Man, Gina Torres is a stupendously lovely woman.
She did the voice of Superwoman (evil version of Wonder Woman from an alternate Earth) in the new Justice League movie, and she was very, very good at being bad, without ever reminding me of Jasmine.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Man, Gina Torres is a stupendously lovely woman.
She did the voice of Superwoman (evil version of Wonder Woman from an alternate Earth) in the new Justice League movie, and she was very, very good at being bad, without ever reminding me of Jasmine.
Wow, really. Huh. I am too lazy to look it up, but perhaps what Vancouver has is more Pacific Rim/Asian folks and fewer peoples of African descent. Plus a pretty sizeable First Nations population.
[link] (Looks like the info was grabbed from Stats Canada.)
Even adding the Metis and Inuit populations to the First Nations population, it's still under 3%.
I like how Wikipedia lists being from another province as an ethnic origin.
How are aboriginal people not a visible minority? Weird. But black folk are a teensy sliver of that pie.
Steph, I need to add that to my Netflix queue. I've seen good reviews.
Interesting that those stats count Jews separately, not as part of a geographical ethnic group. (Official US immigration stuff used to do that, but not since the forties or so.)
Jews are listed in the same table as other geographical groups--why do you say they're not counted as a geographical ethnic group?
Well, because they're not really geographical -- I'm assuming that Jews from Germany, say, are counted as Jewish and not as German.
ita, I just stumbled upon this:
The Employment Equity Act defines visible minorities as 'persons, other than Aboriginal peoples, who are non-Caucasian in race or non-white in colour.'
Oh dear. Map Of The Day
FloatingSheep, a fun geography blog, looks at the beer belly of America. One maps shows total number of bars, but the interesting map is the one above. Red dots represent locations where there are more bars than grocery stores, based on results from the Google Maps API. The Midwest takes their drinking seriously.
Wisconsin is pretty much completely red. When I was a kid, there were about 21 bars in my home town and I think three grocery stores.
I'm not sure what criteria they're using to put what where, but everyone else on that list is geographical, so I thought it odd that you called them out as being treated differently, is all.
eta: They are also rolled into other groups in different tables.