Pow! Shazaam! Its ғMinoriteam!

Behind the scenes of a controversial new Cartoon Network show

BY Silja J.A. Talvi

Dr. Wang is the epitome of nearly every Asian stereotype etched into American consciousness. His skin has a bright yellow cast; his eyes are set in an exaggerated slant. He owns a laundromat, speaks with a ludicrous accent, drives poorly and is incredibly good at math.

But Dr. Wang is more than just your garden-variety racial caricature. On “Minoriteam,” he is a crusading, wheelchair-bound superhero with a 40-pound brain, who uses profits from his laundromat to head up an equally preposterous group of ethnic superheroes devoted to overthrowing their nemesis: the omnipresent White Shadow.

“We use power of racial stereotype to destroy White Shadow,” he cries out during one of the episodes. It’s Dr. Wang’s way of saying, perhaps, that Minoriteam is using the master’s tools to dismantle the master’s house.

“Minoriteam” debuted in March 2006 on Cartoon Network’s late-night Adult Swim line-up. It’s the collective, nerdy brainchild of a bi-coastal trio of successful artistic misfits who share a love for ’60s and ’70s-era Marvel superhero comics.

The creative group consists of 30-year-old writer/actor/director Adam de la Peña (whose TV credits include “Jimmy Kimmel Live” and “I’m With Busey,” among other projects); Peter Girardi, 39, who rose from his humble subway graffitti roots to earn widespread respect in the digital media and design world; and Todd James, 36, who also used subway cars as his artistic medium as a youngster, and then transformed those skills into a lucrative career in logo design for the cream of the hip-hop crop.

All three worked together on the absurdist Comedy Central hit, “Crank Yankers,” before coming up with the Minoriteam concept. To their initial surprise, Adult Swim executives jumped on their provocative pitch, green-lighting what has now turned out to be a two-year period of development and production.

Girardi, James and Peña knew that they were likely to take some heat from media and viewers for “Minoriteam’s” edgy content. But from the beginning of development to the end, they stress, they were never asked to tone down or censor any of the content by the head honchos at Adult Swim. That artistic freedom–and the general outrageousness of the other late-night adult cartoons on this station–is why all three creators say they can’t imagine “Minoriteam” finding a home on any other cable station.

The show was designed to provoke audiences with a heady combination of crass imagery and clever racial commentary–heavily sprinkled with the silly and ridiculous plot twists Adult Swim fans have grown to love. The late night block of programs features Aaron McGruder’s “Boondocks” on one end of the spectrum, with its vivid animation, political sophistication, and dark cynicism; at the other end is the wildly popular “Aqua Team Hunger Force,” which stars a talking wad of meat. (Sound bizarre? Consider that the piece of talking meat is a member of a nihilist household of fast-food characters who go on nonsensical adventures together.)

“There’s a way that people think we’re over all this [race] stuff, but we’re not,” says de la Peña. “We are still [facing] huge and tremendous issues–from race issues to the power of large corporations–and how all of that relates to personal identity. We still need to see that represented.”

“Minoriteam” tackles these issues via a motley group of superheroes modeled after the creative output of prolific writer and comic book artist Jack Kirby (1917-1994). Born Jacob Kurtzberg, Kirby was known in the comic book world as “The King” for his work on such influential characters as the Avengers, the Fantastic Four, the Incredible Hulk, superheroes who typically rose up to defend the defenseless underdogs of society.

The “Minoriteam” style of animation mirrors Kirby’s use of bold contrasting colors, sharp angles, and jagged exclamation bubbles. But the comparisons end there, for what an over-the-top bunch they are. Forget the sexy-but-alienated X-Men, who use their mutations to control the weather, teleport, or rip through flesh and steel with wolverine-like claws. Members of the crude looking-and-talking Minoriteam have a set of stereotype-inspired superhuman strengths all their own.

There’s the sombrero-wearing El Jefe, a wealthy oil tycoon by day, who drinks tequila and uses the Leaf Blower 3000 to alternately propel him into flight or to vacuum up Minoriteam’s enemies. The shirtless Nonstop (ex-pro skateboarder and part-time convenience store clerk Dave Raj) wears a giant turban, flies on a magic carpet and has been shot so many times that he is now impervious to bullets altogether. Fasto is the Minoriteam’s superfly superhero; his tight shorts and duct-taped shoes enable him to move at lightning speeds and dance to distract and wow the white women thrown in his path. (By day, he is the nerdy Professor Dutton, who teaches Women’s Studies at Male University.) And then there’s the conflicted Neil Horvitz, a mailroom worker and avid student of Black culture, history, soul food and statuesque Black women. Horvitz spends most of his time just trying to get on with his life. Unfortunately for him, an incident of racial oppression is all it takes for him to morph into Jewcano, a 63-year-old Moses lookalike, with rippling muscles and an awe-inspiring ability to spew boiling lava.

