Meet Charles Little Bull: He's a role-model grad student in his
twenties who wears his long hair in two braids. And today, when
Nickelodeon unveils his character on "The Casagrandes," he'll become
one of the first Lakota figures to appear in a major American animated-TV
production.
Why it matters: His debut reflects Native American advocates'
heightened campaigning to champion more positive, high-profile representation
in media and news coverage.
- That's happening as they also push for sports teams to drop
offensive mascots with stereotypical images of Indigenous people
- Consulting producer Lalo Alcaraz,
who also worked on the Disney film "Coco," has been an outspoken
advocate for getting more Native Americans in film and television.
The details: Little Bull, voiced by Native American actor
Robbie Daymond, tutors one of the show's teen Latina characters,
Carlota Casagrande. His first appearance comes in an episode titled
"Undivided Attention."
- "Charles is a patient, encouraging, and positive tutor who never
gives up on a student no matter how challenging," a Nickelodeon
official tells Axios in a statement. "Charles loves to learn,
and when he"s not tutoring at the library, he"s hanging at the
library."
Between the lines: "The Casagrandes," which
debuted in 2019, centers around an 11-year-old girl trying to
survive in a big midwestern city. It's one of the first cartoons
in the U.S. to feature a multigenerational Mexican-American family.
- The spin-off from the network"s popular animation series, "The
Loud House," came as more networks were taking chances on Latino-themed
shows.
- Some activists are hoping other characters from the franchise,
like Little Bull, get their own spin-off.
What they're saying: "We"re finally seeing a shift in Native
representation in Hollywood and stories that center and include
contemporary Native characters," Crystal Echo Hawk, founder and
executive director of networking and advocacy group IllumiNative,
told Axios.
- She said she's hopeful Little Bull will be "the first of many
Native cartoon characters on Nickelodeon."
The PBS cartoon "Molly
of Denali" also premiered in 2019 and centered on an Alaska
Native family.
- That children's production focuses on a 10-year-old Athabascan
girl with a video blog about life in rural Alaska. PBS
said it was the first nationally distributed children"s series
with a Native American lead.
Don"t forget: From Looney Tunes to Peter Pan, earlier cartoons
for years portrayed Native Americans using racist and stereotypical
imagery. Often those characters didn't have names. Their tribal
affiliations were rarely mentioned.
- John Redcorn from the Fox cartoon series, "The King of the Hill,"
was a Native American character portrayed as a loner in leather
vests and windblown hair. His symbolism on the show was a topic
of debate among pop-culture critics.
|