90210 John Ringo No
There's a trailer for the upcoming remake of Beverly Hills 90210:
Compare the cast to the demographics of Beverly Hills High School, the real-world school that both shows are based on:
Also, don't get
ojouchan started on the background of the black student (because god knows the only way a black man could be in Beverly Hills is if he's adopted).
Compare the cast to the demographics of Beverly Hills High School, the real-world school that both shows are based on:
In 2007, about 17% of the 2,362 students at the school are of Asian extraction, about 4% are Latino and about 5% are African American. Nearly 70% of the students are white, a category that includes 450 students of Persian descent. [6] Most of them are Persian Jews whose parents fled the Iranian Revolution.—Wikipedia (but don't give me crap about citing Wikipedia because I just spent a whole bunch of time correcting the section)
About 35% of Beverly's current student body were born outside the United States, and 42% of its students speak a first language other than English. Many of these students are of Persian descent. [3] (pdf)
Also, don't get

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Someone needs to fire that copy writer.
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I'll play a gentle devil's advocate to your sarcasm for a moment: the 2000 Census fact sheet for zip code 90210 indicates that only 1.3% of Beverly Hills residents identified as African-American. It may not be all that farfetched. And the adoption idea was probably simply lifted from the first season of The O.C.
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Now, what percentage of that person's friends/clique are white? I'm guessing, based on my experience with self-segregation at my college's dining halls, the number is very close to 100%. Perhaps you disagree; perhaps things are different now, or are different in Beverly Hills.
(And if the cast is not a single clique, but two connected cliques, this still applies through the conntections. But I've never watched the show. Maybe it's about a bunch of totally unconnected people... that seems unlikely, though.)
So, yeah, I suspect any claim that this is "unrealistic" is false.
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The school's population is still higher, with one in every twenty students identified as African-American. Again, I find the adoption-into-white-family explanation a bad way to explain over a hundred kids.
Problems of representation go much deeper. Beverly Hills has a long history of excluding black families from residency and home ownership. By having their black student adopted into a white family, it means we will not see (in a supporting role) a black family living in Beverly Hills.
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(The character of Navid is of Persian descent, although he is not played by a Persian actor.)
As for "self-segregation," the appearance is different from reality. Although members of minorities often take opportunities for intragroup dialogue, in student bodies that have this kind of mix, the trend is for more diverse friendship groups, not less. In one study of UCLA students, almost everyone said that they thought the campus was divided along racial/ethnic lines, but nearly half also reported that there was no majority racial/ethnic background among their group of friends.
As for "unrealistic," if it means impossible, then no it's not impossible. If it means "unrepresentative," then yes, I do believe it's unrepresentative of the experience of attending a public school in Los Angeles, even in Beverly Hills.
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'As for "self-segregation,", the appearance is different from reality.'
Well, maybe it is now, at least at UCLA, or at least whenever that article was written (it is unfortunately undated), but I strongly doubt that was the case in 1989 at the University of Maryland (which is the only 'appearance' I was talking about). If this has changed, that's great (and I did say "perhaps things are different now, or are different in Beverly Hills"), so ok, I retract my critique.
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Most of my groups - at work and at school - have been predominantly East Asian - and while I've definitely been good friends with other races and ethnicities, I would never say "there was no majority" - there definitely was.
And since I generally hang out with ifMUD nowadays, I now have almost zero Asian influences.
And lest I be accused of extrapolating my experience to the entire world, it's something I've been struck with whenever I look on social networking sites. Look at a "friends list" on Facebook/MySpace/Friendster/Orkut/etc - sure there is a mix, but there is a clear majority of one over other.
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I'm pretty sure, from just the 15 seconds of the trailer I was able to watch, that that last bit is false.