I realise all it does is help her entomb herself in her self-perpetuating bubble of confirmation bias, but it sure gives me something to ridicule, and if that's not the second purpose of the internet I don't know what is.
Most of what you've described is basically boilerplate. OMG TWIITER?generals3 said:She has an entire channel dedicated to her propaganda, a twitter account, has been invited on TV and god knows where else. That's more voice any of her trolls or critics can even dream of being given.
I hear what you're saying, but it's inconvenient to my narrative, so I will ignore it and accuse Anita of being TEH BIASUhura said:She's talking about Xbox One press conference, Mirror's Edge was in the EA press conference :O
I think she's actually a fan of the first Mirror's Edge game.
The same reason you just wrote multiple paragraphs on her. She upsets people by saying things they don't like.Torque2100 said:Guh, are we STILL talking about this woman?
Well, you will notice that all EA titles this year feature women as protagonists and fit her anti-male agenda....Uhura said:Yes, she totally gets to dictate everything at EA now. Sure.
I think i've given my definition right there: share of voice. She has more than any individual troll, you're much more likely to come into contact with her rhetoric than the one of critic X or Troll Y. What's your definition in this context?Zachary Amaranth said:Most of what you've described is basically boilerplate. OMG TWIITER?generals3 said:She has an entire channel dedicated to her propaganda, a twitter account, has been invited on TV and god knows where else. That's more voice any of her trolls or critics can even dream of being given.
Come on.
I'm still waiting for the definition of the word loud that fits this situation. Now I'm also waiting for the definition of the word loud that would fit "being asked to appear on TV."
The two quotes you provided dont actually contradict each other at all, so I dont see how saying one after the other would a retreat from a previous stance or opinion, considering that her stance and opinion havent really changed.generals3 said:I think it's easier for her proponents to dismiss a lot she says and twist its meaning because otherwise her stance clearly becomes indefensible. Which it is. She has positioned herself as an enemy of anyone who respects games and developers. But her constant backpedaling allows her to fool some people in her "goodness". She's a lying insipid person who's always going to complain and doesn't respect anything she's complaining about. (otherwise she wouldn't attack these media the way she does it to serve her insipid agenda which consists of lying and pathological twisting)Ablestron said:Yes what she does provokes a response, but so does anyone who speaks out publicly against something; when you do this, you have to be prepared for a negative response, its just bound to happen. If anything she was provoking Microsoft and its employees for the purpose of change, and you cant cause change unless you point out the current flaws, staying quiet out of courtesy of others gets you nowhere; all those who tweeted back misogynistic comments and criticisms of her character are being immature; a criticism of a company for its lack of female presence is not a personal attack on those who enjoy the products of that company. Anita herself has stated in her videos that there is nothing wrong with enjoying the media that she criticizes, so long as we are aware of the downsides and stride towards something better. Pointing out that there are no female protagonists at the Xbox E3 conference doesn't depart from this message at all, she never once said if you like these games your a bigot or a misogynist. She didn't say any one game was bad because it had a male character either, people are coming to that conclusion because its easier to hate her and dismiss her when you put words in her mouth and take what she says out of context.
"Given the reality of that larger cultural context, it should go without saying that it?s dangerously irresponsible to be creating games in which players are encouraged and even required to perform violence against women in order to ?save them?"
See what she's saying about devs using these tropes? That they're being dangerously irresponsible. That's what i tell drunk drivers. She's showing 0 respect to their work. For her, devs not doing what she wants is IRRESPONSIBLE. (and without any evidence to support that mind you!)
Also, her constant lack of consistency is beyond absurd:
" But just because a particular event might ?makes sense? within the internal logic of a fictional narrative ? that doesn?t, in and of itself justify its use. "
" To say that women could never die in stories would be absurd, but it?s important to consider the ways that women?s deaths are framed and examine how and why they?re written."
See how first she totally dismisses context and basically says "You know, the context doesn't justify killing wiminz" and than goes on to say "It's not always bad, it depends on how it's done". Way to backpedal and contradict yourself there.
Oh and complaining because there were no female protagonists shown at the xbox presentation is sexist as hell. What kind of shit complaint is that? I never even thought about complaining about gender representation during E3 presentations, all i cared about is the QUALITY of the games. You can support her goal, but supporting her or her methodology... Well no, just no. No sympathy there.
she was just referring to the Microsoft press conference. Nintendo had Bayonetta, and Sony had Transistor.DarkhoIlow said:"There is absolutely no games with female protagonists", it seems that she didn't see Transistor and Bayonetta 2.
