baxtavius:

fussyfangs:

tumblr i am glad that we can all agree that chris brown’s actions were inexcusable

now if you could start applying the same critical spirit to your favorite white dudes that would be great

ben roethlisberger

julian assange

woody allen

kelsey grammer

roman polanski

elvis

nicolas cage

charlie sheen

gary oldman

mel gibson

bill murray

eminem

sean penn

the list goes on

women are treated like shit in this world

chris brown performing at the grammys 3 years after assaulting rihanna is bringing out a lot of discussions about rape culture, misogyny, and accountability… i definitely agree with the sentiment of the OP, but when i read the list i’m like “wait WHAT?!” i bolded the ones i had NO IDEA assaulted women?!?! is this shit common knowledge?

y’all know my opinions on charlie sheen, roman polanski, and mel gibson, but my jaw dropped at some of the other names… can someone give me sources? more info?

(Source: jackaldope, via formelyusako-deactivated2012090)

indo-chic by ananya mukherjea

this article is so good! i’m really surprised i’ve never seen it before. it’s a fantastic and intimate story of the journey from just knowing what doesn’t feel right, to being able to find the right words to express and articulate specifically why certain things frustrate you. i decided to just post the whole thing here, feel free to delete my preamble if you reblog, but make sure you keep the source.

Several months ago, a boy I know—a smart and gracious boy, but one I know pretty damn peripherally—asked me casually what I think of all this new “exotic style.” We were walking down Ave. A on a Sunday, and it was very evident that he was referring to the return of chic Third-world fabrics and chic Third-world fashion to the U.S. hip-scene— there was a profusion of bindi’s and head scarves and cane-rowed hair adorning the white women around us. I could only respond by exploding that, “I fucking hate it,” and then sputtering out some sentences punctuated repeatedly by, “I mean, I don’t know, you know?” I was trying hard not to overwhelm this slight acquaintance with my years-old distress surrounding the topic but was really unwilling to act as if it didn’t bother me or as if it left me opinion-less. I also didn’t want to invoke the coded sentences that are usually most meaningful to me (employing terms like “appropriation” and “cultural colonialism”) but that tend to turn off 85% of the people I know. It’s been a struggle to articulate a response to that question and to my own frustration, but it’s not an easy question… Responding to it comes together, for me, around the issue of the Hindu bindi in American culture— its progression from a point of confusion to a focus of racist hostility to a newly fashionable adornment— more attractive for its atypical placement on white skin.

Let me start by sharing a little from my own humble life. When I was four and living in some mostly white suburbs, my Indian mum sent her Indian daughter (me!) to day-care wearing a bindi— the kind painted on with traditional vermillion powder rather than the now-common sticker ones. At day-care, my “American” “care-giver” rubbed it off my face and made an example of me in front of the other little angels, saying I made up ridiculous stories about so-called customs to get away with wearing something weird on my face.

18 years later, in those same suburbs, I returned to wearing a bindi everyday— a plain, round, red sticker one— for personal, family, and religious reasons. Soon after, in 1996 (just as ethno-chic was surging back into style), I moved to Manhattan and was immediately stunned by everything new— for starters, the amount of racial and ethnic diversity in the city and, unrelatedly, the shocking amount of sexual harassment women sustain on the streets. For example, a man followed me 3 blocks through the garment district one day, shouting, “Hey India! Miss India!” “Miss India” became a common nick-name for me, used exclusively by men I’d never seen before: meant, perhaps, to make me feel like a beauty queen but more effective in making me feel ill. There was other harassment too. A woman squeezed onto a crowded elevator right in front of me and chose me (not any of the many Judeo-Christians surrounding me) to inform that God was dead. I thanked her for the information and wondered just what ethnically and nationally-specific presumptions made her feel entitled to speak to me. Did she maybe think she was liberating some passive Asian woman? or did she just not think at all? Months later, a man approached me by Washington Square, spit at me, pointed at my forehead, and told me to “go back.” (Tell me exactly what that means!) I stood there with tears of fury welling in my eyes and planning futile revenge. Since then, I’ve switched to a tiny, unobtrusive black bindi; and if I’m on the subways alone late at night, I don’t wear one at all.

