Race Swapping

2010Discourse meme / exploitable formatactive

Also known as: Raceswapping · Race-swapping

Race Swapping is a 2010s discourse meme sparked by *The Last Airbender* and *Dragon Ball Evolution* controversies, evolving into an exploitable format of absurd parody posters swapping characters' races.

Race swapping is an internet term and meme format centered on the practice of changing a fictional character's or historical figure's race in media adaptations. Online debate around the concept picked up in the early 2010s following controversies like *The Last Airbender* and *Dragon Ball Evolution*, then evolved into an exploitable meme format where users create absurd parody posters swapping iconic characters' races for comedic effect. The discourse reached peak irony in June 2025 when Marvel Comics introduced an actual white Black Panther.

TL;DR

Race swapping is an internet term and meme format centered on the practice of changing a fictional character's or historical figure's race in media adaptations.

Overview

Race swapping describes the practice of casting an actor whose race differs from a character's established depiction in a film, TV show, or comic adaptation1. Also spelled "Raceswapping" or "Race-swapping," the term covers both the real industry practice and the meme ecosystem that grew around debating it7. On the meme side, the most common format involves creating fake movie posters or promotional images that swap a well-known character's race to an absurd degree, often casting Ryan Gosling in roles associated with Black characters or historical figures5.

The practice isn't exclusively one-directional. Early high-profile cases involved white actors replacing characters of color, commonly known as whitewashing1. But the bulk of modern online discourse and memes focus on established white characters being recast with Black performers, which critics call "Blackwashing"3. The meme format plays on the perceived asymmetry, with users creating increasingly ridiculous parody castings to satirize the trend.

Race-based casting changes have existed throughout cinema history. The 1997 *Starship Troopers* turned the explicitly Filipino Juan "Johnny" Rico into a white character played by Casper Van Dien1, and Captain Nemo, originally an Indian prince in Jules Verne's novels, has been played by white actors including James Mason, Patrick Stewart, and Michael Caine across multiple adaptations1. But the specific term "race swapping" didn't gain online traction until the early 2010s, when M. Night Shyamalan's *The Last Airbender* (2010) and the live-action *Dragon Ball Evolution* (2009) sparked organized fan backlash over white actors being cast in originally non-white roles4.

*The Last Airbender* proved the bigger catalyst. Fan communities that had mobilized against the casting decisions during production saw their complaints validated when the film flopped critically and commercially. These early debates established the vocabulary and rhetorical framework that would drive over a decade of online discourse, setting the template for how fans would respond to every future casting announcement that deviated from a character's established appearance1.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube, social media (casting controversy discourse)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2010
Year
2010

Race-based casting changes have existed throughout cinema history. The 1997 *Starship Troopers* turned the explicitly Filipino Juan "Johnny" Rico into a white character played by Casper Van Dien, and Captain Nemo, originally an Indian prince in Jules Verne's novels, has been played by white actors including James Mason, Patrick Stewart, and Michael Caine across multiple adaptations. But the specific term "race swapping" didn't gain online traction until the early 2010s, when M. Night Shyamalan's *The Last Airbender* (2010) and the live-action *Dragon Ball Evolution* (2009) sparked organized fan backlash over white actors being cast in originally non-white roles.

*The Last Airbender* proved the bigger catalyst. Fan communities that had mobilized against the casting decisions during production saw their complaints validated when the film flopped critically and commercially. These early debates established the vocabulary and rhetorical framework that would drive over a decade of online discourse, setting the template for how fans would respond to every future casting announcement that deviated from a character's established appearance.

How It Spread

The conversation escalated in 2016 when Zendaya was announced as Mary Jane Watson in *Spider-Man: Homecoming*. MJ had traditionally been depicted as a red-haired white woman in Marvel comics, and some fans labeled the casting another case of what they called "Ginger Erasure." Imgflip user RustyB uploaded a side-by-side comparison meme of Zendaya and the classic comic version in late 2016, one of the first viral image macros directly using the race swap framing.

By the early 2020s, the format graduated from fan grumbling to a full-blown meme category. Users began crafting parody movie posters that exaggerated race swaps to absurd extremes, often featuring Ryan Gosling in historically Black roles. On February 25th, 2023, a Reddit user posted a fake George Floyd documentary poster starring Gosling on r/okbuddyretard, earning over 660 upvotes before moderators removed it.

Disney's live-action *The Little Mermaid* (2023), starring Halle Bailey as Ariel, became the biggest single flashpoint of the era. Defenders argued a mermaid's skin color is irrelevant to the story. Critics like Newsweek columnist Alex Miller, himself Black, pushed back: he argued that after Disney made two *Black Panther* films featuring original Black characters, recasting a white Danish folklore character was a step backward, not forward. Miller raised the obvious thought experiment: imagine if Marvel's Blade, the historically Black vampire hunter, "became a pasty-white British man. They'd rain down fire and brimstone on Kevin Feige".

