First of all, thanks to my mother, who pointed out that this site was reporting internal server errors. For the record, I believe the maintainers of this server upgraded the web server installation. As a result I was running on a more recent version of Python, in which the random number generator I was trying to use was deprecated. I changed my calls to random (mainly used to choose a tagline at the top of the home page) and all was well.
I realize that I left the
riddle
in the previous entry unanswered. Ian was the first to respond with
the correct answer (not surprising, since he studies codes for a living,
at least to a first approximation). I'm sure most readers recognized
the mysterious black writing as
Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics, the writing
system used to write aboriginal languages such as Inuktitut. OK, great,
so they included some Inuktitut message in the ad, perhaps the
name of the film, right?
Wrong. The text is a simple substitution cypher (a cryptogram) of
the English name. It's easy to see that, because the syllabic
characters are broken into "words" with the same length as those
in the English name. Looking more closely, you can see that the
same symbols are used consistently to represent the same letters:
ᑎ for T, ᕿ for E, and so on (go ahead, test your
browser's Unicode support!).
So what's the deal here? It comes across as a cheap and insensitive
stunt, as if the person creating the ad thought they had to make it
look more "Inuity". As if it didn't matter what the text was; the
syllabics are just clip art, after all, not actual language. Besides,
in Canada the movie doesn't even use an Inuktitut name or writing, as
is obvious from the movie's official site -- just French and English. (They do use the name
Inuujjutiksaq internationally; I wonder what that translates as.)
I've been trying to come up with a good analogy for what kind of
insensitive graphic could accompany a movie about a different culture
or group,
just to reinforce the point. But I haven't been able to pick the
appropriate group or offensive graphic:
"Can you believe that the ad for that movie about a black/Jewish/gay/furry
has a _________ in it?" And no, I don't mean a black-Jewish-gay-furry
person (as interesting a movie as that would make). Pick one, or devise
your own.