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Kal Penn discusses playing typical Indian roles, media's view on minorities

By Abram Brown
Posted: 11/17/08, 1:25 AM EST Section: Feature
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Even before Kal Penn walked onto the stage at Goldstein Auditorium Saturday night, shouts of "Kumar!" rippled through the 800-person audience.

Penn, the co-star of the "Harold and Kumar" movies, spoke about the portrayal of minorities in mass media today. Penn spoke intelligently, but he tried to keep things light with humor.

"Dude, when did I become an advocate?" Penn asked the audience at the beginning. "I'll try to live up to the expectations."

Penn discussed the question of whether the media should entertain or represent minorities. White culture still visually dominates. Studio and network executives are afraid to change what's worked in the past, Penn said.

When Penn received the script of "Van Wilder" and was offered the role of Taj_final Mahal Badalandabad, he didn't really know if he would do the movie. The character of Taj wasn't what he expected or wanted to play.

"From an artistic perspective, I thought it was boring," Penn said of the characterization of Taj. "I wanted to play something a little more dynamic."

Penn accepted the role. He and the two writers, Brent Goldberg and David Wagner, changed Taj a bit. But the writers wanted to follow conventional wisdom as much as possible and include several racially insensitive lines, Penn said.

"Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle" broke away from a scripted formula, thanks to writers Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg, Penn said.

"They wanted to write a script for the sake of writing a funny script," Penn said of Hurwitz and Schlossberg.

If the two writers had followed the examples of past successful movies, "Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle," would have been something much different, Penn said.

"The movie would have been called 'David and Jason go to McDonalds,' " Penn said.

David Seon, sophomore sport management major, said he came to see Kal Penn after several of his friends at Northwestern University told him about hearing Penn speak. Seon also said he thought the price to hear Penn was cheap.

"I loved 'Harold and Kumar,'" Seon said. "Three dollars for a ticket? Can't beat that."

Even TV shows today with diverse casts, like "30 Rock" or "Lost," don't deal with race or diversity in the plots, Penn said. And there's the problem of a few businesses dominating the media industry, Penn said.

There are five big companies that control the media, Penn said. But today, Penn pointed out, people have more opportunities to get their message out and to show off what they can do by using Web sites like YouTube.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 3 of 3

Raj

posted 11/17/08 @ 3:44 PM EST

Unimpressive talk. Penn spent far too long on things that he didn't seem to realize were of minimal importance to Asian Americans when it comes to prejudice. (Continued…)

Sanjeev Kumar

posted 11/17/08 @ 10:39 PM EST

Kalpen spent too much time reading those letters. He should've talked about the main points of the letters. He also looked unprofessional by keeping on looking at his watch and drinking water every two seconds. (Continued…)

Tanush Sincar

posted 11/18/08 @ 2:11 AM EST

he totally should have done that.

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