aaliyahman wrote:
What is absolutely hillarious is that you've grouped together such differing celebrities.
Aye. Of course it is. Because seperating them suits your argument. Yet, logically, it serves no purpose. You can't pick and choose celebrities and their careers just because it suits your argument. If so, I'll do the same for you to counter. God, this country is always so kind to our athletes of an ethnic origin.
Kelly Holmes and Denise are sports stars; they earn their achievements on the track, the media has hardly anything to do with their career. Fail 1.
And yet the fact the pair of them are constantly still in the medias eye, after their careers have long finished, entirely negates your already selective logic.
Mel B was part of a mixed race (4 white and 1 black) girl group. What was her nickname? Scary. When she went solo she had the initial hype from the group and then look what happened. Her songs were just as good as her contemporaries arguably. Fail 2
I'm actually sat here, in disbelief, that you're using the fact that she was called 'scary' spice as if it was some sort of slight against her. How big is the chip on your shoulder?
Alicia Dixon has had an amazing solo career hasn't she

I love the girl but you are blind not to see the stigma on her career, whilst she's on these shows receiving high publicity, she can't get a massive solo hit single.She is primarily a singer after all. Fail 3
The original post said f**k all about musicians, or how good their singing careers are. It was specifically a blanket statement suggesting that
We in England do't seem to like a confident black woman. The several examples I gave which entirely debunked that farcical assumption stand firm to counter the original comment, which made no reference to their careers whatsoever.
UKMusicLova wrote:I know this is getting off-topic now but I think skin tone is a factor too.
If we look at people who's attitudes have been slated: Jamelia, Estelle, Alexandra Burke, Misha B etc.... they are all dark skinned.
Or Cher Lloyd, Liam Gallagher, Adele, Dappy off the top of my head who've had their attitudes slated who just so happen.....not to be dark skinned.
I'm just genuinely baffled at how some of you can blindly through out such clearly untrue sweeping assumptions that aims to judge the majority of the general public of an entire country, and expect to be taken seriously on the basis that the only person of colour in the spice girls was called Scary
I did read somewhere and do agree to an extent that some people don't tend to like arrogance, at least not when it's unfounded (which, in her, it is). But that is a trait of her personality, not her skin colour, and selectively plucking celebrities that suit your argument but then choosing to ignore those which negate it undermimes the entire argument.