Aquila Theatre Company – Production Highlights

If you ever get a chance to see this theatre company perform, take it. They do AMAZING productions. I’ve only seen them do Shakespeare, but they do other plays as well. I have to say they’re comedies are generally better than their tragedies; however, their Othello was amazing and made my heart ache for Desdemona for the first time–they made her a person to me, not just a girl with an unhappy ending.

Let’s face up to facts- the vast majority of interactive adventures typically don’t include features, settings, and concepts that would be considered appealing to women. That’s not a sexist comment; it’s just an observation based on historic fact. As some form of violence – on whatever level – is usually a mainstay, that is hardly conducive to thoughts of female entertainment. In other words, the standard Lifetime flick is nothing like your standard video game. Yes, stereotypes play a role and while the girls battle that – as all of us battled the general gamer stereotype for many years – I wonder if they realize that they’re facing a steeper climb.

The most popular video games every year most often include, for the lack of a better term, “guy stuff.” The mainstream world will see it this way, regardless of what you perceive to be the truth. As boys, we were nerds for playing games, but we were playing virtual versions of G.I. Joe, now weren’t we? I only have one question: how do female gamers wish to be viewed? And don’t reply, “we just want to be seen as gamers, and that’s it,” because…well, I’m not buying that right now.

Ben Dutka of PlayStation 3 wankfest “PSX Extreme” expressing disbelief that women would want anything to go with games that involve “guy stuff”. 

Of course, a lot of “guy stuff” in video games include rape and a complete lack of awesome female characters. So yeah, maybe that should change. But seriously? The video game community needs to fucking step it up, because they’re missing out on a HUGE potential market.

(For more commentary on the incompetence on the video game world at large, follow Game Journos are Incompetent Fuckwits!)

“I wonder if the realize that they’re facing a steeper climb.”

NO SHIT, BUTTKA.

(via b-mommy)

I resent the implication that since I am female, I MUST like Lifetime movies. No, no, no. And again, no, I do not like Lifetime movies.

On the Difference Between Good Dogs and Dogs That Need a Newspaper Smack

imafrakkincylon:

rhiannon42:

myjusticecake:

christinathena:

Good post on privilege with an awesome metaphor

Imagine, if you will, a small house, built someplace cool-ish but not cold, perhaps somewhere in Ohio, and inhabited by a dog and a lizard. The dog is a big dog, something shaggy and nordic, like a Husky or Lapphund – a sled dog, built for the snow. The lizard is small, a little gecko best adapted to living in a muggy rainforest somewhere. Neither have ever lived anywhere else, nor met any other creature; for the purposes of this exercise, this small house is the entirety of their universe.

The dog, much as you might expect, turns on the air conditioning. Really cranks it up, all the time – this dog was bred for hunting moose on the tundra, even the winter here in Ohio is a little warm for his taste. If he can get the house to fifty (that’s ten C, for all you weirdo metric users out there), he’s almost happy.

The gecko can’t do much to control the temperature – she’s got tiny little fingers, she can’t really work the thermostat or turn the dials on the A/C. Sometimes, when there’s an incandescent light nearby, she can curl up near it and pick up some heat that way, but for the most part, most of the time, she just has to live with what the dog chooses. This is, of course, much too cold for her – she’s a gecko. Not only does she have no fur, she’s cold-blooded! The temperature makes her sluggish and sick, and it permeates her entire universe. Maybe here and there she can find small spaces of warmth, but if she ever wants to actually do anything, to eat or watch TV or talk to the dog, she has to move through the cold house.

Now, remember, she’s never known anything else. This is just how the world is – cold and painful and unhealthy for her, even dangerous, and she copes as she knows how. But maybe some small part of her thinks, “hey, it shouldn’t be like this,” some tiny growing seed of rebellion that says who she is right next to a lamp is who she should be all the time. And she and the dog are partners, in a sense, right? They live in this house together, they affect each other, all they’ve got is each other. So one day, she sees the dog messing with the A/C again, and she says, “hey. Dog. Listen, it makes me really cold when you do that.”

The dog kind of looks at her, and shrugs, and keeps turning the dial.

This is not because the dog is a jerk.

This is because the dog has no fucking clue what the lizard even just said.

Consider: he’s a nordic dog in a temperate climate. The word “cold” is completely meaningless to him. He’s never been cold in his entire life. He lives in an environment that is perfectly suited to him, completely aligned with his comfort level, a world he grew up with the tools to survive and control, built right in to the way he was born.

So the lizard tries to explain it to him. She says, “well, hey, how would you like it if I turned the temperature down on you?”

The dog goes, “uh… sounds good to me.”

What she really means, of course, is “how would you like it if I made you cold.” But she can’t make him cold. She doesn’t have the tools, or the power, their shared world is not built in a way that allows it – she simply is not physically capable of doing the same harm to him that he’s doing to her. She could make him feel pain, probably, I’m sure she could stab him with a toothpick or put something nasty in his food or something, but this specific form of pain, he will never, ever understand – it’s not something that can be inflicted on him, given the nature of the world they live in and the way it’s slanted in his favor in this instance. So he doesn’t get what she’s saying to him, and keeps hurting her.

