Category Archives: Pop Culture

Jem’s no feminist

Mar 3, 2014

My phone started blowing up milliseconds after a Jem & the Holograms reboot was announced.  Friends sent me the news with an urgency that suggested my life would never be the same.

Now, I loved Jem as much as any future art-freak punk rock girlchild– but analyzing the Holograms vs Misfits subtext reveals some capital B Bullshit.  The Misfits were confident, aggressive, ambiitous– and villains.  The Holograms were man-focused, glamorous good girls who failed the Bechdel test in every episode.  A show with so much supposed girlpower actually enforces in the subtlest of ways many social constraints women face on the regular.

 

“She’s a Bad Influence,” duet with Jem & the Holograms and the Misfits

One destructive aspect of girl-culture is woman-on-woman hate.  Backstabbing, gossiping, exclusion, and the like.  Women, despite having elevated communication skills and strongly developed empathy, are socialized to avoid verbalizing their feelings.  You’re a drama queen.  A bitch.  Bossy.  Aggressive.  So when conflicts arise, women are more likely to discuss the issue with other individuals than the one they are conflicting with.  This is the least productive way to resolve issues, and given the sensitive, empathic nature of emotional female hardwiring, the most destructive way to address unhappiness.

“She’s a Bad Influence” exemplifies this power dynamic.  “She” of the song is nowhere to be seen, indirectly addressed, totally shit on by everyone involved.  Ganging up on a single girl unites rivals and offers relief that “it’s not me.”  I’m feeling for the bad influence here, who’s probably suffering from depleted self-esteem, emotional damage, and suicidal impulses.

 

“You Oughta See The View From Here,” the Misfits

“This is the place we belong, up at the top… It’s fabulous, and so are we!”  Girl power incarnate.  Yet.  Given the “bad” label placed on the Misfits, the song’s braggadocio isn’t about empowerment.  It’s a vilification of female self-confidence, cemented by the offended, shocked, SHOCKED reactions from heteronormative city folk.  The taxi driver with his “dreams so small” and the little old lady with a face full of Misfits flyer are furious with the women who dare to fly.  Only the Misfits’ weird-ass punk fans celebrate their message of ambition.

 

“Like A Dream,” Jem and the Holograms

Contrast the bad-girl song with heroine Jem’s good-girl servitude.  “Like a dream… that is coming true.  I will lead you to a place you’ve never seen.”  There’s no agency for Jem in this video.  Her persona literally disappears multiple times, with the attention focused on the male and his attempts to capture her.  What’s more, the entire storyline of man as aggressor and woman as seductive temptress is fueled by Jem’s desire to harm the conventionally unattractive Misfits.  Moral being: pretty and elusive’s better than interesting and empowered.

I’m betting this Jem and the Holograms reboot’s going to be a terrible piece of shit, but honestly?  The original wasn’t much better.  MISFITS FOREVER.

 

Advice for the digitally wayward

Feb 2, 2014

Text distress?  OKCupid confusion?  Have you been vaguebooking?  It’s perfectly normal to feel adrift in a world of digital etiquette.  When phones were invented, society went through the same issues. Identify yourself when you call, don’t yell into the receiver, avoid putting your partner on hold forever.  Telephone etiquette was clearly delineated across mass media—print, radio, and screen.

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Fast forward to now.  Enter computers; enter cell phones; and enter those naughty little cell phone cameras.  We have myriad communication platforms which can be used in any combination of ways to embarrass ourselves or offend our peers.  There is no mainstream rulebook for this.  We are a fractured nation of subcultures, getting information and social cues from thousands of sources.  It’s a confusing time, to say the least.

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We humans are social creatures who love and need structure.  When we talk to each other, we need rules for how to do it, in order to interpret unspoken signals and demonstrate that we know our place in society, and how to communicate within it.  Sandy is here to answer your questions, dear hearts, bestowing a bit of light on that fuzzy, gray world of digital social interactions.  Let the requests flow in!

Address your advice request to Digital Etiquette at sandythezine@gmail.com.
Sign-off Acronyms Needed, Darling You.

xo,
suzymae & SANDY

Respecting Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Jan 1, 2014

Rev Dr King2Civil rights, so important for society, so easy to take for granted.  Martin Luther King, Jr. day is so much more than a three-day weekend.  Here’s a collection of articles and photos that reveal more about the man who stands as a symbol for equality, self-respect, and love.

Life magazine’s great historical photo archive documents the March on Washington, where Dr. King gave the legendary “I have a Dream,” speech, August 28, 1963.  It’s impossible to look at the faces in the crowd and not be moved by the powerful energy and emotion.

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Intimate photos of Dr. King’s life and family, a man with a genuine smile.  Charisma is eternal.  The King Center has more photos and a detailed list of his many accomplishments as a  writer, orator, and social leader.

Enacting change requires control, strength, and support.  Slate has a copy of the Montgomery Improvement Association’s guidelines for boarding a bus while black immediately after segregation was ruled unconstitutional.  Even though the document’s written in an even tone, the threat of violence and intimidation is chilling to this day.

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Photos of the Lorraine Hotel, the night MLK was assassinated from Life magazine.  Sad, grave, sobering.

A Memphis jury found the US government guilty of a conspiracy to assassinate Dr. King, but documentation of this verdict is sparse.  The King Center has a statement on the assassination trial verdict from Coretta Scott King and her family.  A must-read.

More information will be revealed in 2027, when sealed records the government has regarding Dr. King will be released.

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And now for some proof that our society still has a LOT of work to do.

  • The Gap invokes Martin Luther King, Jr.   For a sale.  Featuring white models.  With no context for what this national holiday represents.  Not smart.