Frustrations of an Ethnic Avatar in Second Life

My real life identity and ethnicity bleeds into my Second Life; I am a Hispanic/Black male and would like to have my avatar resemble my ethnicity and race. Within Second Life I’ve found that this can be a hard, tiring and frustrating process. The reasons are not technical in nature, it has nothing to do with my inability to wear skins or a graphics card failure; it has everything to do with inaccurate and insufficient content. While there’s an abundance of “dark” or “tan” skins, they do not have the features of the ethnicities and races they represent; clothing, hair, and accessories suffer from a lack of accuracy, identity and quality. This has caused me a great deal of frustration.

I grow more frustrated by the current ethnic content; while many exist, it does not seem correct and lacks details I’m used to in real life. I have yet to find a designer who is completely exempt from my ire. Some designers do better than others but they seem far and few in between. My current avatar has flaws I would like to see fixed by other designers in the very near future. In some sense I feel as if I’m settling for an appearance that does not fit my identity.

Before continuing, I want to be clear about my frustration; it is the inability to represent myself as an Hispanic/Black/Ethnic avatar due to the poor quality and/or limited options available within Second Life. I’m not claiming racism (that I’m denied access due to the color of my skin), if anything I’m saying there’s ignorance (possibly bordering on negligence, although too harsh of a word) among content creators as it pertains to ethnic avatars.

The Examples

I’m shocked by the amount of effort it takes finding a skin with features, details, traits that are common in real life. While there are many “tan” and “dark” skins, many (if not all) are darker representations of their lighter counterparts. They lack certain characteristics to accurately represent ethnic people. An example is scalp hair, which is drawn on the scalp of the skin as a way to represent short hair. In real life, many Hispanics and Blacks have very short hair, but in Second Life, not all ethnic skins have this option. The few that do, the hair tends to be brown and not the more common black. There’s also a lack of hair style, low shaved heads are usually clean cut, some include a ‘widows peak’, others are faded, or military cut (cut low showing the scalp). This example may seem like a very issue, however this is one of the most important aspects that should be available for those wanting an ethnic avatar. I purposely avoid skins that lack this trait regardless of their quality.

Hair style may not seem important, but it is a major representation of ethnic identity. Dreadlocks aren’t grown just because they are cute, there’s a reason, a commitment and a story behind them. There are some very well done and authentic dreadlocks in Second Life, however it’s one of only three black hairstyles that seems to exist; afro’s and cornrows are the other two. While these hairstyles are the most distinctive they are not the only ethnic hair styles. Creators may want to take a look at other styles including the flat-tops, buns, and fro-hawks to add more diversity to their hair designs.

The choice of avatar clothing further exasperates this issue. “Urban” clothing doesn’t seem to represent urban clothing at all, most of these items are city clothing (jeans, faded t-shirts, etc). “Ethnic” clothing tends to be stereotypical Hip-Hop/gangsta’ replicas of actual clothing that are poorly designed. A middle-ground does not exist and the true style of urban clothing is void in Second Life. Clothing and accessory designers have created style-like virtual replicas of boots, loafers, and shoes; yet I cannot find a good Timberland boot style. Design styles of popular urban clothing, such as Fubu, and Ecko, aren’t seen often enough (if at all) in Second Life.

The really frustrating (and borderline offensive) aspect of this topic is nothing has changed for some time. I’ve waited close to a year to write this post because I felt I was over reacting. After talking with others about my frustrations, not only did I learn others felt the same way, but they felt just as frustrated regardless of their ethnicity. In circles it has become a bit of a joke and an unspoken issue. It feels like designers are pigeonholing what ethnic avatars should look like, even though it may not be intentional. The references used to create darker skins, clothing, and hair styles seem to be incorrect, misguided and at times afterthoughts. What exists is a small thin slice of a small representation of people. This slice that we got in Second Life misses the wide ethnic cultures including the Caribbean and West Indian style. Designers and content creators need to do a better job in their research.

