GoldieBlox and the Three Feminism Follow-up Points

[Content Note: Misogyny]

This morning I wrote a post about how female representation in STEM fields (which is extremely low and a popular topic for feminists and anti-feminists alike) isn't just a matter of entrance rates, but is also a matter of retention rates, and how I would like to see that highlighted more often in conversations on the topic. I tied in a reference to a commercial that had been sent to me that featured a line of toys I'd not previously heard of (in itself not a remarkable thing; I don't keep up on toy companies) called GoldieBlox. The commercial contained these lyrics (transcribed the best I can catch):

Girls!
You think you know what we want, girls!
Pink and pretty: it's girls!
Just like the 50's, it's girls!

You like to buy us pink toys,
and everything else is for boys.
And you can always get us dolls,
and we'll grow up like [inaudible].

It's time to change.
We deserve to see a range.
'Cause all our toys look just the same,
and we would like to use our brains.

We are all more than princess-made.
Girls build the spaceships,
Girls that code a new app,
Girls that grow up knowing
that they can engineer that.

Girls!
That's all we really need, is girls!
To bring us up to speed is girls!
Our opportunities as girls!
Don't underestimate girls!

Girls! Girls! Girls!
Girls! Girls! Girls!
My problem was not with the commercial (which seems mostly fine to me, although I would point out that one can like princesses and maths, but I can get the point if the point is a lack of variety and options) but with the accompanying article which stated that the company's goal was to increase female representation in STEM fields -- my point regarding that was that once again we are tasking women and girls as individuals with systemic problems. The answer to how to get more women in STEM isn't to make more women interested via Cool Toys, but to make the atmosphere in STEM fields more welcoming to the women who are interested. And that means, among other things, targeting men to fix things, not little girls.

What I didn't realize this morning when I was writing all this was that the toy company is actually a Kickstarter project (whoops, me) whose proposed toy is still fairly pink and very pastel (which seems kind of at odds with the marketing lyrics, so... um?) and whose founder has some things to say about about girls and women that I personally find very troubling. (incomplete transcript follows):
Hi, my name is Debbie. I'm an engineer from Stanford, and I was always bothered by how few women there were in my program. So I've decided to do something about it.

I'm starting a toy company called GoldieBlox to get little girls to love engineering as much as I do. GoldieBlox is a book and a construction toy combined. It stars Goldie, the girl inventor, and her motley crew of friends who go on adventures and solve problems by building simple machines. As girls read along, they get to build what Goldie builds, using their tool kit.

I grew up in a small town in Rhode Island. My parents dream was for me to become an actress. They never bought me Legos; they didn't buy me K'nex or Lincoln Logs -- it didn't occur to them, or me either. These toys develop spacial skills and get kids interested in engineering and science. I didn't even know what engineering was until I was a senior in high school. So, to me, GoldieBlox really is the toy I wish I'd had growing up.

A lot of companies try to take their construction toys and make them pink to try to appeal to girls. And while, yeah, it's true: girls do like pink, I think there's a lot more to us than that. So I've spent the last year researching this: How do you get girls to like a construction toy? It all kinda came down to one simple thing: Boys like building, and girls like reading.

So I came up with a really simple idea: What if I put those two things together? Spacial plus verbal; book series plus building set.

[...]

You want your little girl to play with GoldieBlox because as much as she likes dress-up and princess stuff -- and don't get me wrong, I like that stuff too -- there's so much more to her than that. She can explore every opportunity and become anything she wants to be when she grows up.

The thing is: 89% of engineers are male. So we literally live in a man's world. Yet 50% of the population is female. So if we wanna live in a better world, we need girls building these things too, we need girls solving these problems.

[...]

So help me buy this for your daughter, your niece, your friend's daughter. Any girl you know is so much more than just a princess.

Help me build GoldieBlox so that our girls can build the future. Thanks for watching.
The page accompanying the video also includes this:
GoldieBlox goes beyond "making it pink" to appeal to girls. I spent a year doing in-depth research into gender differences and child development to create the concept. My big "aha"? Boys have strong spatial skills, which is why they love construction toys so much. Girls, on the other hand, have superior verbal skills. They love reading, stories, and characters.

GoldieBlox is the best of both worlds: reading + building. It appeals to girls because they aren't just interested in "what" they're building...they want to know "why." Goldie's stories relate to girls' lives. The machines Goldie builds solve problems and help her friends. As girls read along, they want to be like Goldie and do what she does.

Goldie's toolkit is inspired by common household objects and craft items -- things girls are already familiar with. Plus, the set features soft textures, curved edges and attractive colors which are all innately appealing to girls. Last but not least, the story of Goldie is lighthearted and humorous. It takes the intimidation factor out of engineering and makes it fun and accessible.
Okay. Here's the thing, okay? I get really uncomfortable writing about individual people, especially when it's a case of less Here Is A Person Oppressing The Masses and more Here Is A Person Doin' It Wrong. I don't know Debbie Sterling from Eve, but I believe her heart is in a good place on this. And if I had kids, I'd probably buy into this set because it seems like a cool toy.

