Later, we meet “The Crows”, a group of five blackbirds who act in a manner that offensively portrays stereotypes normally assigned to African-Americans. Only the leader of the group, Jim Crow, is named; the other four are merely referred to as “brothers”. These crows act as the long-sought comic relief of the film, giving the viewer a break from the serious prejudices set against Dumbo in the first fifty minutes of the film. Whenever black actors or actresses were portrayed in film, they were always put into supporting roles, usually with the sole purpose to make the main protagonist(s) realize something and help them achieve a goal of sorts. In the case of Dumbo, these crows are here to encourage Dumbo to fly in their own way, which basically just makes fun of him further through a long-winded song and dance number.
The way these crows talk, act, and how they are dressed all coincide with existing stereotypes against African-Americans. Even the name, Jim Crow, is a “hilarious” nod towards both a nickname for blackface and the Jim Crow laws, southern statutes that legalized the segregation between blacks and whites in the 1880s. There is also the issue of Jim Crow being voiced by a white actor, while the rest of the crows were rightly voiced by black actors. It’s as if Disney would rather have some white guy do his best “black impression” than to put an actual black actor in a position of