Excuses and Resolutions

I am further appalled by the explanation for this problem and that so many people (including myself) have been quiet for so long. The only reasonable excuse I come across is that the resources and time designers have are limited and they are stretched very thin. I will agree there is a lot of hard works and effort in designing items in Second Life, but this excuse flies in the face of logic. Many already have “dark” and “tan” skins, t-shirts, and jeans that need require tweaking to their existing product. This excuse ignores the fact that designers are always creating something new! Why not include this as a part of your next release? Another excuse is a very ignorant and stupid one, that is these sorts of items “won’t sell.” The real question is have designers tried? What indicators do they have that these items will not sell? I’m sure, if one shoe designer created a Timberland style of boots, it would sell quite well. In actuality designers are handicapping themselves! I purposely do not buy certain skins, clothing and items because they do not fit my style. If certain items do not exist on the market, why would I purchase them?

I want to be clear as to what I’m recommending. I’m not asking for a slew of poor or high quality, ghetto-fabulous, stereotypical items geared for ethnic avatars. I’m not asking for a “Black” Mall, a “Black” shopping area, or a “Black” fair; these solutions could be construed as offensive, exclusionary, and perform the opposite effect of what I’m hinting at. I’m suggesting that the idea of a “Black Mall” is not even unavailable in Second Life due to the lack of proper content. In a world where creativity and diversity is highly touted, it seems to be lacking on certain fundamental levels. Ethnic avatars are not the only ones suffering from this; I’ve heard for years that the are very little selection in Asian and Middle Eastern styles (I can only speak for myself which is Hispanic/Black.) There’s plenty of ethnic people and clothing references that designers can choose to make their brands more diverse. If designers need a list of people to watch for ideas here is my beginner list: Kayne West, Chris Brown, Samuel L. Jackson, Lawrence Fishburne, Beyonce, Will Smith, Cuba Gooding Jr., Jada Pickett, Tyra Banks, Carlos Mencia, Andy Garcia, Emilio Estefan, Jennifer Lopez, Marc Anthony, and even Ricky Martin.

I am not singling out any one designer, brand or segment, everyone is just as liable. I have many close friends who are designers who personally hear my frustration. I believe designers need to re-evaluate what they have and work on creating more items and content that is more diverse and of equal quality or don’t do it at all (which for many of you is not an option). If there’s anytime to begin this process, now would be a great time with Martin Luther King Day, Obama’s Inauguration (US), and February (African-American History Month in the states) quickly approaching.

Note on the use of the word “Ethnic”: I am really uncomfortable with the term “Ethnic” to describe Black/African-American or Hispanic/Latino people. However I feel in this case, it best represents the topic at hand. When I use this term I am referring to Black and Hispanic-Caribbean.

Comment Note: I purposely left names of designers, clothing, and skin that I feel does a better job than others. The intention of this post is not to highlight or dismiss certain designers for what they are or not doing right. It’s an attempt to shine the light on a much larger issue at hand. Comments are welcomed and encouraged, however I will be moderating them heavily as to prevent finger pointing, advertising, and needless flaming.

Comments

@Anon Your comment comes off very racist and ignorant. Your comment ignores two important things. 1) Second Life is an international world wide service, the United States is only a fragment of the entire world. 2) If you compare world populations, the united states if 3rd on the list behind Asian countries (http://www.prb.org/Datafinder/Topic/Bar.aspx?sort=v&order=d&variable=21)

To say that “This is how it is” and “More white people use technology” is not only the sort of thought that keeps racism and inequality alive in a day and age where so much has been overcome.

who cares how it sounds. Reality is reality- and youre just not being real. Who cares how “global” it is. Fact is fact- look around. You dont have to ENJOY reality- but at least accept it.

@Anon I wasn’t aware that Second Life was an exclusively American environment. Your argument doesn’t take into consideration (A) global diversity or (B) the % of people whose avatars have a racial identity outside of their real life selves.

For any change to occur, people have to critically talk about it openly.

I care, and I’m quite sure plenty of other people do. Reality isn’t as clean cut as you present it, if that was the case a Blacks and Hispanics would not have high positions in government. Reality is, your blind.

Nexeus….Reality is black and hispanic in government came about because of affirmative action- AKA they have NO CHOICE but to put people of color into office. But I digress. Oh and nice how you chose to interpret what I posted Catero maybe you should slow down and read or ask for some help with comprehension. SL is based in America despite its global access. FOUNDED BY a WHITE man, CEO is a WHITE man. Deal with it. Side track the issue further by focussing on me and your chosen interpretations of what I have posted. Fact is, there are not as much CHARACTER driven art such as comic books and avatar creations that are GEARED towards non-whites. Like it or not, fact is fact.