But.

Point One. It's still not okay to approach the issue of women in STEM fields as a problem that can be solved entirely by women being extra-exceptional. Women are being deliberately driven out of STEM fields. And I don't mean "deliberately driven out of STEM jobs", though that is also true; I mean driven out of the field, in many cases before they ever had a job in the field. The woman who gives up fighting sexism in STEM twenty years into her career is not necessarily quitting for reasons different from the girl who gave up on STEM when she was twelve.

Making more engineering toys for girls is a good and admirable thing that should be done, but it's not going to change the fact that women are being deliberately driven out of STEM fields. Making engineering toys that parents feel comfortable buying for their girls may be arguably good and admirable (though I harbor concerns that the Pink Toy Equals Acceptable Toy can cause more harm than good, but laying that aside for the moment), but it's not going to change the fact that women are being deliberately driven out of STEM fields. The men who are sexist to me on a daily basis have, in many cases, daughters and sisters who they encourage to be engineers because the money is good and why not follow Father / Big Brother's footsteps. That doesn't stop them from being sexist assholes to non-Exceptional Women they've not made exceptions for.

That doesn't mean these toys aren't worth making. It does mean it's problematic to market them as fixing the STEM representation issue, because that marketing angle tasks women with solving a systemic problem.

Point Two. The stereotypes being espoused in this video and the related marketing materials are just reinforcing the same stereotypes that have been used to bar women from STEM fields, that are being used to drive women out of STEM fields, and that are regularly used to marginalize women in STEM fields by pushing them into communication and documentation fields (which are always lower paying, less prestigious, and more subject to lay-offs). The whole "boys build, girls read" thing is a favorite tool in the misogyny arsenal -- it is the IMMEDIATE anti-feminist response to the very problem of female representation in STEM fields: "Oh, girls don't want to go into STEM because they don't like to build!"

It's not true. But beyond that, more fundamentally, you cannot fight sexism by using sexism. You can't dismantle a patriarchal system while appealing to its foundational premises.

Point Three. This whole thing is so soaked in gender essentialism and non-threatening femininity that it genuinely concerns me. My own experiences in STEM is that one way to avoid appearing threatening is to embrace full girly-girl in the hopes that male colleagues won't target you as much. (This doesn't really work, of course, because you can't win at patriarchy. But sometimes it can lessen the shit thrown at you in the short term.)

I'm 100% with women who like pink and princesses; I'm completely down with that. But that's not what this video is saying: it's one-part assuring men that all girls love pink and dresses and princesses and dress-up and have poor spacial skills and one-part scolding women that that's not good enough, that we need to be "more than just a princess" and that it's up to us to make sure that this isn't "literally a man's world". So there's this horrible double-whammy of telling girls that (a) you much be super-femme to be acceptable, but (b) you must also be STEMy to be valuable.

(And, then, of course, a lot of corollary bullshit about how boys, on the flip side, are good at spacial relationships and bad at reading, which NOPE! And which doesn't even get into all the problems I have with binary gendering and gender essentialism in the first place, all of which are VERY BIG PROBLEMS because all that erases huge swaths of people who don't happen to conform for whatever reason.) 

That's not dismantling patriarchy. That's propping up the Exceptional Woman as something that we have a duty to be. We can't be butch or boyish or unfeminine because how weird would that be, if we asked for non-pink toys, but also we'd be faint copies of something better since our lady-heads can't do spacial rotations anyway. And this is precisely how women are marginalized in STEM today: we're unfailingly seen as unfeminine (and therefore threatening) until we magically become too feminine (and therefore silly and not worth paying attention to).

There is literally no way to win in this framework, and reinforcing that with Boys Are From Mars, Girls Are From Venus gender essentialism just reinforces that. It's problematic in the extreme, and it's a problem that sort of seeps out of the frankly contradictory marketing where the music video is all ICKY PINK THINGS and the Kickstarter video is all PINK INNATELY APPEALS TO GIRLS and also it's bad to like princesses because we need to be more than that, yo, but it's still important to like dress-up because girls love stories and characters because of our lady-feels.

I don't really blame Ms. Sterling for maybe not navigating this very well; I've lived a whole lifetime of not navigating this very well. But as much as I wish her well, that doesn't make this marketing campaign any less painful for me to watch.

Open Wide...

Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat, lying on her side on my desk, with her paws pressed against the side of my laptop screen and her head pressed against my hand, which is sitting atop the mouse

Olivia Twist, jamming herself between my laptop and mouse, so I have to "pet her" with my mouse hand as I work. She does endeavor to find the cutest ways to be totally fucking annoying, lol.

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

Open Wide...

Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



The Cure: "Love Cats"

Open Wide...

Alec Baldwin is the worst.

[Content Note: Homophobia, misogyny, racism, rape jokes.]

