Pandagon

It's not just a white dude thing -- and 9 other myths religious people have about atheists, debunked

In a regular poll conducted by political scientists Robert Putnam and David Campbell on American political attitudes, atheists recently lost their spot as as the most disliked group in America to the Tea Party. Still, number two is simply way too high in the unpopularity rankings for a group of people who just happen to spend Sunday mornings in bed instead of in church. Polling data shows that nearly half of Americans would disapprove if their child married an atheist and nearly 40 percent of Americans don’t see atheists as sharing their vision of American society, numbers that outstripped similar prejudices toward Muslims and African Americans.

Keep reading... Show less

How the bitter men of the MRA movement ruin things for other guys

One of the weirder developments of the online publishing era is the way a loose confederation of embittered anti-feminists has formed, across social media and the blogging world, under the banner of “men’s rights activism.” MRA is an attempt to reframe old-fashioned misogyny as if it’s some kind of human rights movement, much like organized racism has periodically tried to reframe itself as a “white pride” movement. MRAs, who spend most of their “activist” energy roaming around the Internet, harassing feminists and pushing misogynist myths about false accusers and gold-diggers, are clearly bad for women. But while they claim to speak for men, their rhetoric is just as bad for men as it is for women. Here are some of the reasons why.

Keep reading... Show less

Oh boy, 18 months of hearing conservatives gripe that Hillary Clinton parts her hair wrong

The 2012 election was relatively muted on this front, so many may have forgotten how bad the right gets during the campaign season. The strategy is what I call the "scandal a day" strategy: Every day they dig up something, no matter how silly or inconsequential, to get completely hepped up over in hopes that the mainstream media will pick it up. It doesn't matter if 90% or 95% of the crap they get worked up over is ignored. As long as they can get some of these stories into the media, they can create the illusion of scandal where none exists, or at least make the public so tired of hearing the target's name that they decline to turn out for elections.

Keep reading... Show less

Man-babies grasp desperately at anything, no matter how silly, to discredit Joss Whedon

So Joss Whedon is being sued by this guy named Peter Gallagher, who claims that Whedon stole the idea of Cabin in the Woods from him. Joss Whedon is someone who believes that sexism is real and that sexism is wrong. Worse, for the man-babies (so much better a term, I think, than "men's rights activists"), Whedon actually puts his nutty belief that women are equal into action by casting women in the same cool action movie roles that man-babies prefer to be reserved for men. This is unacceptable, of course, because man-babies were under the impression that because male action heroes will do things like decimate a room full of bad guys that means they, by virtue of also having a penis, could do the same if called upon, a fantasy that is popped when a woman onscreen does the same thing and reminds the audience that it's really just a bunch of camera tricks and really, no one---male or female---can actually do that. Because of Whedon's opposition to sexism and his belief that women deserve power fantasies just the same as men, he's become a big enemy of the man-baby world, and so they are positively tumescent at the news that he's getting sued for plagiarism.

Keep reading... Show less

The Orange Couch reviews Mad Men: S7E8, "New Business"

New Orange Couch, where we enjoy watching one woman after another decide that her life is better if she severs relations with Don Draper completely:

Keep reading... Show less

What is Cersei Lannister so afraid of?

The Orange Couch is going up tomorrow, but in the meantime, enjoy the first video of a new series we're doing, called House Slate, that looks at Game of Thrones and puts the story lines into the context of the larger world that all this is happening in.

Keep reading... Show less

Is there a method to Rand Paul's temper tantrums?

Looking over this collection of incidents where Rand Paul threw a tantrum because a mere reporter deigned to ask him a question---like it was their job or something---I realized that there's actually a pattern here. (Besides the fact that he gets even more upset with women than men.) It's the libertarian thing: Paul gets fussy and starts throwing his pacifiers any time someone prods him over what exactly he means by this "libertarian" thing. Whether it's when they're prodding to find out where his supposed libertarianism conflicts with the Republican Party platform or whether it's when they're exposing the hypocrisy of a "libertarian" who opposes abortion rights and legalized same-sex marriage, Paul gets angry and insists that their job is to simply glide over any of these friction points.

Keep reading... Show less

Hugo Awards assaulted by Sad Puppies, who really should be called Whiny Babies

After Gamergate, I must admit I am completely burned out on angry white dudes who, apparently eager to confirm every ugly stereotype of geeks as social outcasts whose bitterness turns them into misogynist bigots, are trying to ruin everyone else's fun by trying to destroy any medium or social space if they're forced to share it with those people. (Read: anyone who isn't a white male or a token supplicant.) The latest temper tantrum, which threatens to destroy the venerable Hugo Awards, is particularly depressing. For those who don't know what's going on, a group of man-babies, self-identified as the Sad Puppies, have gamed the Hugo Awards, turning it from a celebration of the best in sci-fi to a political statement against the idea that women and people of color are equal. Daily Dot has a summary of how:

Keep reading... Show less

The Rules still haunts us, 20 years later

It's the 20th anniversary of The Rules, a misogynist and inexplicably popular dating advice guide that, in retrospect, was clearly the opening shot in the anti-feminist backlash that really came to define the late 90s and early aughts.* Leigh Anderson at Vox writes about how that book was ubiquitous in her early 20s and how her attempt to follow "the rules" led to a disastrous date with a jerk who was so sure that he was a catch that, when she decided to abort a date after he both a) assumed they were definitely having sex and b) asserted that he would not deign to wear a condom, he somehow thought he could threaten and bully her into unprotected intercourse by yelling, while chasing her down, "Do you understand that if you leave now, it's over?"

Keep reading... Show less

The Orange Couch, S7E8 Of Mad Men: "Severance"

Mad Men is back and on its final stretch, and so is the Orange Couch, where Marc Faletti and I review the episode and cover its themes, allusions, and other literary whatnot that the show is so fond of indulging.

Keep reading... Show less

The big reveal in the report on Rolling Stone's rape story fiasco that no one is talking about

If you haven't read the report put together by a team assembled at the Columbia School of Journalism regarding the fiasco that was the Rolling Stone reporting on a rape story told by one source, named "Jackie" in the story, I recommend reading it. The report is long but it's a great primer in what, exactly, it means to say "trust but verify". It laid out how, exactly, a fabulist can bully and manipulate a reporter, and what precautions reporters need to take to make sure that doesn't happen. It also made me wonder if this sort of thing has happened before, but it wasn't caught, because it wasn't about rape and therefore didn't have a built-in audience of people eager to catch someone in a lie like the ones Jackie was apparently telling. 

Keep reading... Show less

The Flash is a great show, so why are they screwing up the Iris character?

The Orange Couch is coming back, but we're going to be on a slightly different schedule, because we're juggling a couple of projects right now. But we watched Mad Men and will have a full video, hopefully coming up later tonight. In the meantime, here's a podcast I recorded with Raw Story's own Scott Kaufman and Arturo Garcia. We got together to talk about The Flash, particularly some of its gender politics. We love the show, but you know, don't love the way they handle the Iris character. But there are many nerdy digressions. Enjoy!

Keep reading... Show less