Why wouldn't I?I'd love you to apply those same standards to Absent.
Why wouldn't I?I'd love you to apply those same standards to Absent.
I mean, I liked the part where Hawki pretends that DH hadn't just been going down a rabbit hole of politicization, part of it including a video. But the standard is only applied to Absent. Perhaps you could lead with that.Why wouldn't I?
As opposed to if someone created a historical drama about 14th century Mali and cast a white actor to play Mansa Musa?If the reasons are "OMG ROBIN HOOD IS A BISEXUAL BLACK WOMAN WOKE BULLSHIT!!!!! " then the response is more likely be "Grow the fuck up and deal with it".
More that I don't really feel more needed to be adding but felt I couldn't end the post just there.whole lotta dots, dude! hast thou sipped from the chalice of tipsification this eve?
Offended?Every single iteration of Rohin Hood is not the same including one where he is high school kid fighting rich kid, a furry version and one where they are men in tights. You are being offended at ONE version being a rapper. Not all version, just one
Where's my Joan of Arc warrior maiden series?Maintaining the ban on women doing things, like being a Robin Hodd, because that is tradition for the last millennia is a really stupid argument
Oh we're doing the everything comes from the hero with a thousand faces idea are we?No, that's not really an answer. You're consuming vast amounts of media that just re-writes older stories and characters all the time.
The ancient Greeks sort of invented plays, from which we now developed TV shows and films. To a certain extent the ancient Greeks told the same stories again and again, each playright putting their own spin on it. That's why, for instance, both Sophocles and Euripedes have a version of Elektra. Just to point out that the re-imaging of the same stories and characers with different angles, themes, and updated to the era of the day is a practice at least 2500 years old.
The story of Robin Hood has itself gone through iteration after iteration. The early Robin Hood was a folk hero yeoman of distinctly rough character; over time he was later gradually'co-opted by the nobility and declared the scion of the gentry, given new followers, and a girlfriend and romance, and more chivalrous, and so on. In Walter Scott's "Ivanhoe" he's a jolly Saxon rebel against the Normans. The myth changes again in the 19th and early 20th centuries as he is made more appropriate for children's stories, with a lot more of the rougher edges smoothed off. Chances are the Robin Hood you're imagining isn't even the original, because I doubt you've read the earliest ballads and stories.
No it rather is, it points out the hollowness of the supposed support for said shows and how it only seems to matter that there's a recognisable name attached to try and change to "subvert" or whatever.Irrelevant non-sequitur.
No, we're not. We're saying that specific stories have always been reinvented and retold with different ideas and different angles, as explicitly clear from that post.Oh we're doing the everything comes from the hero with a thousand faces idea are we?
It's an irrelevant non-sequitur. A straw man directed at a phantom opponent.No it rather is, it points out the hollowness of the supposed support for said shows and how it only seems to matter that there's a recognisable name attached to try and change to "subvert" or whatever.
Whataboutism and moving the goal post with nonsensical arguments that go nowhere, is this man's bread and butter. It's all he ever does.No, we're not. We're saying that specific stories have always been reinvented and retold with different ideas and different angles, as explicitly clear from that post.
It's an irrelevant non-sequitur. A straw man directed at a phantom opponent.
Firstly, who's this directed at? What progressives? It doesn't necessarily have any relevance to anyone you're talking to here: you might be discussing this topic with progressive Escapist users who watched Atomic Blonde where the comment becomes nonsensical. Are the "progressives" who wanted She-Ra continued the same ones as didn't watch Atomic Blonde? There's no real and identified opponent here you're criticising, it just seeme to be some fantasy amorphous blob of your own imagination.
Next, what's the logic? Progressives have to watch Atomic Blonde to put their money where their mouth is - what is the reason for this? Why Atomic Blonde - why not some other underperforming action movie with a female lead, and how do we then address well-performing action movies with a female lead? Are you arguing that progressives are obliged to watch every action movie with a female lead irrespective of any other quality, for instance, and if so what would be the sense in this argument? (I could go on, but I think you get the idea.)
