Better Off Ted (Failing dark skin)

Brief description

In the short-lived TV sitcom Better off Ted, the writers parody the phenomena of biased technology in an episode titled “Racial Sensitivity.” This episode presents the corporation where the show takes place installing a “new state of the art system that’s gonna save money,” but employees soon find there is a “glitch in the system that keeps it from recognizing people with dark skin.” When the show’s protagonist confronts his boss, suggesting the sensors are racist, she insists otherwise: The company’s position is that it’s actually the opposite of racist because it’s not targeting black people, it’s just ignoring them. They insist that the worst people can call it is indifferent … In the meantime, they’d like to remind everyone to celebrate the fact that it does see Hispanics, Asians, Pacific Islanders, and Jews. The show brilliantly depicts how the default Whiteness of tech development, a superficial corporate diversity ethos, and the prioritization of efficiency over equity work together to ensure that innovation produces social containment. The fact that Black employees are unable to use the elevators, doors, and water fountains or turn the lights on is treated as a minor inconvenience in service to a greater good. The absurdity goes further when, rather than removing the sensors, the company “blithely installs separate, manually operated drinking fountains for the convenience of the black employees,” an incisive illustration of the New Jim Code wherein tech advancement, posed as a solution, conjures a prior racial regime in the form of separate water fountains. Eventually the company sees the error of its ways and decides to hire minimum-wage-earning White employees to follow Black employees around the building, so that the sensors will activate. But then the legal team determines that, for each new White worker, they must hire an equal number of Black workers, and on and on, in a spiraling quota that ends when the firm finally decides to reinstall the old sensors. Ruha Benjamin Race After Technology, retrieved January 06, 2020.

Work that the situation appears in

Title Publication Type Year Creator
Better off Ted Narrative, TV series or episode Victor Fresco
Aesthetic characteristics
Machine P.O.V
Machine P.O.V.

Authored by

UUID
7df931e9-0c8d-417e-b1d7-efb53351338c