Opinion writer Brandon Morse at RedState made a broader case that the practice betrayed a failure of imagination, writing an original superhero character on the spot to prove new non-white characters could be created just as easily. Comic creator Eric July echoed the criticism, calling race-swapped characters "sloppy seconds" and "hand-me-down" versions that white creators pass along after decades of merchandise and development.

The entire discourse reached peak irony in June 2025. Marvel Comics introduced Ketema, a white-skinned son of T'Challa, as the new Black Panther. The character was created by Christopher Priest, a Black writer iconic for his work on the *Black Panther* series, who openly resented being typecast as "the guy who writes Black people because he's Black". "Marvel Comics did the meme. We have a white Black Panther!" wrote one X user. The reaction split along predictable lines: fans who'd defended years of race swapping in one direction were suddenly outraged, while those who'd criticized the practice celebrated the turnabout. The popular hashtag #RemakeADisneyClassic, where users had spent years photoshopping white actors into traditionally Black or minority Disney roles, suddenly felt less like satire and more like prophecy.

How to Use This Meme

The race swapping meme typically takes one of these forms:

1

Parody movie poster: Pick a well-known character or historical figure strongly associated with one race and create a fake promotional poster "announcing" a casting swap. Ryan Gosling is the go-to choice for reverse (white-for-Black) swaps.

2

Side-by-side comparison: Place the original character design next to the adaptation's version, usually with minimal or no caption, letting the visual contrast speak for itself.

3

Fake studio announcement: Mock a Netflix, Disney, or Amazon press release about a race-swapped adaptation, playing on these studios' reputations for diverse recasting.

4

Historical figure edit: Photoshop a different-race actor into a historical role, like a white actor as Frederick Douglass or a Black actress as Queen Victoria, pushing the concept to its most absurd conclusion.

Cultural Impact

The race swapping debate moved from niche fan forums to mainstream media through high-profile opinion pieces and viral moments. Newsweek ran an essay by Alex Miller arguing that race swaps insult Black audiences by offering tokenism instead of genuine investment, pointing to Mami Wata, a water spirit from West African folklore, as an example of an original Black character Disney could adapt rather than recoloring Ariel.

The 2025 white Black Panther exposed a fault line in the discourse that the memes had been mapping for years. Commentators who'd insisted fictional characters' skin color shouldn't matter were suddenly arguing that T'Challa's Blackness was essential to the story. People who'd laughed at the Gosling-as-Black-Panther memes watched it materialize on the comics page. Many speculated the twist was a setup for a villain reveal, but the initial reaction was electric regardless.

TV writers sometimes made the subtext explicit. The head writer of *She-Hulk* said she wrote the series partly as a "f*** you" to the audience she expected to be upset by it, while the animated show *Velma* drew criticism from both left and right for its aggressive race changes to the *Scooby-Doo* cast. Disney's *Snow White* remake faced so much backlash over its changes that the studio reportedly had to rewrite how the title character got her name.

Fun Facts

The white Black Panther character Ketema was written by Christopher Priest, a Black creator who deliberately steered into the meme as a commentary on being pigeonholed by his own race in the comics industry.

Jason Momoa's casting as Aquaman, a character traditionally depicted as a blond white man, is one of the few race swaps that faced almost zero pushback. More fans questioned his acting range than his Polynesian heritage.

Michael Clarke Duncan's portrayal of the traditionally white Kingpin in the 2003 *Daredevil* film was widely called the best part of the movie, proving a race swap can be the high point of an otherwise panned project.

Billy Dee Williams played Harvey Dent in Tim Burton's 1989 *Batman* with a contractual clause guaranteeing he'd return as Two-Face. Warner Bros. paid him out of that contract so Tommy Lee Jones could take the role in *Batman Forever*.

Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury was based on an alternate Marvel universe version specifically redesigned to resemble Jackson in 2002, before he was ever cast.

Derivatives & Variations

Netflix Blackwashing parodies:

A focused sub-format targeting streaming services' casting patterns, with users creating fake original movie posters featuring outlandishly race-swapped historical figures like a Black Anne Boleyn or Queen Charlotte[6].

Ginger Erasure:

A meme and talking point noting the pattern of red-haired characters (Mary Jane Watson, April O'Neil, Ariel) being disproportionately recast with Black actors in modern adaptations[3].

Ryan Gosling as Black Panther:

The iconic reverse race swap edit, featuring Gosling photoshopped into the Wakandan suit. It became reality-adjacent in 2025 when Marvel introduced an actual white Black Panther[5].

#RemakeADisneyClassic:

A popular X/Twitter hashtag where users created mock posters of white actors in traditionally Black or minority Disney roles to highlight perceived double standards[5].