Alec Baldwin is widely regarded as a Swell Liberal Fella, despite the fact that he casually engages in racism and misogyny, thinks rape jokes are the tops, and has, on multiple occasions, screamed homophobic epithets at paparazzi. MSNBC recently gave him his own show, because of course they did.

He's currently on another apology tour, following his latest homophobic outburst, and yesterday he went on some garbage tech show, on which he was invited to "share his views on business largely because of his fictional role as a top General Electric Co. executive on the TV series 30 Rock and his role as a hard-charging salesman in the 1993 film Glengarry Glen Ross" (sure), where he did this shit:

Alec Baldwin jokingly professed his love for a man in front of a large crowd Wednesday as he tried to ease the backlash triggered by an Internet clip that captured him berating a photographer with what sounded like a gay slur.

"I want you to be my lover, Matt," Baldwin told a member of his entourage after asking him to stand up. "I love you, Matt. I love you in that way."

After the packed audience's laughter died down, Baldwin added that he has loved some men more than women during his life, although never in a sexual way.
Perfect.

So, to recap: Since being caught on camera screaming homophobic epithets at someone, Baldwin has: 1. Denied that he did and lied about what he said; 2. Asserted he can't be homophobic because he has a gay hairdresser; 3. Joked about wanting to fuck a dude, followed by a serious reassurance that he's straight, but totes loves some men more than women.

I have not watched MSNBC since they hired Alec Baldwin, and I will continue to not watch MSNBC as long as he is in their employ.

Open Wide...

Farewell, Cardinal Dolan! It's Been Terrible!

[CN: anti-agency, rape culture, rhetoric of political and religious violence]

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, aka my BFF, has ended his term as president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. In his final address to that body, he left 'em laughing with the astonishing observation that perhaps U.S. Catholics aren't so persecuted just because the Affordable Care Act has a birth control mandate:

At a news conference, Cardinal Dolan said that the bishops are not abandoning the religious liberty campaign, and that it had been “very successful.” But he said that in the interest of justice and the bishops’ own credibility, the bishops should heed the pleas that they have heard from Christians overseas to turn their attention to those who are being killed and persecuted for their faith.

He said, “We don’t have tanks at our door, we don’t have people being macheted on their way home from Mass.”

Of course, Dolan and his fellow bishops were quick to assure the press that birth control, marriage equality, reproductive agency and the like are all still THE DEVIL. But maybe a junior devil. Second-string, even. On a farm team.

Readers of this space will know that Dolan has led the US Catholic bishops into an ever-closer alliance with the Republican Party. Under Dolan, the bishops worked hard to become the GOP's Incense Division, leaving us with bishops comparing Obama to Stalin and Hitler and videos equating a vote for Obama with fiery hell being promoted on parish and diocesan websites, all with nary a peep of disapproval from the USCCB. Now we get the spectacle of Dolan and his fellows somehow trying to reconcile their record with Pope Francis' suggestion that you know, maybe the Church has been over-focusing on that stuff, and OH YEAH economic injustice and shit!

I would find this particular whooooops! pretty funny if it weren't for the millions of living, breathing people that Dolan and his pals have hurt with their blustering absurdities. And if it weren't for the fact that Dolan's chosen successor, seems to be cut from the same altarcloth, personally leading harassment of abortion-seekers and providers and valuing abusive priests more than their victims.

So yeah. Meet the new boss. Pretty much like the old.

(For those of you wondering how you'll live without Cardinal Dolan at the head of the USCCB, here are a few greatest hits from his tenure to ease your loss):

Dear Cardinal Dolan: I Am Not Disposable. [CN: anti-agency]

The High Price of Privilege. [CN: rape, rape culture]

Quote of the Day. [CN: anti-agency]

U.S. Bishops Investigate Girl Scouts. Because McCarthyism.[CN: misogyny, homophobia, antiagency]

Good Luck With All That. [CN: anti-agency]

In Case You Forgot About It. [CN: rape, rape culture]

Notre Dame Sues Over Birth Control Mandate. [CN: anti-agency]

Well, That Didn't Take Long. [CN: homophobia]

Dear Cardinal Dolan, You Are Still an Asshole. [CN: anti-agency]

Important News! [humor/parody]

[Commenting Note: Please take care in comments to distinguish between Catholic leadership and those ordinary Catholics who may be appalled by Dolan and his peers.]

Open Wide...

In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today!

[Content Note: War on agency] The US Supreme Court, in a typical 5-4 decision, refused to block the Texas law requiring abortion providers to have admitting privileges at local hospitals. Seethe.

[CN: Slavery] British police rescued three women from a London home where there were held against their wills for over three decades. Two people have been arrested, following an investigation launched after one of the three women called the Freedom Charity to report "she had been held against her will in the house for more than 30 years."