Finally, someone’s said it.

First and foremost, thank you for this post.

Since starting in SL, I’ve strived to remain as I am in real life- a black American female of Caribbean descent. And the first thing I noted in SL was the lack of skins that even remotely came close to my tone.

I’m not extremely dark or olive, and throughout the 2 years I’ve been active, I’ve gone from being a light caramel tone to being far too dark to being a near gray. Lately, thought there have been improvements. Creators are not just making a brown tone of their lighter skins, but actually putting time into making something that truly represented the ethnicity it’s aimed at. It’s been primarily female skins though…..

As for those quick to say, “Just make it yourself!”…..it’s not as easy as typing the words down. I make nearly everything I own in SL other than clothing, items for my body, pets and plants. I’m skilled in fine arts, so yes,I’ve tried with open source skins and came close to something I liked. However, like it is stated, not everyone has that patience or that skill. It’s why people buy things here in the first place. If they all could make something exactly how they wanted, there would be no need for a post like these one. And the idea you may have in your head won’t always translate in-world.

I believe there’s a tremendous demand for what Nexeus is asking of designers, but currently choice-wise, more effort and detail has gone into a lighter toned skin than one meant to be what he calls “ethnic.” If the skin appears to lack in any form, yes, it won’t sell. As much as someone may want an olive or dark toned skin, if it will make you look like a gray person who never applied lotion or an overcooked white chick, why settle for it?
There is nothing wrong with desiring something that closer represents you. It doesn’t have to fit exactly, but something a bit more than a simple tinting.

@Anon, your “fact” is a simple opinion, just like everyone else who posts a comment here. Even if SL was founded by a white American, it doesn’t mean that’s the only market in SL. It may “seem” dominant to you, but it’s only true to those who haven’t ventured to sims based around Japanese, European, and other global residents. SL is so much than an “American” thing. Open your pretty white eyes, and look around sometime :)

Your assumption that I have pretty white eyes is racist- you have no clue about me. None at all. Im probably darker than you are. Your assumptions that I dont visit other sims is nothing more than that. For I do. And I make my comments based on facts. Even asian people make their characters look white. Look at most manga or even avatar the last air bender. ROUND EYES and white skin. go ahead and tell me Im wrong. you think japanese people beleive they have round eyes and white skin? No. But the people who are buying their products do.

I’m all for the open discussion of issues, conversations and the difference of opinion. I do allow people’s opinions that differ from mine or even those that I may object to as comments on my website. However, I do object to inflammatory back and forth. @Anon I’m putting you on a ban list, not because I want to repress your voice or that I disagree with your point of view or even for the fact that your arguments completely miss the fact of my post. Your continued participation in this discussion only leads to more inflammatory comments that will cross lines that it should not. I am going to stop it before it gets worse.

Dunno if Anon or Anon2 will ever read this, but I must say I meant no racist remarks by referring to white eyes. It’s a common saying for me when talking about someone with a very clouded point of view, ie cloudy gray or “white” eyes.

If you are so upset by Nexeus’ “whining,” why are you so insistant on reading and posting comments to something you clearly disagree with? He never said that no one liked him or people like him, and from the looks of it, the one easily angered here is you.

Your view is your own, yes, but your “facts” remain entirely one-sided. You do realize there is more than one default skin in SL, and not all are human. I love how you are certain you are “darker” than me :D And referencing anime and manga characters is hardly an indication of Asian preferences.

In just remarking about your hair and skin comments, I think the reason they are not more accurate is really from a lack of personal or intimate knowledge/experience of the creators. I personally do not make skins, but I would think that part of the process of making a skin and being able to add certain subtle characteristics comes from, in part, seeing your own skin and being familiar with it. The ethnic qualities you seek might not be there simply because skin designers just aren’t familiar with them or how to duplicate them.

I can imagine, though, that is is frustrating. I recently saw a black male skin on some random display and was struck with how bad it was. It looked like the creator attempted to make a more accurate skin, but it just did not work at all and looked as though the avatar had an illness of some sort.

As for clothing, as a I designer I can only state that I make things that I personally like. I will, however, take suggestions. I would be a fool to ignore a customer asking for a particular item! I cannot guarantee how quickly I can make it or if it will totally fit the bill, but I sure as hell will give it a go.

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