Monday, November 25, 2024

Bee Gees drummer Dennis Bryon died four days apart from original sticksman Colin Petersen

Bee Gees drummer Dennis Bryon died within days of the group’s other sticksman Colin Petersen. Following the news that...

Latest Posts

Kimberly Wyatt opens up about cancelled Pussycat Dolls reunion

Kimberly Wyatt lost money when The Pussycat Dolls reunion was cancelled. The 42-year-old singer shot to fame as part...

Drake to tour Australia

Drake is heading Down Under for the first time in eight years to bring his 'Anita Max Wynn Tour' to Australia.

Linkin Park’s Emily Armstrong celebrates ‘monumental impact’ Chester Bennington had on her vocals

New Linkin Park singer Emily Armstrong has hailed the late Chester Bennington as a huge inspiration. The former Dead...

George Harrison’s guitar sells for record-breaking price at auction

A guitar bought by the late George Harrison for £58 has sold for over £1 million at auction. The...

Hank Azaria officially steps down from voicing Apu on The Simpsons

Hank Azaria has confirmed he will no longer voice Apu Nahasapeemapetilon on ‘The Simpsons’.
The 55-year-old actor originally provided the voice for the Kwik-E-Mart proprietor, but in 2017 the show came under fire for making the Indian-American character a racist caricature, who was voiced by a white actor.
And now, Hank – who voices characters including Moe Szyslak, Chief Wiggum, Comic Book Guy, and Carl Carlson – has confirmed he will no longer be voicing Apu, although he’s not sure what will happen to the character.
Speaking to Slashfilm, he said: "All we know there is I won’t be doing the voice anymore, unless there’s some way to transition it or something. We all made the decision together … We all agreed on it. We all feel like it’s the right thing and good about it.
"What they’re going to do with the character is their call. It’s up to them, and they haven’t sorted it out yet. All we’ve agreed on is I won’t do the voice anymore."
Hank couldn’t comment on whether or not Apu would be written out of the show or simply be recast with a more suitable voice actor, but creator Matt Groening said in 2018 he was keen to keep Apu in the show.
He said at the time: "I love Apu. I love the character, and it makes me feel bad that it makes other people feel bad. But on the other hand, it’s tainted now – the conversation, there’s no nuance to the conversation now. It seems very, very clunky. I love the character. I love the show.
"We’re not sure exactly how it’s going to play out. Back in the day, I named the character after the ‘Apu Trilogy’ by Satyajit Ray. I love Indian culture and Indian film and Indian music. I thought that the name was a signal that we had, at least, a scholarly intention. I thought maybe a kid was going to grow up and find out what the name came from and go watch the ‘Apu Trilogy’, which are the greatest films, basically, in the history of cinema."
Matt, 65, said will not write Apu out of the show to appease critics and if the creative team can come up with suitable and funny stories for him and his family he will continue to be a part of the Springfield ensemble cast.
He added: "If we come up with a good story we’ll do it, but some of the stuff the show got taken to task for, we covered in an episode a couple of years ago [in 2016’s ‘Much Apu About Something’] … My guess is I agree, politically, with 99 per cent of the things that Hari Kondabolu believes. We just disagree on Apu. I love the character and I would hate for him to go away. I am sorry that ‘The Simpsons’ would be criticized for having an Indian character that, because of our extraordinary popularity – I expected other people to do it. I go, maybe he’s a problem, but who’s better? Who’s a better Indian animated character in the last 30 years?
"As many people have pointed out, it’s all stereotypes on our show. That’s the nature of cartooning. And you try not to do reprehensible stereotypes."
The conversation around Apu began in Hari Kondabolu’s 2017 documentary ‘The Problem with Apu’, which explored whether or not Apu’s character had contributed to negative stereotypes of Indian-Americans.

Latest Posts

Kimberly Wyatt opens up about cancelled Pussycat Dolls reunion

Kimberly Wyatt lost money when The Pussycat Dolls reunion was cancelled. The 42-year-old singer shot to fame as part...

Drake to tour Australia

Drake is heading Down Under for the first time in eight years to bring his 'Anita Max Wynn Tour' to Australia.

Linkin Park’s Emily Armstrong celebrates ‘monumental impact’ Chester Bennington had on her vocals

New Linkin Park singer Emily Armstrong has hailed the late Chester Bennington as a huge inspiration. The former Dead...

George Harrison’s guitar sells for record-breaking price at auction

A guitar bought by the late George Harrison for £58 has sold for over £1 million at auction. The...

Don't Miss

Bob Dylan Review: Rough, Rowdy and as relevant as ever

Dylan comes on stage and doesn't speak. The audience are reverentially quiet, too. The Royal Albert Hall has turned into a cathedral,...

Jamiroquai announce first tour since 2019

Jamiroquai have announced their first tour in six years. The 'Heels of Steel' jaunt will see the 'Virtual Insanity'...

Ed Sheeran didn’t give Band Aid 40 ‘approval’ to use his vocals

Ed Sheeran has claimed he did not give his consent for his vocals to be used on the new Band Aid 40...

Mac Miller’s lost album Balloonerism coming ‘soon’, according to new trailer

Mac Miller's lost album 'Balloonerism' will seemingly posthumously drop "soon". During Tyler, the Creator's Camp Flog Gnaw festival in...

Luke Grimes’ next album will be ‘heavily influenced’ by his baby boy

Luke Grimes' next album will be "heavily influenced" by his baby boy. The 40-year-old actor and country singer recently...

Stay in touch

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.