- By Gregory Rodriguez
- Los Angeles Times Columnist
- February 25, 2008
Six weeks ago, 29-year-old
Culver City Internet copy writer Christian Lander started a
blog, stuffwhitepeoplelike. wordpress.com, on a whim,
thinking he'd poke fun at himself and fellow white people.
Spending roughly two hours a day writing satirical posts about
"stuff white people like," Lander had no idea how much his little
inside joke would catch on. In the first week, the site received
about 200 hits a day. The next week it jumped to 600, and then
4,000 the next. By last week, he was averaging 300,000 daily hits.
Lander, who arrived in L.A. from Toronto 2 1/2 years ago, came up
with the idea for the blog after talking to a Filipino friend
about how much they both liked the HBO police drama "The Wire."
For some reason he's already forgotten, they both wished that more
white people watched the show. Which got him thinking: What
exactly do white people like?
- By "white people," Lander doesn't actually
mean the more than 221 million Americans who check that box on
the decennial census. But that's part of the fun. Lander is
doing to whites what scores of journalists and politicians do to
non-white minorities every day, "essentializing" complex
identities -- that is, stripping away all variety and reducing
them to their presumed authentic essences.
One irony-deficient reader complained that the blog was less
about white people than it was about yuppies. And without
knowing it, she was cutting to the heart of the joke. Lander is
gently making fun of the many progressive, educated,
upper-middle-class whites who think they are beyond ethnicity or
collectively shared tastes, styles or outlook. He's essentially
reminding them that they too are part of a group.
"I'm writing about the white people who think they're absolutely
unique and individual," Lander told me. "I'm calling them out
and poking fun of myself. The things I post are all the things I
like too!"
And what are those things? Recycling, expensive sandwiches,
standing still at concerts, Toyota Priuses, natural medicine,
irony, public radio, breakfast places, vegetarianism, organic
foods and being an expert on ethnic cultures are just a few.
Lander thinks that most of his readers are actually members of
the elite group he's lampooning. Some of the comments on the
blog suggest that he's right. "Oh, lord, it only hurts because
it's true! Love the blog," one reader who calls herself White
Lady wrote. But others are more perplexed. Responding to a blog
entry claiming that white people like Sarah Silverman, MC wrote,
"I'm white and I HATE Sarah Silverman (and would take Monique
... ANYDAY, so there.") Still another offended and anonymous
reader listed a lot of racist stereotypes about blacks,
Mexicans, Arabs, Jews and Chinese to even the score.
As unusual as Lander's site is, it is also part of a
sociological trend among whites who live in increasingly
non-Anglo cities and regions: their transformation into a
minority group. Whites used to think of themselves as
standard-issue American -- they had the luxury of not having to
grapple with the significance of their own racial background;
they were "us" and everyone else was "ethnic." Not anymore.
"Demographic shifts have put a new kind of pressure on that
category of people who were once just considered the norm," says
Mike Hill, author of "After Whiteness: Unmaking an American
Majority." "White identity is becoming particularized and
minoritized. No longer the normative category, it's becoming one
of many identities."
This pressure naturally leads to a greater sense of
self-consciousness as the new minority begins to negotiate their
relationships with members of other minorities (everyone else).
Still, Lander is less concerned with cross-ethnic and racial
relations than he is with how whites treat each other. As a
onetime graduate student in the Midwest, he got tired of coastal
condescension of the fly-over states and the glib assumption
that "red staters are evil and stupid."
"Too many white people don't like to be reminded that they're
white. They like to think that white people are those evil
corporate right-wingers or the uneducated masses who vote the
wrong way. But 'enlightened whites' are white people too and
have just as much of a group mentality as they think the red
staters have."
Still, Lander doesn't want you to think he's angry or taking
himself too seriously. "First and foremost, it's satire; it's
funny," he says. "I'm trying to make people laugh."
But he's doing so in a brave new world in which we're all
becoming minorities, and nobody's really sure who's going to
have the last laugh.
grodriguez@latimescolumnists.com
- Article at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-rodriguez25feb25,0,1952462.column
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