[CN: Racism; capital punishment; rape] Alabama's parole board has voted to grant posthumous pardons to three of the men in the Scottsboro Boys 1931 rape case, in which nine black boys were falsely accused of raping two white women on a train. "All the Scottsboro Boys served jail time, but Haywood Patterson, Charlie Weems and Andy Wright were the last of the accused to have convictions on their records in a case that came to symbolize racial injustice in the Deep South in the 1930s. The three men, along with defendant Clarence Norris, were convicted on rape charges in 1937, after a six-year ordeal that included three trials, the recantation of one of the accusers and two landmark U.S. Supreme Court decisions on legal representation and the racial make-up of jury pools. The men were all convicted by all-white juries, and all but the youngest defendant was sentenced to death. Alabama ultimately dropped rape charges against five of the accused."

[CN: Sexual assault] Republicans are obstructing votes on Senators Kirsten Gillibrand's and Clare McCaskill's proposed defense authorization amendments to change the way the military deals with sexual assault cases. Because of course they are.

In other news, a memo has been circulated to House Republicans detailing a rolling strategy to defeat Obamacare, with topics like: "Because of Obamacare, I Lost My Insurance." "Obamacare Increases Health Care Costs." "The Exchanges May Not Be Secure, Putting Personal Information at Risk." "Continue Collecting Constituent Stories." I'm guessing "Propose a Superior Alternative" is not among the bulletpoints.

[CN: Misogyny] CNN published an interview with Serena Williams' tennis coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, under the title, "The man who rescued Serena Williams." LOL. Fuck you, CNN. Fuck. You.

[CN: Sexual violence; rape culture; police malfeasance] A detective on the Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston rape case, in which no charges have been brought for nearly a year, told the accuser's attorney that "her client's life 'will be made miserable' if she pursued a sexual assault case" against Winston. Yeah, it's a real mystery why there are loads of survivors who are disinclined to report sexual assault to authorities.

Neato: "A volcanic eruption has created a new island in the sea about 620 miles south of Tokyo."

OMG THIS STORY ABOUT A MAN BEING REUNITED WITH HIS DOG AFTER LAST WEEKEND'S TORNADOES! The picture of him hugging the dog! The picture of him petting her while she drinks water! Her wee face! ♥

Open Wide...

Same-Sex Marriage Moves Forward in Scotland

Yesterday, the Scottish Parliament voted 98-15 to advance a bill that will legalize same-sex marriage in Scotland: "The vote, which took place Wednesday night in Scotland, essentially passed the Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Bill on its first reading, allowing the legislation to move to the Parliament's Equal Opportunities Committee, where lawmakers will consider amendments, before seeking a final vote from members of parliament, likely in early 2014. If the bill passes out of committee and through its third reading before the full parliament, same-sex couples could begin marrying in Scotland next year."

During the parliamentary debate, Ruth Davidson, the leader of Scotland's Conservative Party, took to the floor to speak in favor of the bill [content note for homophobia, bullying, and self-harm]:

MSP Ruth Davidson, Leader of the Scottish Conservatives: This debate is not easy, and I don't think it was ever going to be. When areas of love meet the law, where belief, commitment, and faith collide with legislation, the waters will always be difficult to navigate. I therefore commend all of the contributors to this debate in the past few months and years, who have sought to make thoughtful contributions, to elevate the ideas and to temper the language, displaying a respect for beliefs which differ from their own, but recognizing that those beliefs are just as sincerely held. And I hope that that temperance will continue this evening, demonstrating that, while this may be a fledgling Parliament, it has a maturity, too.

And it is precisely because of the nature of this debate that I believe that this bill is a matter of conscience. And that's why, similar to other parties, Scottish Conservative members have been given a free vote.

So, today, I speak on behalf only of myself. In fact, I have no doubt that this could possibly be the most personal speech I ever make in the chamber. And I hope to explain why I support the broadest principle of this bill—and that is the principle of extending marriage.

I believe in that principle because I believe in marriage. I believe that marriage is a good thing. I saw the evidence of that every day growing up in a house that was full of love. And while my own family had all the stresses and strains that were common to all, there was never any doubt or question or fear in my mind that our togetherness was in any way insecure.

And the bedrock of that stability and security was my parents' marriage. And that stability helped me and my sister to flourish and have confidence that we could be whoever we wanted to be. More than 40 years married, and my parents still love each other. And I look at what they have and I want that too, and I want it to be recognised in the same way. And that recognition matters.

Presiding Officer, from childhood, you have known without even thinking that if you found someone that you loved and who loved you in return, you had the right to marry them. That same unthinking right to marry extended to the cabinet secretary; the leader of the Labour Party has that right also; so, too, does the leader of the Liberal Democrats. I want that right to extend not just to me, but also to the thousands of people across Scotland who are told that the law says no. They can't marry the love of their life. They're not allowed—and, unless we change the law, they will never be allowed.

And it does matter, Presiding Officer. It matters that a whole section of our society is told that they can have the facsimile of civil partnership, but they can't have the real thing. It's not for them. Their love is something different; it's something less. Their commitment is denied.

I don't want the next generation of young gay people to grow up as I did, believing that marriage is something they can never have. We have the opportunity, with this bill, to change that—and to change the attitudes, and even the stigma, that being lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender can still evoke, and which can cause so much harm.

