I'm not entirely sure how to respond, as I'm not exactly sure what the point of the thread is. The title is a statement, but it seems to have arisen from a conversation no one else has been party to.
Do people think a preference for male leads is a problem? All people? Some? A few? Who are 'the people' being referred to in the first place?
Is the point of the post 'it's okay to have preferences'? Well, gee, thank you for the permission I didn't realise I needed.
I'll just randomly touch upon my own feelings on protagonists genders: the default, white, presumed-straight male POV is, frankly, a bit tedious. I've no issue with people preferring male leads and [generally white and straight] narratives, but I reserve the right to regard
them as being a tad boring; seemingly wishing only to have the same kinds of stories told on a loop. Little is learnt about human nature when we're constantly staring down at our own feet, instead of looking up and around.
Variety is the spice of life, and we sure as hell don't have enough of it in popular culture.
Gengisgame said:
At the same time I understand why feminists have become the way they are, they see a scantily clad female as a problem, they could see a male lead as "another male lead", women only said X amount of words, they sit in classes or read articles and are told about all these statistics and now view a product with the wrong kind of outcome as a problem.
Re the underlined: what, you mean wildly diverse across a spectrum of critical thought?