The object of Minoriteam’s hatred is White Shadow, a one-eyed, floating pyramid (reminiscent of a certain design on the back of U.S. currency) who is driven by one nefarious goal: to ensure that political and economic power remain in the hands of the very few–and the very white.

Part-man, part-corporation, White Shadow needs his own band of anti-heroes (his “minions”) to combat the Minoriteam. Among the regulars who line up to ensure continued white supremacy: a brutish Racist Frankenstein, the notoriously hard-to-climb Corporate Ladder and the race-biased Standardized Test.

The outrageous scenes that emerge from the collusion of these forces are the furthest thing from what anyone would expect, and therein lies the draw. “Silly is subversive,” de la Peña says.

In “Operation Blackout,” White Shadow gets tired of African American-owned businesses, and hatches a scheme to kidnap the highly successful, utterly narcissistic black entrepreneur, Sebastian Jefferson. When the Minoriteam finally frees him in the show’s hilariously climactic end, Jefferson distances himself quickly from his rescuers because he thinks it’s bad for his status-and class-conscious image. “You look like a racist A-Team,” he says with disgust.

What’s up next for Minoriteam? The show is introducing its first female superhero, stronger and smarter than any of the males. It should come as no surprise, the creators divulge, that Dr. Wang and his cohort take all the credit for her hard work and superhero accomplishments.

Even the Minoriteam superheroes have some of their own issues to overcome.

Silja J.A. Talvi, a senior editor at In These Times, is an investigative journalist and essayist with credits in many dozens of newspapers and magazines nationwide, including The Nation, Salon, Santa Fe Reporter, Utne, and the Christian Science Monitor.

More information about Silja J.A. Talvi

  • Reader Comments

    Hmmm. I am glad my tax dollars don’t pay for this. But i may watch an episode, just to check it out.

    Posted by wolf on Jun 2, 2006 at 10:05 AM

    Sounds entertaining.  Don’t have cable so I’ll have to wait this comes out on DVD and pay for it with my non-tax payer derived income.

    Posted by theloneous on Jun 2, 2006 at 2:07 PM

    I’d rather have my “tax dollars” support this than killing innocent women and children throughout the world, but hey, thats just me.

    Posted by Siskiyouz on Jun 2, 2006 at 3:04 PM

    This has potential, but I am disappointed that the enemy is defined by color only.

    It’s economics that drive the division of various groups of people.

    Color is just a nice all-encompassing blinder that makes this impossible for people to understand. LOL

    It shouldn’t be the “white shadow” as the enemy, but “Richey Rich” fully grown into a heartless, cold, calculating plutocrat. Who detests any wealth created even INdirectly by physical labor or actual production. Instead his goal is to create wealth soley via speculation on hedge funds, futures markets Etc. In short various forms of legalized gambling. Which can dramatically increase one’s wealth without ever contributing to the production of anything or the performance of any filthy labor. :-D

    The constant struggles of the heros would revolve around Lady Prophet, the most powerful character in this universe, because she would possesses vast psionic powers that enabling her to manifest and control the motivations of all people.

    Unfortunately her vast potential for good is rarely realized, because she is not very bright, ,and is all too easily manipulated for evil by the true evil endless, selfish greed of Richey Rich.

    The heros could face endless trials trying to free “Lady Prophet” to do the good she is capable of doing, but before they can. They must free her from enslavement at the hands of Richey Rich, arch scion of evil, and his council of the damned called the “The most Selphish ones” 

    Preventing them from succeeding could be a host of evil supporting characters like “Endliss Greede.”

    Also where is “Redneck man” the poor as dirt white guy. He would be the perfect “dark” character - no not in color. LOL

    Dark characters are the overt bad guys who end up doing a critical good thing or two Redneck man, always wanting to fight the good fight, but thanks to the manipulations of RR he is always confused as to what’s real and what isn’t. LOL

    Posted by johnnyincentx on Jun 2, 2006 at 4:45 PM

    Since we’re speculating on the creation of comic stereotypes, let’s get philosophical and create a mythological universe populated by “Gods and mortals”, where the “Gods”, by definition, are systemic social organizations composed of subsidiary social organizations which themselves are motivated by local organizations of families composed of “mortals”.  Each contituent organization derives its divine characteristics from the mortality of its membership which seeks to minimize its individual mortality by investing its energy in the maintenance and reproduction of the organization which simultaneously sustains and destroys them.  Morality and ethics are thereby required to promote social cohesion at the expense of its more expendable membership, and allow the rest to focus its concentration on internal and external threats to its collective existence.  Racism, sexism, homophobia, poverty and affluence can all be harnessed to the framework of production and consumption which extends the mortality of the whole.  Of course, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, and operates according its own autonomous rules of efficiency.

    Posted by Major Major on Jun 3, 2006 at 6:02 AM
  • extended discussion >>>Continued...

    Discussions with more than 5 comments are continued on our special discussion page to encourage continuity and ease of use. There are currently 6 posts.