[She yields to a question.]

MSP Jamie Hepburn: I thank Ruth Davidson for giving way in what I think is a very eloquent contribution; I am enjoying it very much. She spoke about the next generation. I am the father of two very young children. I don't know what their sexual orientation will be, but, in the circumstances that they grow up and have a same-sex attraction, what would the member say, if this Parliament failed to legislate for the provision that's before us today, what would you suggest that I should say to them in futures if they wanted to be married? How—how would she think that I could look at them in the face and say that this Parliament missed the opportunity to give them that right?

Davidson: Well, I would hope that their father had helped vote them the opportunity to have them going forward. And I think that talking about the next generation is important, because it is them for whom we must think of.

Last year, the University of Cambridge conducted a huge body of research; it was called "The School Report." The researchers spoke to hundreds of LGBT pupils right across the UK who were open about their sexuality. A majority said that they were the victims of homophobic bullying, and that it happened to them in their school. More than half deliberately self-harmed. Nearly a quarter had attempted to take their own life on at least one occasion.

These are our children, and they are made to feel so much guilt and shame and despair. And we have an opportunity today to make it better for them. Because, at the moment, we tell these young people, we tell them, "You are good enough to serve in our armed forces. You are good enough to care in our hospitals. You are good enough to teach in our schools. But you are not good enough to marry the person you love and who loves you in return."

We tell them, "You are something different, something less, something other, and that marriage, that dream, that gold standard—that does not apply to you. You don't get to have it." And that apartheid message, that "same but different," that alien quality, that otherness—that is what is reflected in every hurtful comment, every slander, every exclusion and every abuse, whether it takes place in the school playground, on the factory floor, or in the local pub.

And that's why this bill matters. It matters, yes, to those people who will directly benefit from it, those couples today who are eager to commit their relationship in marriage and who I believe should be allowed to do so. But more than that, it matters to the future nature of our country—because we have an opportunity today to tell our nation's children that, no matter where they live and no matter who it is that they love, there is nothing that they can't do; that we will wipe away the last legal barrier which says that they are something lesser than their peers.

We can help them to walk taller into the playground tomorrow and to face their accuser down, knowing that the Parliament of their country has stood up for them and said that they are every bit as good as every one of their classmates—a Parliament that has said that they deserve the same rights as everybody else.

Presiding Officer, I believe in marriage. I believe it is a good thing to be celebrated, and I want everybody in Scotland to know that marriage is open to them. I support the principles of this bill.

[Applause.]
All the blubs forever.

I imagine some of you may be thinking that her emphasis on two-person marriage being the "gold standard" of all possible relationship structures is kind of shitty, and it is. But to put this into perspective, the Scottish Conservative Party is the most conservative of the five parties currently seated in the Scottish Parliament: The Scottish National Party, the Scottish Labour Party, the Scottish Liberal Democrats, the Scottish Green Party, and the Scottish Conservative Party. (There are also three Independent members currently seated.)

This is, broadly, the equivalent of a Tea Party Republican standing up on the floor of the House and mounting an impassioned argument for same-sex marriage.

Conservative Republicans should watch this video and be rightly shamed. This is what conservatism can look like—and does, in other places.

Six of Davidson's 15-member caucus voted with her.

[H/T to Shaker Richard Gadsden.]

Open Wide...

Photo of the Day

image from above of Democratic Illinois Governor Pat Quinn, a white man, signing marriage equality into law in Illinois on Abraham Lincoln's desk
Democratic Illinois Governor Pat Quinn signs the Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act into law during ceremonies on the campus of the University of Illinois Chicago Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2013, in Chicago. Illinois becomes the 16th state to legalize same-sex marriage. He signed the bill on Abraham Lincoln's desk, where the former president penned his 1861 inaugural address. It was brought in from Springfield for the occasion. [AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast]

Open Wide...

Open Thread


Hosted by Pantone Black.

Open Wide...

Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker laurenislearning: "What is a random encounter you had with stranger/s who were awesome?"

Open Wide...

Photo of the Day

image of former President George W. Bush presenting a painting of Jay Leno to Jay Leno on The Tonight Show

Here is just a terrific picture of former President Mondo Fucko presenting one of his paintings of Jay Leno to Jay Leno on The Tonight Show last night. I hope you enjoy this picture of these two Great American Patriots as much as I do!

Open Wide...

Whut.

[Content Note: Classism.]

What the shit is this article?

Actual Headline: "Hate your job? You probably live in the US."

Actual Lede: "The relentless drudgery of working nine 'til five is a common gripe all over the world, but according to a survey by recruitment website Monster.com, U.S. workers hate going to the office the most."

Actual Nonscientific Survey Generalized to Entire World: "The survey...was sponsored by Monster.com and conducted by market research firm GfK. ...GfK interviewed 8,000 people as part of the survey over the telephone, including 1,007 respondents based in the U.S. For the countries profiled—Canada, France, Germany, India, Netherlands, UK and U.S.—respondents were asked to choose one of five options when asked how they felt about their jobs: love it, like it a lot, like it, don't like it, don't love it at all."

