

Most surprising, however, is the fact that both Ed Wuncler III and Gin Rummy are immediately recognizable as being voiced by celebrities Charlie Murphy and Samuel L.
#Gin rummy the boondocks series
The Boondocks, Aaron McGruder's notoriously pugnacious comic strip (1998) and animated series (2005) about Huey and Riley Freeman, two ten-year-old black boys uprooted from the Chicago projects and transplanted into an affluent white suburb, affords an excellent case study immediately following their move, the boys encounter two twenty-something white men who, despite their wealth, periodically engage in armed robbery and auto theft, dressing in stereotypically "black" fashions, engaging in stereotypically "black" pastimes, and speaking in a stereotypically "black" cadence. Popular culture provides an ideal medium in which to examine this phenomenon. Though difference exists between individuals, tensions between their common humanity and more narrowly defined tribal/racial identity render personal identification susceptible to the vicissitudes of usurpation, reassignment, and unconscious alliance-making shared non-tribal interests can easily result in non-tribal group formation and non-tribal identification/peership, creating an ambiguized sense of self. He had no speaking lines in " The Red Ball".For Kenneth Burke and his adherents, identity is a tenuous and ever-shifting condition. Despite being one of the most popular characters of the series, he's only appeared in 6 of the total 55 episodes and only appeared once in Season 2.In many episodes, Rummy drives a black Cadillac Escalade.Despite being white, he has cornrows, similar to the style of Riley's in season one.He and Ed also frequently refer to each other as "n***a", despite both being white.He is one of the three main "wiggers" in the series, with the others being his best friend, Ed Wuncler III, and Cindy McPhearson.His name is also a reference to the identically named card game.He claims that he and Ed served in Special Forces (aka the Green Berets).

His last name, "Rummy," matches the nickname given to Rumsfeld that was often spoken by President George W.
