Baye McNeil is an African-American writer and speaker who has lived in Japan since 2004. He is a columnist for The Japan Times and frequent contributor to the Japanese language online publication Toyo Keizai. He has authored two self-publishedmemoirs, Hi! My Name is Loco and I am a Racist (2012) and Loco in Yokohama (2013).
Early life
According to his books and interviews, McNeil was born in Brooklyn, New York, where he was raised by a single mother.[1] He went to a pan-Africanist school and has membership in the Five-Percent Nation, a Black nationalist movement influenced by the organization Nation of Islam.[2] He served in the U.S. Army and witnessed the events of 9/11. Baye McNeil moved to Japan in 2004. He worked as an English teacher at an eikaiwa for 3 years and then moved to Yokohama in 2008.[3]
McNeil since then has blogged extensively from his website on topics mainly about racial issues. He has a monthly column called "Black Eye" in The Japan Times since 2014[4] about issues of race and ethnicity from his viewpoint as an African American. McNeil's commentary has been sought out by some journalists. He has appeared in various media outlets, including BBC,TBS, The New York Times, The Japan Times, The Washington Post and Japan Up Close commenting on issues about race in Japan.[5][6][7][8][9]
In 2015, McNeil began a successful Change.org petition to remove a segment of the music show Music Fair planned to air on Fuji TV in Japan, in which Momoiro Clover Z and Rats & Star were to perform in blackface.[10] Later, in 2018, comedian Masatoshi Hamada appeared in blackface on Japanese television. McNeil's opposition to this was covered internationally by news outlets such as BBC, The New York Times, the New York Daily News, Vox and TBS.[11][12][13] However, some Japanese people argued that blackface was only considered offensive in America since they intentionally used it to mock black people back then while other countries don't have this historical context.[14][15]
Controversy
In 2020, Baye McNeil was upset about Japanese people for not supporting the BLM protests in Japan. Many locals view this movement as not related to themselves and also dangerous to the public for holding huge protests in the middle of a global pandemic.[16] However, McNeil was angered by the fact that Japanese people are unable to feel empathy with Black Americans. He wrote a blog post expressing his disappointment and called the Japanese who opposed the protests "castrated". [17][18][19] His remarks quickly sparked backlash on the Japanese internet as they thought Baye was just trying to bring his home issues to another country and enforce his values on other people.[17][20] Famous Japanese artist Megumi Igarashi criticized him for trying to impose his own values on Japanese people without even understanding the Japanese culture and people.[21] He later changed the word 'castrated' to 'spiritually neutered' in the English version without any explanation, but the original wording can still be seen in the Japanese version.[17][18][19]
Reception
Baye McNeil self-describes himself and his works as "the driving force of what was to become one of the most talked-about blogs around these parts, as well as one of the most respected books on expat life in Japan: “Hi My Name is Loco and I am a Racist."[22]
He has received some criticism as some see him being too American-centric and too obsessed with race.[20][17][18] Famous Japanese sculptor and manga artist Megumi Igarashi (ろくでなし子) openly criticized Baye McNeil for his tendency of imposing his own beliefs on Japanese people without even understanding much about Japanese society and culture.[21]
Books
Hi! My Name is Loco and I am a Racist (Hunterfly Road Publishing, 2012) ISBN978-0615587783
^Rich, Motoko; Hida, Hikari (2020-07-01). "In Japan, the Message of Anti-Racism Protests Fails to Hit Home". The New York Times. ISSN0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-12-28. A backlash quickly followed. Critics on social media accused participants of disregarding the risks of spreading the coronavirus. /This is an American issue" and "Please do this in your own country."