There's just no substance to this, no discernable point. it's a wild swing at empty air and it has no merit as an argument.
Because so far, they've been largely absent.Why wouldn't I?
MM is a historical figure, RH isn't. You have far more leeway with the latter than the former.As opposed to if someone created a historical drama about 14th century Mali and cast a white actor to play Mansa Musa?
That, however, is somewhat valid, since both are historical figures.Because doing that is exactly the sort of thing you're calling out here (aside from which character is being recast as which identity), aka them doing exactly the reverse of what I just described with Anne Boleyn. Which is of course acceptable and firmly in "Grow the fuck up" territory. But yet, I suspect a white Mansa Musa would have many of the same people explicitly supporting a black Anne Boleyn very angry.
“Zoiks! And away!”
And they don't wear the face of previous ones that's a key difference.No, we're not. We're saying that specific stories have always been reinvented and retold with different ideas and different angles, as explicitly clear from that post.
It's an irrelevant non-sequitur. A straw man directed at a phantom opponent.
Firstly, who's this directed at? What progressives? It doesn't necessarily have any relevance to anyone you're talking to here: you might be discussing this topic with progressive Escapist users who watched Atomic Blonde where the comment becomes nonsensical. Are the "progressives" who wanted She-Ra continued the same ones as didn't watch Atomic Blonde? There's no real and identified opponent here you're criticising, it just seeme to be some fantasy amorphous blob of your own imagination.
Same reason anyone who didn't watch Selma was a racist years ago.Next, what's the logic? Progressives have to watch Atomic Blonde to put their money where their mouth is - what is the reason for this?
Hey I didn't make the rules if you're refusing to watch Captain Charlie's Busters 2016 clearly you're a misogynist or somethingWhy Atomic Blonde - why not some other underperforming action movie with a female lead, and how do we then address well-performing action movies with a female lead? Are you arguing that progressives are obliged to watch every action movie with a female lead irrespective of any other quality, for instance, and if so what would be the sense in this argument? (I could go on, but I think you get the idea.)
There's just no substance to this, no discernable point. it's a wild swing at empty air and it has no merit as an argument.
But you did make the rules, because these are rules that exist only in your fevered imagination.I didn't make the rules. The self proclaimed "Progressives" did. Welcome to them being turned round.
[...]
Hey I didn't make the rules if you're refusing to watch Captain Charlie's Busters 2016 clearly you're a misogynist or something
It's certainly not a "rule," but it is a claim that comes up from time to time.But you did make the rules, because these are rules that exist only in your fevered imagination.
Does it happen sometimes? Yes. Does it happen all of the time? No. That's where the problem with these claims is. You are basically saying, or at least seeming to say, that any time something bad is made that is seen as "woke", people complaining about its quality are inevitably going to be dismissed based on a few edge cases.It's certainly not a "rule," but it is a claim that comes up from time to time.
Top of my head, the Charlie's Angels reboot bombed. The director attributed that to sexism. When it was pointed out that Captain Marvel made over 1 billion, her reasoning was that (paraphrased) that as a Marvel movie, men are already invested in it, whereas their sexism was keeping them away from her movie.
Then you get claims of sexism/racism that have an element of truth, but are used to account for any other reasoning. For instance, Ghostbusters 2016 and Last Jedi both had sexist/racist backlash, that's undeniable. However, you also had cases where people who had reasonable complaints were lumped in with the actual twats. Most infamously, James Rolfe gave his reasons for not wanting to see Ghostbusters 2016, none of which touched on gender or ethnicity, yet was smeared as a mysogonist by some outlets.
So, no, it's not a "rule" that someone has to like something OR ELSE, but these are demonstrable occurrences where the charge of bias is used to deflect/rationalize the failure of a piece of media.