She was, she posted several tweets about the reveals that had female protagonists as well as the conferences that had a female presence.REZNoR_greed said:she was just referring to the Microsoft press conference. Nintendo had Bayonetta, and Sony had Transistor.DarkhoIlow said:"There is absolutely no games with female protagonists", it seems that she didn't see Transistor and Bayonetta 2.
although that does inadvertently raise a point. why she chose to attack Microsoft, and not acknowledge that the other presenters all had quite a few games with female protagonists. you'd think she would've been happy about that.
Nono, in one quote she says: context doesn't matter and than she says "context actually matters". In the second quote she didn't say anything about frequency. All she said is "it can be ok if done right", doesn't say anything about "but it can't be done often!". That's the kind of back pedaling she does constantly. Like how she says things like "It reinforces toxic views of women" and than says "It doesn't suddenly turn gamers into sexists". Now sure the latter doesn't exclude the previous however many of her proponents are pretending it does when defending her. This constant back pedaling and playing with words is plain nonsense and only done to shield herself from legitimate criticism.Ablestron said:The two quotes you provided dont actually contradict each other at all, so I dont see how saying one after the other would a retreat from a previous stance or opinion, considering that her stance and opinion havent really changed.
The first IS meant to be a dismissal of context, that's the point she's trying to make, that even if a characters death fits within the narrative you've created as a writer, the way the character dies and why they die has a significant impact on the reader in such a way that even if it "fits" it can still be considered harmful in the big picture if the way it is done has been over used. That's why stuff like the damsel in distress is harmful, because even if there is context for it within the narrative, it has been used so much over the years that its created a lack of balance.
The second quote is directly related but how is it backpedaling to back up her previous statement with further clarification? Before she said either of these things she states that the examples she gives are only a few and while they are not necessarily harmful in and of themselves, the amount of times they have been used is harmful as a whole; because other ways of writing female characters have not been as addressed; she's pointing out the lack of balance in the writing of female characters over all, and how its harmful to have a history of taking power away from women a media outlet.
I digress, it is true it isn't sexist... Unless you follow the fallacious definition of sexism which allows the gaming industry to be described as being sexist. Because than yes her comment is sexist. If she thinks the gender matters that much than a dev should be allowed to think so too and thus stick the finger towards female protas because them being male is important to them. If one person can care about the gender that much without being sexist so can someone else. (Do mind i personally don't think it's sexist in either case but I was following the definition of sexism used by her supporters)Complaining that there are no female protagonists at the Xbox One conference isn't a sexist statement, because in our culture the current problem is that women as protagonists are not generally considered as viable or as sell-able as a straight white male protagonist is, it's completely reasonable to want a better representation of women in games, and like I said earlier, she doesnt attack any one game or game developer for having a male protagonist, its the over all lack of more female protagonists that pains her, not any one individual case of the lack there of. So when she gets on Microsoft's case for not moving past the mindset that women leads mean less sales thats not making her an "enemy of games" as you say, all that means is she's challenging Microsoft's way of thinking, because the thought that women dont sell is not based in fact.
And why is that a priority? Isn't putting so much emphasis on sex bizarre. It's actually funny how feminists who try to tell us gender doesn't matter seem to be the one most caring about gender.Just because you were only focusing on the quality of the games doesnt make what she says wrong, and it doesnt make you wrong either. She isnt attacking you for not noticing the lack of female representation, all she is doing is pointing it out. Her priority is to seek out a better representation for women in an area where it is lacking, your priority is to find games of high quality that you may decide to buy, she isnt effecting you negatively at all by wanting better representation
Internet =/= gamers. As much as I agree that a lot of the comments lobbed at her are vile, she's not special in this regard, because this happens constantly. I've had a fair number of people wish death on me and my family because of my political views, a lot of other people I know have to put up with condescending pricks constantly, or outright get forced into confrontations. I'm of the opinion it's not what you say but what you do, and all Anita has done is talk, doing little to improve the culture of gaming beyond making it even more divisive than it already was. There are entire websites (4chan, Encyclopedia Dramatica, etc) devoted to spewing hate speech specifically tailored to get under someone's skin.Zachary Amaranth said:Which is hilarious, I might add.JSkunk22 said:The loudest voices who critique her tend to be missing the point(s) and end up proving her right, at least as far as I have seen.