There is so much wrong with this garbage I hardly know where to begin.

Not everyone in the world works in an office. Not everyone in the US works in an office. Very few people who do work in an office in the US (and lots of other places) work "nine 'til five" these days. Not everyone wants to work in an office. Not everyone has access to the education and opportunities that are required for lots of office jobs, especially the "lovable" ones. I could go on for days. DAYS.

Have at it in comments.

Open Wide...

The Walking Thread

[Content Note: Violence. Spoilers are lurching around undeadly herein.]

image of my hand holding a flyer featuring a drawing of a straight white couple from behind, gazing at a wall of family photos, accompanied by text reading: 'Can the dead really live again? Would you say... -yes? -no? -maybe?'

The above is not a screen cap from this episode of The Walking Dead. It is an image of a flyer stuck in my door this morning by a local religious organization. But it seemed appropriate, what with its ability to convey white privilege, heterocentrism, patriarchy, and rising dead all in one concise little package.

Anyway! On to the recap!

Ohhhhhhh noooooo. An entire episode about Governor Cyclops?! HOLY SHIT THIS SHOW. Just when I thought this show couldn't possibly get any worse, we're served up an entire episode based on Governor Cyclops' "What I Did Over the Summer" essay. Fuuuuuuck.

We pick up back at the scene of Governor Cyclops mowing down his own people in a super reasonable way because he is nothing if not the picture of measured decision-making. He and his minions then go camping, where he presumably introduced his new S'mores Initiative, but we don't really know, because all of this is seen in montage while some totally trenchant country song is playing.

His minions fly the coop in the night, so he takes off on his own and wanders the countryside for "a few months" (?) (that does not seem to match the timeline at Grimes Jail) (who can even tell with this show where time is measured by how cavernously Carl the Hat's head is engulfed by his hat) and grows out his hair and beard, and contemplates whether maybe he crossed ALL THE LINES during his tenure as Governor of Unpleasantville.

He reads the side of a barn on which have been spray-painted messages to some dude named Brian Heriot, and he decides to adopt this as his new name. Get it? Because he's a new man now. In case you are hard of metaphoring, they painted it literally on the side of a barn for you.

Ambling down the street in some little town, looking virtually indistinguishable from a zombie, Governor Cyclops sees a little girl in the window of an apartment. Luckily, we were reminded in the opening of the episode that he had a zombie daughter and lost his eye trying to keep her zombie-alive, which is the most important motivating feature of this terrible character.

Governor Brian Heriot (GBH) goes into the apartment building and finds the apartment, where two young, thin, white women greet him, wielding a baseball bat and a gun. He hands over his gun, and they invite him in and he broods and chews the scenery.

Having established that he is suffering from a raging case of man-angst and that the women are definitely willing to risk any potential threat he may be in order to nurse his soul, GBH retreats to another apartment to stay the night. He opens a can of tuna for supper, but is interrupted by one of the sisters bringing him a plate of SpaghettiOs. As soon as she leaves, he dumps it out the window and eats the rest of the tuna. Terrific scene. A+.

Later, GBH drops by to return the plate, and we learn that the two women are taking care of their dad, who is dying of lung cancer and running out of oxygen. He is the only person who can make his granddaughter Megan smile, because of course he is. She also isn't doing much talking these days—and, when GBH carries him into his bedroom (since his daughters became immediately helpless as soon as a man arrived—Pappy asks GBH to fetch a backgammon board from his old pal's apartment.

He retrieves the game, encounters a zombie, yawn blah fart, takes a gun and some ammo on his way out. He gives the game to Pappy and Megan. The SpaghettiOs sister, Megan's mom, who is clearly crushing on him, asks him if he'll run to a nearby nursing home to get some more oxygen. The two women aren't versed in the ways of the zombiepocalypse, because they've been living off of the contents of the food delivery truck their dad was driving when the shit hit the fan. A food truck that they do not guard 24/7, but somehow has not been raided or stolen by wandering bands of pillaging survivors. Sure.

GBH heads off to the nursing home and he is so angsty! He sneaks around quietly, and tries to get out of there with a buttload of oxygen tanks, but manages to escape with only one or two when the zombies descend on him. This might be a nail-biting scene in another show written and edited by other people, but, in typical "no one can spoil The Walking Dead better than The Walking Dead" fashion, there is literally no tension, because we know via his appearance at the end of the previous episode that he survives it.

GBH gives the grateful sisters the oxygen tanks for Pappy, and then he has a great conversation with Megan about his eyepatch, and she totally smiles. Because that's the magic of men, bitchez.

It looks as if GBH is going to be there for awhile. Cut to GBH chillaxing with his new family, clean-shaven and having exactly the same haircut he had before. AMAZING! It's almost like he just had his hair tucked under a garbage wig from the set of a Nicolas Cage film.