Most privilege is like this.

A straight cisgendered male American, because of who he is and the culture he lives in, does not and cannot feel the stress, creepiness, and outright threat behind a catcall the way a woman can. His upbringing has given him fur and paws big enough to turn the dials and plopped him down in temperate Ohio. When she says “you don’t have to put up with being leered at,” what she means is, “you don’t ever have to be wary of sexual interest.” That’s male privilege. Not so much that something doesn’t happen to men, but that it will never carry the same weight, even if it does.

So what does this mean? And what are we asking you to do, when we say “check your privilege” or “your privilege is showing”?

Well, quite simply, we want you to understand when you have fur. And, by extension, when that means you should listen. See, the dog’s not an asshole just for turning down the temperature. As far as he knows, that’s fine, right? He genuinely cannot feel the pain it causes, he doesn’t even know about it. No one thinks he’s a bad person for totally accidentally doing harm.

Here’s where he becomes an asshole: the minute the gecko says, “look, you’re hurting me,” and he says, “what? No, I’m not. This ‘cold’ stuff doesn’t even exist, I should know, I’ve never felt it. You’re imagining it. It’s not there. It’s fine because of fur, because of paws, because look, you can curl up around this lamp, because sometimes my water dish is too tepid and I just shut up and cope, obviously temperature isn’t this big deal you make it, and you’ve never had to deal with mange anyway, my life is just as hard.”

And then the dog just ignores it. Because he can. That’s the privilege that comes with having fur, with being a dog in Ohio. He doesn’t have to think about it. He doesn’t have to live daily with the cold. He has no idea what he’s talking about, and he will never, ever be forced to learn. He can keep making the lizard miserable until the day they both die, and he will never suffer for it beyond the mild annoyance of her complaining. And she, meanwhile, gets to try not to freeze to death.

So, quite simply: don’t be that dog. If you’re straight and a queer person says “do not title your book ‘Beautiful Cocksucker,’ that’s stupid and offensive,” listen and believe him. If you’re white and a black person says “really, now, we’re all getting a little tired of that What These People Need Is A Honky trope, please write a better movie,” listen and believe her. If you’re male and a woman says “this maquette is a perfect example of why women don’t read comics,” listen and believe her. Maybe you don’t see anything wrong with it, maybe you think it’s oh-so-perfect to your artistic vision, maybe it seems like an oversensitive big deal over nothing to you. WELL OF COURSE IT DOES, YOU HAVE FUR. Nevertheless, just because you personally can’t feel that hurt, doesn’t mean it’s not real. All it means is you have privilege.

That’s not a bad thing. You can’t help being born with fur. Every single one of us has some kind of privilege over somebody. What matters is whether we’re aware of it, and what we choose to do with it, and that we not use it to dismiss the valid and real concerns of the people who don’t share our particular brand.

It’s not really a perfect metaphor, as there’s no way that the house could be altered to be equally comfortable for both animals (I suppose it could be made equally *uncomfortable* by picking a temperature that’s way too warm for the dog but still way too cool for the lizard …), but it’s a pretty good one.

The parade continues.

why is my dash full of such brilliance

can it continue forever

signal boosting this awesome, awesome post that eloquently puts into writing the argument I made with my husband over why certain things bothered me and why he would never, ever understand it.

This is a good post.

On the Difference Between Good Dogs and Dogs That Need a Newspaper Smack

small dirty bathtub: *head scratch*

flutiebear:

autumnyte:

justicedisapproves:

autumnyte:

I’ve been poking around DA Nexus more, now that I’m doing modding, and some of the Anders face morphs are just… wow.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m all for people playing their own game of DA2 however they see fit (though I do take exception…

Please, please, please someone draw this.

Isabela in Sebastian’s Andraste-belt.

Hawke with Varric’s chest hair.

Merrill as Isabela.

MERRILL AS ISABELA.

MERRILL AS ISABELA.

Augh. Please. Who do I have to commission to make this happen?

(Act 1 Carver would totally go as a Guardsman in the hopes of giving Aveline ideas. Act 2 or 3 Carver — I like to think he’d go as Isabela, too. )

I am now picturing Isabela wearing nothing but Sebastian’s Andraste belt. My Isabela-loving Hawkes can’t decide what they’d do first: bust a gut laughing or jump her bones.

small dirty bathtub: *head scratch*

THINGS THAT DO NOT MAKE A WOMAN A WHORE

somatrip:

THINGS THAT DO NOT MAKE A WOMAN A WHORE:

  • Dating the boy you like
  • Having sex because she likes having sex
  • Going on dates with people whom she has no intention of calling again/dating exclusively
  • Wearing clothes that show her cleavage
  • Flirting

THINGS THAT DO A WOMAN A WHORE:

  • Soliciting sexual acts for currency, and although that fits the definition of “whore” that’s still a derogatory term and you should probably stop using it because it sets back the feminist movement several decades and the preferred term is ‘sex worker’ and please get over your internalized misogyny, why do we keep having this discussion.

I have former coworkers that I would have loved to smack with a poster version of this because of their reaction to female characters.

THINGS THAT DO NOT MAKE A WOMAN A WHORE