I'm not really sure what definition you can use to call her the loudest voice in this whole thing, especially since nobody would have even cared about her if not for the hysterical reactions from gamers.generals3 said:Since she's probably the loudest voice in this thing
When she says context matters in the second quote she's talking about a different form of context than in the first. The first quote is about the narrative context. See that she mentions "fictional narrative" in the first quote; it means the context within the actual story; example, the reason Zelda is kidnapped is because of her piece of the triforce; anita is arguing that even though the damsel in distress trope works within the "narrative context" that does not exempt it from being an example of the trope.Nono, in one quote she says: context doesn't matter and than she says "context actually matters". In the second quote she didn't say anything about frequency. All she said is "it can be ok if done right", doesn't say anything about "but it can't be done often!". That's the kind of back pedaling she does constantly. Like how she says things like "It reinforces toxic views of women" and than says "It doesn't suddenly turn gamers into sexists". Now sure the latter doesn't exclude the previous however many of her proponents are pretending it does when defending her. This constant back pedaling and playing with words is plain nonsense and only done to shield herself from legitimate criticism.
Don't confuse what a person's supporters say with what they are actually saying. They are not one in the same mind, a supporter of Anita could easily be missing the point entirely and go off the deep end, but that doesn't make their actions Anita's responsibility. I support her but Im obviously not saying the same things that the people you mention are saying am I? Ranking Anita with the silliest and most idiotic of those who support her is incredibly unfair.I digress, it is true it isn't sexist... Unless you follow the fallacious definition of sexism which allows the gaming industry to be described as being sexist. Because than yes her comment is sexist. If she thinks the gender matters that much than a dev should be allowed to think so too and thus stick the finger towards female protas because them being male is important to them. If one person can care about the gender that much without being sexist so can someone else. (Do mind i personally don't think it's sexist in either case but I was following the definition of sexism used by her supporters)
The argument real feminists give isn't "Gender doesn't matter" its "Gender shouldn't matter". Meaning, no one should have to raise awareness about a lack of gender representation, but unfortunately we DO, because there is an imbalance in how women are portrayed in comparison to men, as well as how often women are portrayed versus how men are portrayed.And why is that a priority? Isn't putting so much emphasis on sex bizarre. It's actually funny how feminists who try to tell us gender doesn't matter seem to be the one most caring about gender.
Thanks, I'm glad someone said it before I had to.IceForce said:![]()
OP, you're just badge fishing here, right? Come on, there's no shame in admitting it.
Wyvern65 said:*sighs*
Feminism deserves better than this.
Why is it that people call what she said bullshit and passive aggressive when there are so many other statements about the same conference that draw similar criticism?When she gets passive aggressive and acts like Microsoft are doing a bad thing by not having a female protagonist that's the bullshit. There's nothing wrong with 50 developers making 50 games with male protagonists. They are not obligated to make games she likes. That completely goes against the idea that games are artistic statements.
But this raises an other question, how can she even claim to know "why" they're written? And i'd say the "how" is pretty much the same as the narrative context. The thing is that kind of backpedaling makes her point obnoxiously "vague". Her points are flying all over the planet. At one point it's "we can enjoy games but still be critical of them" than it's "writing such stories is dangerously irresponsible" and "it reinforces toxic views" (kinda contradicts the "we can enjoy them" doesn't it? It's obvious she doesn't wants us to enjoy it)Ablestron said:When she says context matters in the second quote she's talking about a different form of context than in the first. The first quote is about the narrative context. See that she mentions "fictional narrative" in the first quote; it means the context within the actual story; example, the reason Zelda is kidnapped is because of her piece of the triforce; anita is arguing that even though the damsel in distress trope works within the "narrative context" that does not exempt it from being an example of the trope.
In the second quote she is talking about the context of its formation, why & how they wrote it the way they did, ect.. (see that she says "how and why they're written")An example of this would be the development & writing decisions made that turned the game Dinosaur Planet into Star Fox Adventures.
Not really because even the most idiotic of her supporters has yet to reach her level of idiocy. I'm sorry but anyone who watches all her videos has to come to the conclusion she's either an attention whore, dillusional or an idiot. The amount of nonsense coming out of that woman breaks all records. If at least she had charisma and vitality I could enjoy her as a comedian like i did with Glenn Beck. (Because taking her seriously is just impossible)Don't confuse what a person's supporters say with what they are actually saying. They are not one in the same mind, a supporter of Anita could easily be missing the point entirely and go off the deep end, but that doesn't make their actions Anita's responsibility. I support her but Im obviously not saying the same things that the people you mention are saying am I? Ranking Anita with the silliest and most idiotic of those who support her is incredibly unfair.