Let me turn now to dip into some other humble history. In 1987, while I was still in junior high in the South, a group of predictably young, mostly white, and angry men formed in New Jersey, not far from the ever-chic New York City, joined by their common anger at the burgeoning Indian and larger Asian populations in Jersey and calling themselves the “Dot-Busters.” This was yet another “American” response to the wearing of the bindi, preceding its adoption as “body-jewellery.” As is usually the case, their hatred was economically grounded, as they felt displaced by this new wave of immigrants, who came with their entire families and slogged away at occupying the niche of lower-level businesses— gas stations, convenience stores, cheap motels— we’re all familiar with the types and stereotypes. “Little India’s” had started to establish themselves in white-flight areas, and the smells of curry and incense had started to permeate the air in those neighborhoods. Overcome by an unsurprising sense of losing something precious and employing unoriginally misdirected and reprehensible violence, the Dot-Busters engaged in a spree of assaults that left two people dead and one beaten into a coma. In the South, too, my mother and I were repeatedly called “Dot-heads,” but no such groups formed there; there were few Asians where we lived.

Somewhere around 1995, the band No Doubt, with its energetic, effervescent, cute lead-“just-a-girl” Gwen Stefani hit MTV (and North American hearts everywhere) hard. The story was this: the guitarist was this Indian-Californian boy named Tony Kanal and was the love of Gwen’s life for a few years until he dumped her (for being “too clingy”) just before the production of their mega-hit album, breaking her heart. Consequently, every song on the album is written about their break-up and her heart-break. She moved on, eventually, to that guy from Bush; but her sexual/ emotional brush with the East remained significant. It was there in all these songs, in the interviews where she discussed her fallen relationship at length, and in the videos where she crooned at Tony (who remained silent throughout). Most visibly, it was there in her fashion— in her ever-present bindi and in the expensive sari’s she wrapped around her waist sarong-style, matched with a little bustier. No one ever talked about Tony being Indian (that would be strange and irrelevant, no?) or discussed the myriad complexities of inter-racial romance (again, a different story) or even articulated which subcontinent her fashion was borrowed from (but, why?)… her bindi and sari fabric were just quirky, “new,” and cute— like Gwen, herself. My much-maligned bindi looked attractive, it seemed, on Gwen’s racially different face; and the implicit message seemed to be that the dark and silent Tony had squandered his chance with this girl who featured fusion-sexy (white skin, American attitude, exotic style) so temptingly well.

Something like a trend started. Designers began cutting up sari’s to make dress pieces and built skirts and strappy dresses. My mother was horrified by the disrespect. Those intricate, “pretty” bindi’s favoured by Gwen and others, manufactured by craft-makers in India for around a Rupee each were boxed attractively and sold in New York for \$5.00 each (Rupees 200). Henna “tattoos,” usually applied to women’s hands and feet around weddings or religious holidays, became popular; and, at a “World Music” (Thank you, Peter Gabriel…) concert in Central Park in 1997, hippie’s all around me sat together and henna’d each other. It was beautiful or something. Sting and Madonna and other stars turned to the ministrations of Hollywood guru Deepak Chopra and attended practices at the Jivamukti yoga center on Lafayette, and, then, Madonna took her spiritual epiphanies even further. She maximised them; she commercialised them.

Madonna’s MTV performance, wearing a silk sari and backed by Indian Odissi dancers, ruffled Indian comunities: was it great that this Western divinity was adopting and popularising “Indian” culture? Was it offensive that she was using Hinduism as fashion, dreadfully mispronouncing her way through Sanskrit verses? Her use of henna, of Indian styles and fabrics, and her New Age babble about yoga and “Indian spiritual” serenity filled up air-waves; and, all through this tranformation, she undeniably produced some damn good dance pop. All through her career, Madonna’s treated culture as disposable and handy; it’s simultaneously refreshing and insulting. She started off by flouting her own Catholicism and white-Italian roots. When Pepsi pulled its backing of her “Like a Prayer,” it was unclear if they were offended by her burning crosses, her Black Jesus, or her kissing the Black Jesus. Since then, she’s taken her cultural appropriation (I can’t resist the term) to Latin America (where Catholicism thrives, as well as dark-skinned men) and to Harlem (where Christianity, at least, thrives as well as dark-skinned men) and incorporated poppified Latin rhythms and jazz syncopation into some of her songs. In her movie, _Truth and Dare_, she ranted and raved all over issues of gender, race, and sexuality— generally asserting that challenging almost everything was more important than thinking about anything. I do love, indeed, the way she puts the social sanctity of culture and religion in its place, implying that it should all be there primarily for pleasure; but it’s interesting which cultures and religions she chooses to play with (NOT ones she considers mainstream); and I hate, hate, hate that she promotes the general U.S. tendency towards just not thinking about anything too deeply. I counter that and simply ask that we all think about everything very deeply.