Frequently Asked Questions

Race Swapping

2010Discourse meme / exploitable formatactive

Also known as: Raceswapping · Race-swapping

Race Swapping is a 2010s discourse meme sparked by *The Last Airbender* and *Dragon Ball Evolution* controversies, evolving into an exploitable format of absurd parody posters swapping characters' races.

Race swapping is an internet term and meme format centered on the practice of changing a fictional character's or historical figure's race in media adaptations. Online debate around the concept picked up in the early 2010s following controversies like *The Last Airbender* and *Dragon Ball Evolution*, then evolved into an exploitable meme format where users create absurd parody posters swapping iconic characters' races for comedic effect. The discourse reached peak irony in June 2025 when Marvel Comics introduced an actual white Black Panther.

TL;DR

Race swapping is an internet term and meme format centered on the practice of changing a fictional character's or historical figure's race in media adaptations.

Overview

Race swapping describes the practice of casting an actor whose race differs from a character's established depiction in a film, TV show, or comic adaptation. Also spelled "Raceswapping" or "Race-swapping," the term covers both the real industry practice and the meme ecosystem that grew around debating it. On the meme side, the most common format involves creating fake movie posters or promotional images that swap a well-known character's race to an absurd degree, often casting Ryan Gosling in roles associated with Black characters or historical figures.

The practice isn't exclusively one-directional. Early high-profile cases involved white actors replacing characters of color, commonly known as whitewashing. But the bulk of modern online discourse and memes focus on established white characters being recast with Black performers, which critics call "Blackwashing". The meme format plays on the perceived asymmetry, with users creating increasingly ridiculous parody castings to satirize the trend.

Race-based casting changes have existed throughout cinema history. The 1997 *Starship Troopers* turned the explicitly Filipino Juan "Johnny" Rico into a white character played by Casper Van Dien, and Captain Nemo, originally an Indian prince in Jules Verne's novels, has been played by white actors including James Mason, Patrick Stewart, and Michael Caine across multiple adaptations. But the specific term "race swapping" didn't gain online traction until the early 2010s, when M. Night Shyamalan's *The Last Airbender* (2010) and the live-action *Dragon Ball Evolution* (2009) sparked organized fan backlash over white actors being cast in originally non-white roles.

*The Last Airbender* proved the bigger catalyst. Fan communities that had mobilized against the casting decisions during production saw their complaints validated when the film flopped critically and commercially. These early debates established the vocabulary and rhetorical framework that would drive over a decade of online discourse, setting the template for how fans would respond to every future casting announcement that deviated from a character's established appearance.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube, social media (casting controversy discourse)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2010
Year
2010

Race-based casting changes have existed throughout cinema history. The 1997 *Starship Troopers* turned the explicitly Filipino Juan "Johnny" Rico into a white character played by Casper Van Dien, and Captain Nemo, originally an Indian prince in Jules Verne's novels, has been played by white actors including James Mason, Patrick Stewart, and Michael Caine across multiple adaptations. But the specific term "race swapping" didn't gain online traction until the early 2010s, when M. Night Shyamalan's *The Last Airbender* (2010) and the live-action *Dragon Ball Evolution* (2009) sparked organized fan backlash over white actors being cast in originally non-white roles.

*The Last Airbender* proved the bigger catalyst. Fan communities that had mobilized against the casting decisions during production saw their complaints validated when the film flopped critically and commercially. These early debates established the vocabulary and rhetorical framework that would drive over a decade of online discourse, setting the template for how fans would respond to every future casting announcement that deviated from a character's established appearance.

How It Spread

The conversation escalated in 2016 when Zendaya was announced as Mary Jane Watson in *Spider-Man: Homecoming*. MJ had traditionally been depicted as a red-haired white woman in Marvel comics, and some fans labeled the casting another case of what they called "Ginger Erasure." Imgflip user RustyB uploaded a side-by-side comparison meme of Zendaya and the classic comic version in late 2016, one of the first viral image macros directly using the race swap framing.

By the early 2020s, the format graduated from fan grumbling to a full-blown meme category. Users began crafting parody movie posters that exaggerated race swaps to absurd extremes, often featuring Ryan Gosling in historically Black roles. On February 25th, 2023, a Reddit user posted a fake George Floyd documentary poster starring Gosling on r/okbuddyretard, earning over 660 upvotes before moderators removed it.

Disney's live-action *The Little Mermaid* (2023), starring Halle Bailey as Ariel, became the biggest single flashpoint of the era. Defenders argued a mermaid's skin color is irrelevant to the story. Critics like Newsweek columnist Alex Miller, himself Black, pushed back: he argued that after Disney made two *Black Panther* films featuring original Black characters, recasting a white Danish folklore character was a step backward, not forward. Miller raised the obvious thought experiment: imagine if Marvel's Blade, the historically Black vampire hunter, "became a pasty-white British man. They'd rain down fire and brimstone on Kevin Feige".