Pappy dies, and GBH has to horrify everyone by smashing his brainpan with an oxygen tank. Ha ha! It saved his life; now it is the instrument of saving their lives! GET IT?! DO YOU GET IT?! ARE YOU GETTING ALL THE MEANINGFUL SYMBOLISM IN THIS SHOW, PEOPLE?!

Sure, it was tough watching GBH zombie-kill Pappy, but the sisters reassure him that Pappy would have been grateful to GBH for saving them from Zombie Pappy. Megan is too young to understand and regards GBH with fearful suspicion.

Later that night, GBH burns a photo of his family. More symbolism. He decides to hit the road, but SpaghettiOs sister tells him he has to take them with him. It would be irresponsible to leave them without a patriarch, so he agrees. They take off in the food truck, and, that night, literally right next to her sister and daughter, SpaghettiOs sister does it with GBH. RIP Andrea. This guy gets laid like Clooney during the zombiepocalypse!

In the final scenes, which I can only imagine were written by a writer dared by someone to squeeze as many horror plot tropes into one scene as possible, the food truck breaks down, Non-SpaghettiOs sister falls and badly twists her ankle, the zombies descend, and Megan clutches her plushy toy and only barely escapes by running to GBH at the last second—because if there's one thing that all little girls learn eventually, it's that even when you're creeped out by a violent patriarch who you saw harm a gentle male presence in your life FOR HIS AND YOUR OWN GOOD, one day you're gonna be a damsel in distress who needs that violent patriarch to rescue your ass.

These and other essential notes on Ladies: Doing It Right in upcoming episodes of The Walking Dead.

Anyway. GBH runs through the brush carrying Megan, and they fall into a human-made pit. To the sound of machine gun blasts, GBH slowly fights off three resident pit zombies. He then assures Megan that he'll keep her safe. "Holy shit," says a voice from above the pit. It's one of GBH's minions.

Fin.

Open Wide...

The Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by soup.

Recommended Reading:

Debbie: [CN: Racism; appropriation] Beyond the So-Called First Thanksgiving: 5 Children's Books That Set the Record Straight

Anita: [Content Note: Misogyny] Ms. Male Character: Tropes vs Women

Michelle: [CN: Fat hatred; diet talk] Why Diets Don't Work

Crunkista: [CN: Racism] Fuck Sears, or When Mall Cops Attack

Flavia: [CN: Rape culture; racism] An Observation about Rape Culture and Our Racial Histories

Lyndsay: [CN: Discussion of intimate partner violence] "Strong Women" Can Still Experience Violence

Von: [CN: Homophobia; transphobia; racism; misogyny] Why ENDA Is an Urgent Issue for People of Color

BYP: [CN: Racism; police harassment] Stop-and-Frisk Numbers Sharply Decline in NYC

Echidne: [CN: Othering; sexism] Mystery Humans Spiced Up Ancients' Rampant Sex Lives

Andy: Scotland to Take First Vote on Marriage Equality Today

Ana: Quote of the Day: Symbols and Communication

Leave your links and recommendations in comments...

Open Wide...

Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt lying on the living room floor, grinning

Smiley Zelly.

Everyone was happy to see me when I got home. Within minutes of my arrival, all five animals were perched around me, lining up for snuggles and kisses. Iain said, "You look like Dr. Doolittle!" LOL.

But, of course, Zelda was the most enthusiastic greeter of all the enthusiastic greeters. She spun in joyful circles at the front door, then jumped up on me, making these funny little whining noises I've never heard her make, then ran to get her slobbery plushy ice cream cone and offer it to me as a welcome home gift.

After having exhausted herself expending all her energy on JOYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!!!! she promptly fell asleep with her head on my knee.

This dog.

* * *

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

Open Wide...

Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Three Dog Night: "Joy to the World"

Open Wide...

In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today!

Bill Clinton says he hopes "we have a woman president in my lifetime." Do you think he has anyone particular in mind?

Approval for President Obama and the Affordable Care Act are at historic lows. Oof.

Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is set to go nuclear on the Senate filibuster rules.

Republican Representative Trey Radel has pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of cocaine possession. Whoops!

[Content Note: War on agency] Voters in Albuquerque (that is one of my favorite words to type! Albuquerque Albuquerque Albuquerque!) have rejected a ban on late-term abortions. Good job!

[CN: Natural disaster; death] An "apocalyptic" torrential rainstorm has devastated the Mediterranean island of Sardinia, killing at least 16 people, leaving lots of people homeless, and wrecking infrastructure. The storm dumped "more than 44 centimeters (17.3 inches) of rain in 24 hours Monday—half the amount [Sardinia] normally receives in a year, officials said."

[CN: Violence; guns] George Zimmerman, the man who was acquitted for murdering Trayvon Martin, was arrested following a "domestic disturbance" during which he allegedly pointed a shotgun at his girlfriend. (Which I'm pretty sure is a nice, clinical, media-approved way of saying "he threatened to kill his girlfriend with a shotgun.") He is now out on $9,000 bail and has been ordered to "not possess weapons." This fucking guy.