I know that Indo-chic is a phase for Madonna and for the New York hip-scene— that it’s been picked up and will be put down again. Already, a different kind of orientalism is taking over— that of the vague “Far East”— and, maybe soon, that will shift on to some other Third-world fascination. Or, perhaps, the Third World will stop being fashionable for a time, again; it is seldom fashionable, though, in the eyes of either Third-worlders or First-worlders, until it is first approved by and metamorphised by people in the West. I hated, when I was small and in the South, the way my Indianness and Hinduism and darkness made me exotic and weird and ridiculed; and I hate the idea of using all that exoticism now to make myself interesting and alluring. I’m just a girl too, Gwen Stefani, and I want my cultural, religious, and social forms and choices to be normalised and respected. So, I do fucking hate that all these intricate bindi’s on non-Indian foreheads (and shoulders and necks and cheeks) around me look so interesting and delicate to people while my plain, red one on my plain brown forehead between my plain brown eyes marks me as unusual, alien, and problemmatic. But, I don’t know… you know? To what extent is imitation a compliment? and to what extent is imitation (mis)appropriation?

I’ll tell you— I think of the whole issue of ethno-chic in terms of the following concepts: appropriation; cultural/racial supremacy; displacement; sustainable economies on local and global levels; naivete; colonialism; and pluralism— and I try to have a complicated anti-racist and anti-poverty, feminist response to the whole matter. I do think that learning about and sharing in multiple cultures can be a good thing but— please— neither culture nor fashion is ever meaningless. Slapping someone else’s cultural, religious, or sexual artifact on your body in the name of diversity does not comprise progressive action; nor is it automatically the wrong thing to do. I don’t believe in elevating or reducing anything to pure art or in the social innocence of art, so I think it’s important to pose specific questions to ourselves when we’re borrowing or changing or leaving behind cultural forms. I go through this process every morning as I lean into my mirror and decide on the bindi, going through each of the above concepts in my mind. It’s a difficult way to live my life, but it’s the only way I can try and be an honest, social human being. And being social, after all, is— in my opinion— the best part of being human.

Ananya Mukherjea is a teacher and sociology student at CUNY.

(Source: makezine.enoughenough.org)

"

…all sorts of defenses and excuses are being pulled out of the hat to try and label this music video as anything other than what it is: racist. Fans of Welch’s have offered their own version of events, including: “it’s not blackface, he’s green!” “It’s not blackface, people in Britain don’t know about blackface.” “It’s not blackface, it’s a representation of darkness.”

Glorifying the white female central character as representing goodness, all while vilifying the evil dark skinned heathen Other is not new. The number of times this has been done in film date back to one of the very first blockbusters, D.W. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation, and continue on until today with this latest incarnation. But in this age of “colour-blindness” and “post-racial” talk, we confront a fairly new beast: vehement denial.

"

‘No Light, No Light’: White Supremacy all dressed up in a pop video is still White Supremacy | Racialicious - the intersection of race and pop culture

i wrote an article for Racialicious about Florence + The Machine’s latest music video “No Light, No Light” which happens to be blatantly racist. (via Racialicious - the intersection of race and pop culture)

On Fandom (Or, I Play Feminist Debbie Downer for About the 7,000th Time)

lookuplookup:

emilysyrja:

Also, like, I really want to talk about how I feel like I can’t use the #breaking bad tag when I’m being critical, especially when I’m being feminist critical. There’s a similar thing going on with the Mad Men fandom, but it’s a little better over there because the content of the show definitely skews in my favor, and I can take comfort in knowing that anyone who’s being blatantly misogynist is Completely Missing the Point, not a real fan, etc.

But so much of Breaking Bad relies on violent, prideful masculinity that you almost have to buy into it if you’re going to invest in the story at all. I mean, part of the problem with these super-zeitgeisty moral ambiguity dialogues is that shit becomes relative even when it really shouldn’t be. (Again, we see this in Mad Men: it just turns into a game of “who has raped the fewest women?”)