Opinion writer Brandon Morse at RedState made a broader case that the practice betrayed a failure of imagination, writing an original superhero character on the spot to prove new non-white characters could be created just as easily. Comic creator Eric July echoed the criticism, calling race-swapped characters "sloppy seconds" and "hand-me-down" versions that white creators pass along after decades of merchandise and development.

The entire discourse reached peak irony in June 2025. Marvel Comics introduced Ketema, a white-skinned son of T'Challa, as the new Black Panther. The character was created by Christopher Priest, a Black writer iconic for his work on the *Black Panther* series, who openly resented being typecast as "the guy who writes Black people because he's Black". "Marvel Comics did the meme. We have a white Black Panther!" wrote one X user. The reaction split along predictable lines: fans who'd defended years of race swapping in one direction were suddenly outraged, while those who'd criticized the practice celebrated the turnabout. The popular hashtag #RemakeADisneyClassic, where users had spent years photoshopping white actors into traditionally Black or minority Disney roles, suddenly felt less like satire and more like prophecy.

How to Use This Meme

The race swapping meme typically takes one of these forms:

1

Parody movie poster: Pick a well-known character or historical figure strongly associated with one race and create a fake promotional poster "announcing" a casting swap. Ryan Gosling is the go-to choice for reverse (white-for-Black) swaps.

2

Side-by-side comparison: Place the original character design next to the adaptation's version, usually with minimal or no caption, letting the visual contrast speak for itself.

3

Fake studio announcement: Mock a Netflix, Disney, or Amazon press release about a race-swapped adaptation, playing on these studios' reputations for diverse recasting.

4

Historical figure edit: Photoshop a different-race actor into a historical role, like a white actor as Frederick Douglass or a Black actress as Queen Victoria, pushing the concept to its most absurd conclusion.

Cultural Impact

The race swapping debate moved from niche fan forums to mainstream media through high-profile opinion pieces and viral moments. Newsweek ran an essay by Alex Miller arguing that race swaps insult Black audiences by offering tokenism instead of genuine investment, pointing to Mami Wata, a water spirit from West African folklore, as an example of an original Black character Disney could adapt rather than recoloring Ariel.

The 2025 white Black Panther exposed a fault line in the discourse that the memes had been mapping for years. Commentators who'd insisted fictional characters' skin color shouldn't matter were suddenly arguing that T'Challa's Blackness was essential to the story. People who'd laughed at the Gosling-as-Black-Panther memes watched it materialize on the comics page. Many speculated the twist was a setup for a villain reveal, but the initial reaction was electric regardless.

TV writers sometimes made the subtext explicit. The head writer of *She-Hulk* said she wrote the series partly as a "f*** you" to the audience she expected to be upset by it, while the animated show *Velma* drew criticism from both left and right for its aggressive race changes to the *Scooby-Doo* cast. Disney's *Snow White* remake faced so much backlash over its changes that the studio reportedly had to rewrite how the title character got her name.

Fun Facts

The white Black Panther character Ketema was written by Christopher Priest, a Black creator who deliberately steered into the meme as a commentary on being pigeonholed by his own race in the comics industry.

Jason Momoa's casting as Aquaman, a character traditionally depicted as a blond white man, is one of the few race swaps that faced almost zero pushback. More fans questioned his acting range than his Polynesian heritage.

Michael Clarke Duncan's portrayal of the traditionally white Kingpin in the 2003 *Daredevil* film was widely called the best part of the movie, proving a race swap can be the high point of an otherwise panned project.

Billy Dee Williams played Harvey Dent in Tim Burton's 1989 *Batman* with a contractual clause guaranteeing he'd return as Two-Face. Warner Bros. paid him out of that contract so Tommy Lee Jones could take the role in *Batman Forever*.

Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury was based on an alternate Marvel universe version specifically redesigned to resemble Jackson in 2002, before he was ever cast.

Derivatives & Variations

Netflix Blackwashing parodies:

A focused sub-format targeting streaming services' casting patterns, with users creating fake original movie posters featuring outlandishly race-swapped historical figures like a Black Anne Boleyn or Queen Charlotte[6].

Ginger Erasure:

A meme and talking point noting the pattern of red-haired characters (Mary Jane Watson, April O'Neil, Ariel) being disproportionately recast with Black actors in modern adaptations[3].

Ryan Gosling as Black Panther:

The iconic reverse race swap edit, featuring Gosling photoshopped into the Wakandan suit. It became reality-adjacent in 2025 when Marvel introduced an actual white Black Panther[5].

#RemakeADisneyClassic:

A popular X/Twitter hashtag where users created mock posters of white actors in traditionally Black or minority Disney roles to highlight perceived double standards[5].

Frequently Asked Questions