[CN: Worker exploitation; classism] Walmart holds a food drive for its impoverished employees "so associates in need can enjoy Thanksgiving dinner." Meanwhile, McDonald's recommends its impoverished employees sell "some of your unwanted possessions on eBay or Craigslist" to help get out of holiday debt. Yeah, bootstrap bullshitters—poor people are just lazy.

The Oxford Dictionary's 2013 word of the year is "selfie." Okay then.

Don't worry, everyone: R2D2 will definitely be in the terrible new Star Wars installment! I know, I know—it might not be terrible! (It will definitely be terrible.)

Jean-Clade Van Damme did some of his famous splits for Volvo.

Open Wide...

Femfest: The Odyssey

As I mentioned, I was in Oregon at Southern Oregon University to speak at the SOU Women's Resource Center at their inaugural Femfest. I gave a workshop on the Rape Culture, and then I delivered the keynote address, the text of which is below the fold, for anyone who is interested in reading it.

My profound thanks to the university for hosting me, to everyone who attended, and especially to Molly Harris, who organized and coordinated the event, and who invited me to be a speaker. Molly is the greatest.

It was my first time in Oregon, and I loved getting the opportunity to visit the beautiful Rogue Valley.

I am completely knackered, as the travel was way more intense than anticipated, because I left on Sunday, during the major storms and tornadoes in the Chicagoland area. When I left my house for the airport shuttle, we were under a tornado watch, and it was a pretty hairy ride to the airport. O'Hare was utter mayhem; with so many delayed and canceled flights and people stuck and desperate, it was just a nightmare of super angry and frustrated folks.

I felt terribly bad for the people working at the airport, who were getting the brunt of all this angst, even though they were working their asses off. Bonnie at Alaska Air and Carl at United Airlines were total champions, trying to help me get to Portland in time to make my connecting flight to Medford. They were AMAZING. In the end, the best option was grounded for awhile, too, so I just hunkered down on the dirtiest carpet in the world and made the best of it with a similarly sanguine older man, who chatted away the time with me. There's no controlling the weather!

Anyway. Travel was rough, and all the running all over airports in between sitting in awkward places and getting no sleep for days thanks was hard on my body. By the time I arrived back at O'Hare yesterday, just having missed a shuttle back home so with another hour of waiting in a bad chair, I was wrecked and not in the best mood.

But then, through one of THE WEIRDEST stranger interactions I've ever experienced, about which I'm not going to tell you because it may become a guest post at some point, ha, I ended up meeting a woman named Ariane, who was taking the same shuttle I was, and we just chatted like old friends for the next couple of hours, not even the slightest bit bothered by the rush hour traffic that was, inexplicably, even worse than usual.

It was just a weird trip. So many people being the worst, and so many people being the best.

I was glad to be with the great people at SOU, and the great people I met along the journey, and now I'm glad to be home.

Open Wide...

Transgender Day of Remembrance

[Content Note: Transphobia; violence.]

image of a candle burning at my home this morning
A candle burns at Shakes Manor.

Today marks the 15th Annual Transgender Day of Remembrance, which is "set aside to memorialize those who were killed due to anti-transgender hatred or prejudice. The event is held in November to honor Rita Hester, whose murder on November 28th, 1998 kicked off the 'Remembering Our Dead' web project and a San Francisco candlelight vigil in 1999."

71 trans* people are being memorialized this year. 71 people known to have been killed as a result of anti-transgender hatred or prejudice resulting from fear and ignorance.

Julia Serano, a trans activist and author of the oft-mentioned Whipping Girl: A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the Scapegoating of Femininity, has noted that transphobia kills not just by violent action, but apathetic inaction.
Trans people are often targeted for violence because their gender presentation, appearance and/or anatomy falls outside the norms of what is considered acceptable for a woman or man. A large percentage of trans people who are killed [work in the sex trade], and their murders often go unreported or underreported due to the public presumption that those engaged in sex work are not deserving of attention or somehow had it coming to them.

Some trans people are killed as the result of being denied medical services specifically because of their trans status, for example, Tyra Hunter, a transsexual woman who died in 1995 after being in a car accident. EMTs who arrived on the scene stopped providing her with medical care—and instead laughed and made slurs at her—upon discovering that she had male genitals.
The 2001 documentary Southern Comfort details the last year in the life of Robert Eads, who died of ovarian cancer after two dozen doctors refused him treatment.

That's the kind of hate crime that doesn't make headlines. Or even federal hate crimes statistics.

We remember all the victims of violence and apathy today.

No oppression has ever been eradicated by a careful, polite, diligent deference to pretending it doesn't exist. That is the importance of a day of remembrance.

No oppression has ever been eradicated without meaningful inclusion and visibility, either, which slowly chips away at the privilege that underwrites marginalization. That is the importance of vigilance in community every day of the year.

Open Wide...

Open Thread


Hosted by Pantone 2597.

Open Wide...