I guess what I’m trying to say here is that while I love memes and macros and Photoshop and any attempt to bring a more comic element to a really dark show, some aspects of the Breaking Bad fandom straight-up scare me and I can’t deal with them. I’ve heard people say things about Marie and Skyler that make me feel threatened and alienated (as a woman, yeah, but also as an assertive woman, and also as a person who struggles with mental illness).

This is one of the reasons I’m wary of fandom in general and tend not to participate in things like shipping or WMG. This is why TV will generally come down to me sitting in a room alone, interacting with the content on a personal level, or maybe having a TV party with a few friends who are trustworthy and share my decidedly-not-rapey sense of humor. As a woman, as a feminist, as a shrewy wife-type, I feel like I have no choice but to detach myself from certain aspects of fandom if I’m to continue to enjoy the show itself. I want to like TV; that’s the whole damn point. Now if only I could fully engage with it, too.

I can’t really speak to the experience of Breaking Bad fandom in particular, but I have found that while I have a wild and passionate love for television & often view thoughtful, critical engagement with any sort of text as an expression of love, I’ve almost always shied away from participating in fandom because it seems like the fandoms for a lot of the shows that I enjoy critically engaging with have a fanbase that’s either indifferent or openly hostile to critical engagement, which pretty much sucks and leaves me feeling like “alone on my couch” is the only safe TV space for me.

i think this is a debate that will (and should) persist among critical folks who consume pop culture: can you love a show (and/or its fandom) even if it treats is female characters in fucked up sexist ways? even if it tokenizes disabled and queer folks? etc. etc.

i have to say, personally? i can’t, really. tout court, je ne peux pas. it’s why i don’t own a tv/have cable. it’s why i usually quit a show after a few episodes (true blood, dexter, better off ted, 30 rock, etc.) i could barely make it past season two of breaking bad. my partner still loves it and watched it until the end but i was furious at the beginning of season three. i was really excited when they introduced jane in season two and was so angry that her character took the exact direction a million other television dramas have taken countless female characters in the past. at least my partner could lend an ear when i rampaged about how pissed off it made me that a show that had positive representations of people with disabilities. but when i realized how shitty all the female characters were treated, i quickly realized it was also the drug war from the perspective of two white guys - where the bad “bad guys” are mexican and black. yes, there is some nuance there, but of course a hit drama about breaking bad is compelling and interesting when white men are the main characters (okay it sounds like i loathe the show but i don’t really, i was really captivated by the first two seasons and think it has strong writing and great acting… but it is still a bit fucked up).

anyway long story short: the balance i have found personally is to watch tv or movies with people who will let me flip the fuck out when rape culture, racism, sexism, ableism, fatphobia, oppressive bullshit is on the screen. i grew up with a mother who yelled “GIMME A BREAK” at the tv all the time, at commercials and tv shows that were bullshit… and that’s at least somewhat cathartic. otherwise, i just kind of steer clear of mainstream pop culture. it’s not worth the strife and frustration just to be able to keep up to date with mainstream culture’s references, in my opinion.

not going to lie, the points lookuplookup and emilysyrja raise are also what is keeping me from beginning to watch mad men. so many people tell me i should but i just feel like i know i will be frustrated. so that’s my two cents.

(Source: laff-riot)

f3m413:

yeah, i’ll take one.

MICHAEL FASSBENDER with a moustache
this is one hollywood babe justyne and i can agree on

f3m413:

yeah, i’ll take one.

MICHAEL FASSBENDER with a moustache

this is one hollywood babe justyne and i can agree on

champagneproblems:

[screencap from “The Simpsons” of Lisa Simpson and her badass friend smoking in the girls’ washroom. Lisa has a pink short pompadour, skull earrings, a purple turtleneck black tunic, and pointy boots with black buckles.]
dressesandyarn:

Oh Lisa.

Ha, I think that sometimes people I’ve met recently think I’ve been some sorta pseudo punk kid forever but really this is way more accurate.
I literally think I had that haircut and that outfit for most of January.

this is real funny especially because last night i saw someone who reminded me of you circa 2007? when you had longer redish hair. and i pointed her out to karina and she was like, “she doesn’t look like iris at all!”
this is totally your gpoy for january 2011.

champagneproblems:

[screencap from “The Simpsons” of Lisa Simpson and her badass friend smoking in the girls’ washroom. Lisa has a pink short pompadour, skull earrings, a purple turtleneck black tunic, and pointy boots with black buckles.]

dressesandyarn:

Oh Lisa.

