Indian or Alaskan Native. These figures should be considered only as a rough estimate. The purpose of this graph is to compare the name's specific race and Hispanic origin distribution to the distribution in the general population of the US.

On this basis, the people with the name MIKE have a higher likelyhood of being White and a lower likelyhood of being Hispanic origin.

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RedditRuleViolator t1_iye7k72 wrote

Is it ok to make those assumptions, though, still? Statistically speaking violent crime is committed at a higher rate by African Americans, but it's wrong to assume every African American is a criminal.

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downonthesecond t1_iyeafty wrote

It's TV, what did they expect?

Surely hey can do a better job at informing the public.

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anasui1 t1_iyec4pj wrote

they could have added "straight" while they were at it, so the trifecta of all the evil in society is completed

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dashrendar t1_iyel5ks wrote

No you can't. Kanye got in trouble for pointing out statistical facts as he did it in a horrible way. Chappelle pointed out those same facts and the facts about the demographics of people in said groups, but that it is wrong to make judgements about those groups that the facts fit. Like, you can think that this country has been ran by essentially all white males who are protestants, but it would be wrong to say that white males that are protestants run the country.

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JohnCavil01 t1_iyetpo7 wrote

Or you could instead try reading the article.

I agree the headline is exploiting clickbait tactics - but it makes some valid points if you could be bothered to take a few minutes to read it before getting up on your internet soapbox.

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EcstatMec t1_iyeufny wrote

>I agree the headline is exploiting clickbait tactics

Ok, so I'm right? Or are you saying I should not be allowed to judge them for their very deliberate title? Joke

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