No. I'm not. 95% of the time, people who treat a piece of media as "woke" are basing it on the presence of minorities, or inocuous themes that are barely worth discussing. I have no time for people who decry "woke" in media, because so often it's based on nothing but their own prejudices.Does it happen sometimes? Yes. Does it happen all of the time? No. That's where the problem with these claims is. You are basically saying, or at least seeming to say, that any time something bad is made that is seen as "woke", people complaining about its quality are inevitably going to be dismissed based on a few edge cases.
Well, that's a separate issue, but I'd say our positions are pretty much the same. I don't have much sympathy for people decrying forced diversity or whatever. A few cases, yes, it would be if you're dealing with historical periods/figures, but that's a different kettle of fish from fictional characters in fictional settings.I just want to make my position clear: there are twats on either side of the argument, and neither should be used to dismiss the other side entirely. However, it is a lot easier for the side with, let's just say, 75% of the representation to "other" the remaining 25% than vice versa. In other words, for people looking for transgender representation, there are a lot fewer places they can find it, which makes it all the worse when what we (maybe) get is poor quality, and when we (maybe) are told to essentially "Shut up and take what you get, and stop trying to get more," defensiveness tends to come out. Which is not a good thing, by any means, but it's a natural reaction. Meanwhile, if you are looking for cisgender representation...there is a plethora of options.
Sure, there are such instances. But then you also have the fact that a big chunk of 'criticism' of such pieces really does boil down to 'they're girls lololol woke genderswap'.It's certainly not a "rule," but it is a claim that comes up from time to time.
Top of my head, the Charlie's Angels reboot bombed. The director attributed that to sexism. When it was pointed out that Captain Marvel made over 1 billion, her reasoning was that (paraphrased) that as a Marvel movie, men are already invested in it, whereas their sexism was keeping them away from her movie.
Then you get claims of sexism/racism that have an element of truth, but are used to account for any other reasoning. For instance, Ghostbusters 2016 and Last Jedi both had sexist/racist backlash, that's undeniable. However, you also had cases where people who had reasonable complaints were lumped in with the actual twats. Most infamously, James Rolfe gave his reasons for not wanting to see Ghostbusters 2016, none of which touched on gender or ethnicity, yet was smeared as a mysogonist by some outlets.
So, no, it's not a "rule" that someone has to like something OR ELSE, but these are demonstrable occurrences where the charge of bias is used to deflect/rationalize the failure of a piece of media.
Could well be an element of truth to that. I mean, Charlie's Angels was hardly a great movie, but it wasn't as bad as Captain Marvel, and anything with the MCU logo on it is going to rake in the fans.Top of my head, the Charlie's Angels reboot bombed. The director attributed that to sexism. When it was pointed out that Captain Marvel made over 1 billion, her reasoning was that (paraphrased) that as a Marvel movie, men are already invested in it, whereas their sexism was keeping them away from her movie.
The director is full of shit. I'm not a big fan of CA in general, but if that was the case, then the last two movies from the early 2000s would have bombed.Top of my head, the Charlie's Angels reboot bombed. The director attributed that to sexism. When it was pointed out that Captain Marvel made over 1 billion, her reasoning was that (paraphrased) that as a Marvel movie, men are already invested in it, whereas their sexism was keeping them away from her movie.
I can vouch for Hawki on this one. I actually remember and was there to see it. I saw Rolfe's video first and some entertainment sites (video game news sites included) were already labeling him a villain, or taken his video out of context. Thankfully, most people could already smell bullshit.Most infamously, James Rolfe gave his reasons for not wanting to see Ghostbusters 2016, none of which touched on gender or ethnicity, yet was smeared as a mysogonist by some outlets.
Not really. I'm not a champion of CM, but it at least has some entertaining moments.Could well be an element of truth to that. I mean, Charlie's Angels was hardly a great movie, but it wasn't as bad as Captain Marvel,
Basically her line of reasoning.Unless she was saying that was the sole reason her film didn't do well, which is obviously untrue.
Yep.(I got the movie expecting it to have been a flop primarily because of sexism, was disappointed to find out there were legitimate reasons for not being well received. I still find it rewatchable...though the male characters tend to be more watchable than the female ones, which probably wasn't the intent.)