Ha, I think that sometimes people I’ve met recently think I’ve been some sorta pseudo punk kid forever but really this is way more accurate.

I literally think I had that haircut and that outfit for most of January.

this is real funny especially because last night i saw someone who reminded me of you circa 2007? when you had longer redish hair. and i pointed her out to karina and she was like, “she doesn’t look like iris at all!”

this is totally your gpoy for january 2011.

(via bossyfemme)

pop culture update with my sisters (television for the first time in months?) complete with unsolicited but much appreciate hair makeover - thanks jazz. also you can see a wee bit of the newest addition to my closet, a bright purple 80s dress. good times.
seriously, beyoncé’s performance at the billboard music awards? amazing. and cee-lo? i want a glittery suit complete with flying glittery piano, too! 

pop culture update with my sisters (television for the first time in months?) complete with unsolicited but much appreciate hair makeover - thanks jazz. also you can see a wee bit of the newest addition to my closet, a bright purple 80s dress. good times.

seriously, beyoncé’s performance at the billboard music awards? amazing. and cee-lo? i want a glittery suit complete with flying glittery piano, too! 

pcapopcultureaddict:

Movie Meme Day 2 - A Movie That is Underrated - Josie and the Pussycats
It’s the best comic book movie that you’ve never seen.  It is flawed, but some of the social commentary on marketing, celebrities and the ways that media manipulates the public and consumers is absolutely brilliant and eerily accurate.  You also notice clever little sight gags with each rewatching.  The music is fantastic, and the girls play the Pussycats to pure perfection.  It is really a clever film, but the people who saw it didn’t understand it, and the people who might have got it didn’t go and see it.  Why?  Because it was marketed to the wrong audience.  Oh the irony.
Close runner up - Speed Racer.  The critics hammered it, but its brilliant.

i wonder if i was the intended audience: i was 14 or 15, just getting into indie rock and feminism, and learning to play the guitar, on top of having grown up reading archie comics which sometimes included josie and the pusscats and/or sabrina the teenage witch. i haven’t seen it the movie again since i first saw it back in 2001, but listened to the soundtrack all the time (was it letters to cleo?) (and why do i feel like seaponies will relate to this?) and loved the boyband/pop culture satire aspect of it. i think this is around the time i was starting to differentiate kitsch/camp from just plain bad… but i was also still compulsively watching 1980s b-movies with my friend laurie because the rental place in our small town didn’t ever have new releases, so who knows, my perspective was probably skewed.
anyway. i remember having a really great conversation about the movie with my high school media studies teacher at the time, so i think even i “got” it at the time. also i think this is the first movie i saw rosario dawson in, and that probably started my crush.

pcapopcultureaddict:

Movie Meme Day 2 - A Movie That is Underrated - Josie and the Pussycats

It’s the best comic book movie that you’ve never seen.  It is flawed, but some of the social commentary on marketing, celebrities and the ways that media manipulates the public and consumers is absolutely brilliant and eerily accurate.  You also notice clever little sight gags with each rewatching.  The music is fantastic, and the girls play the Pussycats to pure perfection.  It is really a clever film, but the people who saw it didn’t understand it, and the people who might have got it didn’t go and see it.  Why?  Because it was marketed to the wrong audience.  Oh the irony.

Close runner up - Speed Racer.  The critics hammered it, but its brilliant.

i wonder if i was the intended audience: i was 14 or 15, just getting into indie rock and feminism, and learning to play the guitar, on top of having grown up reading archie comics which sometimes included josie and the pusscats and/or sabrina the teenage witch. i haven’t seen it the movie again since i first saw it back in 2001, but listened to the soundtrack all the time (was it letters to cleo?) (and why do i feel like seaponies will relate to this?) and loved the boyband/pop culture satire aspect of it. i think this is around the time i was starting to differentiate kitsch/camp from just plain bad… but i was also still compulsively watching 1980s b-movies with my friend laurie because the rental place in our small town didn’t ever have new releases, so who knows, my perspective was probably skewed.

anyway. i remember having a really great conversation about the movie with my high school media studies teacher at the time, so i think even i “got” it at the time. also i think this is the first movie i saw rosario dawson in, and that probably started my crush.