There is little to zero mention of Trishna

’

s ethnicity, and no one seemed

visibly triggered

by the portrayal of an inter-racial couple.

This is perhaps the breakthrough that we need when it comes to fostering a greater national identity in multi-racial Singapore. If an interracial relationship can be the face of a Korean cosmetics brand without warranting oohs and aahs, then it suggests that we have the capacity to be race-blind; to transcend the racial identity that continues to distinguish us as individual Singaporeans on our identity cards.

If Laneige is aiming to position itself as an inclusive brand, then it should be thrilled to know that its advertisement has managed to shift Singapore’s race conversation forward without the R-word even being mentioned.

Unfortunately, entrenched stereotypes still remain a major obstacle to racial inclusiveness in Asia. Watsons Malaysia proved that with its disastrous Hari Raya advertisement in June, featuring a “blackface” actress who “washes off” her dark face to become “beautiful”. Needless to say, the video drew flak for being sexist and racist, and was taken down shortly after launch.

Meanwhile in Singapore, even national broadcaster Mediacorp has been guilty of committing the cardinal sin of racial insensitivity.

In an episode of the Chinese-language drama series I Want to be a Star on Toggle, which aired last year, actor Chew Chor Meng said Indians and Africans were “the same”. Co-star Shane Pow later appeared in the same episode as a character with an Afro wig and donning blackface.

For breaching the Video-On-Demand Programme Code, the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) slapped the broadcaster with a $5,500 fine.

In another instance of broadcasting racially insensitive content, a Night Owl Cinematics make-up video equated a darker shade of make-up to an ethnicity that is predominantly darker-skinned.

As one Reddit user puts it, “we … partake in casual racism with our friends so frequently that we have no second thoughts of it. in fact, the video is an accurate depiction of us.”