Sunday, January 27, 2008

The Miss America Pageant: New Wine in An Old, Shriveled, Timeworn Teat of a Wineskin?

Not to be a complete wet blanket, I have to credit the folks at TLC who helped make last night's Miss America pageant a little more culturally relevant.

I say, a little more. But in a world where the pretty girls aren't giving us much to look at - whether it's the recovering Lindsay Lohan, or the abusive Naomi Campbell, or the disintegrating Britney Spears [do your own damn web search] - I'm beginning to wonder about the cultural relevance of a contest in which young women, under the guise of nubile virginity, are rewarded largely on the basis of physical attractiveness, with points thrown in for performing a few tricks they learned in finishing school, and speaking in complete sentences that demonstrate effective deployment of clauses like "I believe that" and "such as."

Is there anything wrong with acknowledging hotness? I don't think so. It depends on circumstances, but that's for another post, isn't it?

But is there anything wrong with two equally-qualified people receiving the same pay for the same work, the same seniority, the same achievements? There shouldn't be. But I have to wonder whether the beauty pageant mentality - perpetuated by these resucitation attempts - somehow filters its way into how "female achievement" is defined.

Perhaps I am making a spurious correllation here. One doesn't directly cause the other... but maybe both are symptoms of larger issues that threaten to hamstring a society's development, precisely because they threaten to hamstring one very large segment of that society.

What other indicators can we check besides this redirection of energy into Miss America?

Perhaps the already-tired media obsession with race versus gender politics, despite the outcry over its irrelevance, should get us thinking.

Perhaps the confluence of the conservative stacking of the Supreme Court, the emphasis on abstinence-only sex education, the coincidental uptick in (especially teen) pregnancies and drop in abortion rates, and the gag-order aesthetic that has crept into the "girl in trouble" film genre - exemplified in Juno - should give us pause.

Maybe the very act of removing a child from a parked car - a habit of attention we have strangely naturalized as "instinctive" despite the artificiality of automotive technology and our stimulus-saturated environments - and the huge disparity in prosecution and sentencing depending on who has committed that sin of omission - should make us wonder whether we really have interrogated our assumptions about what is appropriately "male" and "female."

Because a revamped beauty pageant, whatever else it does show, will not offer a peek at the machinery of assumptions, stereotypes and institutional biases that drives it.

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Monday, January 21, 2008

American Apparel misogyny and its discontents

The obvious location to link this would have been facebook, but the LA Times has completely jacked up the way its links appear when you attempt to post them through the "posted items" app. Anyway, when I saw this hot little story I was immediately reminded of fellow facebooker Vivian's link to blog Jezebel's assessment of the visual effect of fashion misogyny on the female form, courtesy of American Apparel. Now... however trendy it is, is it really worth padding this spitwad's wallet?

Lawsuit has fashion mogul in spotlight - Los Angeles Times

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For those who may have stopped dreaming: a refresher

Ladies and gentlemen, may I offer you one of the greatest speeches in history - and I don't think I'm exaggerating here. Advice: watch, reflect, act. And don't stop dreaming.


Embedded video



The full text of the speech, along with the video source, can be found here.

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Sunday, January 13, 2008

A reminder: I'm not joking about escalators

It's never a good idea to horse around on moving machinery after consuming significant quantities of alcohol. But I'm telling you, there are some machines to which we have become so habituated that we easily forget how dangerous they can be.

And it's never occured to me that those rubber belts on the banister could be ridden. Most of the time they don't even go the same speed as the steps. Plus, do you know how many little vectors have touched those things? (No, that's not my #1 anxiety, but still...)

I've been to the Hollywood & Highland complex. if you're on the top floor looking out into the open courtyard, you'll quickly notice that it's a long way to the bottom. Whatever transportation you take to get there. Which is probably why I don't go there much. All the same... I think I don't even want to know all the details of this tragedy. I just imagine one of the three or four nightmare escalator scenarios I've already filed under WCS and that's all I need.

The only thing that would have made it worse is if this fellow had been taking the escalator with a baby stroller in tow.

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Thursday, January 10, 2008

I got Foo Fighters tickets and now I want to scream like a little girl

The Internet presale started at 10 a.m., and I got my tickets at approximately 10:04, but it has just now hit me that I am truly in a position to attend the Foo Fighters concert just added to the tour schedule. In LA.

It has just now hit me and, since I have the catalog (plus the typical boots) but have never seen them perform, unless you count that little program on DirecTV's channel 101 back in September... and that was from the IYH tour, before ESP&G... to my chagrin, I have this strange impulse to go completely spastic.

But I'm going to hold on to this feeling. I'm going to save it up for the gig and then go loopy. Until then, I will work diligently on my various academic projects and duties, and eat as much ramen as it takes to stay within budget. Especially since I just had to buy a couple of new tires in the wake of yesterday's blowout. But that's another story - stay tuned...

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