"Right"? Sure you have that right, nobody prevents you from making your own game. Whether or not others decide to do what you want however isn't a right, it's a privilege. This is capitalism, not communism.Of course men have a right to be represented in games, and in many ways, they still aren't fully; how often do you see a black male protagonist over a white one for example? The reason your not racist for wanting better female representation is because it does not exist on the same level as male representation. So the feminist argument goes like this "if men have a right to be represented in this medium, don't women also?"
She sure is mad actually. The way she treats their work suggests exactly that. And saying they're acting dangerously irresponsibly suggest as certain amount of anger. And no feminists don't have that right, they have the right to say it but they also have the right to be criticized for that. There is nothing wrong with wanting more female protagonists but the way she approaches the whole thing is plainly wrong, this isn't a social issue, this is a matter of people not getting what they want.Again, like Ive said before, Anita isn't mad at any one game or developer for the over all trend, she simply wants more to take the risk and try and represent women better. And when large conglomerates like Microsoft refuse to budge out side of their idea that men are still the only demographic worth aiming for then feminists are within their right to call them on that without being sexist against men.
But it is relatively sexist. Why do they "need" to be represented more? That you want them to be sure, but why is it needed? Are penises bad? Are tacos so much better we need more of them? If not why is there a NEED for it?To put it plainly, saying women need to be represented more does not mean representing men is wrong.
Again, if it shouldn't matter than all you should see are humans, not women and men. Not quite there are ya?The argument real feminists give isn't "Gender doesn't matter" its "Gender shouldn't matter". Meaning, no one should have to raise awareness about a lack of gender representation, but unfortunately we DO, because there is an imbalance in how women are portrayed in comparison to men, as well as how often women are portrayed versus how men are portrayed.
I did my research and when it comes to video games it all points towards one thing: you are wrong. All the studies and statistics are very clear: there are a lot more men interested in the games feminists are complaining about. Isn't it normal that as a consequence more attention is given to their desires? The idea of forcing devs to treat a niche market as more important than it is is not social justice or whatever you're lead to believe it is. It's complaining for the sake of it.Ablestron said:this just sounds like fucking trolling man, its obvious you wouldnt be interested in learning anything if these are the questions you still need answered. Grow up, and do your own fucking research, because Im not going to sit here for hours finding all the articles, and documents, and statistics, and personal accounts, and fucking reasons that would help to convince you that inequality is actually a problem that has yet to be solved and NEEDS solving, just because your too fucking lazy to do the research your self, especially considering that the Google search bar is probably in corner of your screen at this very moment.Why do they "need" to be represented more? That you want them to be sure, but why is it needed? Are penises bad? Are tacos so much better we need more of them? If not why is there a NEED for it?
the world its self isnt there yet, stop trolling, you fail at it.Again, if it shouldn't matter than all you should see are humans, not women and men. Not quite there are ya?![]()
Define social equality. Because i'm starting to think you're following the communist idea of "equal outcome". In which case i'll have to strongly disagree with that goal as great supporter of the free market and capitalism.This is tiring me out man, a social issue can very well be a matter of people not getting what they want if what they want is a matter of social equality; which is what feminism is, equality between men and women.
That couldn't be any more wrong. The person and how the person does it is very relevant. If i want to stop poverty by killing all the poor surely the fact i'm obviously a psycho and want to use mass murder to achieve the goal is relevant? Surely you wouldn't support me just because you like the idea of getting rid of poverty?I support what she supports, gender equality, and that's the issue that should always be peoples concern, not whether or not the person voicing this concern for equality should be the one to voice it.
As much as someone is mentally able to consent to a captor in a life threatening situation such as being a hostage taken by pirates. Like I said in my edit far off topic, sorry guys this is the last I shall say of it.Father Time said:Stockholm syndrome doesn't remove your ability to consent.
What exactly was "inflammatory" about what she said? She commented that there were no games introduced at the XBone presser featuring women... and the responses were not "I disagree. Here's an example of a game that..." The responses were essentially agreeing and saying this was a good thing.Wyvern65 said:Amazing how she managed a master's degree in media studies and at the same time is absolutely shocked that when you post something inflamatory on twitter, no matter who you are, you get idiots posting in response. [/sarcasm]