Agent Carter needs to be a success. It needs to be a success because sexism is still very much a thing, in Hollywood as in most other large societal institutions. There is an ironic meta-level to this series and to Peggy Carter as a character, wherein she must battle the sexism of her time in order to do the work she feels called to and which is exclusively male-dominated. Concurrently, her series must fight that same uphill battle of entrenched sexism 70 years in the future, in present-day 2015, as it attempts to make a dent in an entertainment genre still depressingly, excessively inhabited almost solely by white men.

Male superhero yarns can be brilliant, and they can be mediocre and they can be downright abominable, and Hollywood will continue to churn them out prolifically like clockwork. If Agent Carter is nor a roaring success, all hopes for a Black Widow movie go rushing down the drain, along with any other female-led superhero movie or TV franchise still in early stages of development. Agent Carter is a test balloon, and all of Hollywood is using this one 8-episode series to pose the question “Can female superheroes be successful? Can they be profitable? Can they be popular?”

On the Meta-Sexism of Agent Carter & Breaking the Superhero Glass Ceiling (X) via thedailyfandomtv

(via impostoradult)

dragongirlau:

thatsecretlesbianside:

leela-summers:

For any non-Aussies out there, Karl Stefanovic is a pretty beloved TV presenter on the morning show “Today”. He’s created many hilarious TV moments like eating the world’s hottest pie, losing his shit over grumpy cat, the conversation about the long stabby thing – and there was also that time where he told a bad pun Dalai Llama joke TO the Dalai Llama

Well today he revealed that (as a comment on sexism in the media) he has been wearing the same suit on air every day for a year with nobody noticing. He started doing it deliberately after seeing the backlash that his female co-hosts would constantly get over their appearances. 

“No one has noticed; no one gives a shit. But women, they wear the wrong colour and they get pulled up. They say the wrong thing and there’s thousands of tweets written about them. Women are judged much more harshly and keenly for what they do, what they say and what they wear… I’ve worn the same suit on air for a year – except for a couple of times because of circumstance – to make a point. I’m judged on my interviews, my appalling sense of humour – on how I do my job, basically. Whereas women are quite often judged on what they’re wearing on how their hair is.” -Karl Stefanovic

This is so damn important. Thank you, Karl, for proving sexism is real.

For. A. Year.

Wtf Ultimate Spider-man?

copperbadge:

dr-kara:

drawology:

Alright so I’m watching the Ultimate Spider-Man Spider-verse episodes where Spider-Man goes to different dimensions and teams up with different versions of him. And for this third season I’ve given the show a break because it started to actually be a little entertaining and fun to watch.

But then…

Wow I was thinking about picking this show up again but NOOOOPE

NOPE 

NOPE

NOPE 

It’s almost like they want to be teaching younger men that strong women are the enemy.  But that would be silly wouldn’t it?

sigh

In its first season, the Ultimate Spider-man writer’s room literally drove a female staffer to resign, in part over a discussion they had about how they’d like to rape and dismember White Tiger, the only female on the team and the only Latina in the show. 

Glad I stopped watching when I heard that, sounds like they haven’t gotten any better since. 

It does rather sound from that review like the ep was written by fedora wearing douchebags whining about *~misandry~*. Ugh. And to think I was super excited for this season (and I think, literally this episode, because Donald Glover was getting to play Miles Morales.

Wtf Ultimate Spider-man?

copperbadge:

kammartinez:

copperbadge:

In theory, at least if we go by patriarchic naming conventions, it means that Tony’s son knocked up Rhodey’s daughter. I’m sure Rhodey was thrilled

Or Tony’s daughter kept her name and passed it on to her daughter; that’s very Stark. 

Either way I feel like Tony and Rhodey had a conversation at some point that involved shotguns.

I don’t think it started out with something as mild as shotguns. I think that’s when it all settled down, when tempers had cooled . I imagine the initial conflict was an aerial dogfight, with Tony in the suit and Rhodey in his jet, the both of them yelling at each other over their comms. But that’s just me.

Oh, I’m sure it wasn’t just Tony and Rhodey. I would imagine the kids’ mothers were involved too, with shifting allegiance based on whether they were so pissed they wanted to punch everyone or whether they were calm enough to want to stop things (I’m assuming Pepper and Carol but I’m willing to entertain other possibilities on a case by case basis; Tony does have an ongoing thing for Jennifer Walters).

Plus, there’s Rhodey Stark’s parents to consider, since I strongly doubt they were sitting at home waiting for their parents to duke it out. Although I suppose the dogfight might have been caused by their elopement. 

So you have at least three battle suits (Iron Man, War Machine, Rescue) plus at least one, probably two Kree-powers (Carol and Carol Junior) possibly plus whatever superhero powers (green rage monster?) or heavy machinery Stark Junior had.

I mean, and presumably the rest of the Avengers sitting on a roof nearby eating popcorn. 

Steve is going to be so annoyed when he gets back from his first vacation in ten years and finds his friends and godchildren making spectacles of themselves. 

You want to say Hi to the cute girl on the subway. How will she react? Fortunately, I can tell you with some certainty, because she’s already sending messages to you. Looking out the window, reading a book, working on a computer, arms folded across chest, body away from you = do not disturb. So, y’know, don’t disturb her. Really. Even to say that you like her hair, shoes, or book. A compliment is not always a reason for women to smile and say thank you. You are a threat, remember? You are Schrödinger’s Rapist. Don’t assume that whatever you have to say will win her over with charm or flattery. Believe what she’s signaling, and back off.

If you speak, and she responds in a monosyllabic way without looking at you, she’s saying, “I don’t want to be rude, but please leave me alone.” You don’t know why. It could be “Please leave me alone because I am trying to memorize Beowulf.” It could be “Please leave me alone because you are a scary, scary man with breath like a water buffalo.” It could be “Please leave me alone because I am planning my assassination of a major geopolitical figure and I will have to kill you if you are able to recognize me and blow my cover.”

On the other hand, if she is turned towards you, making eye contact, and she responds in a friendly and talkative manner when you speak to her, you are getting a green light. You can continue the conversation until you start getting signals to back off.

The fourth point: If you fail to respect what women say, you label yourself a problem.

There’s a man with whom I went out on a single date—afternoon coffee, for one hour by the clock—on July 25th. In the two days after the date, he sent me about fifteen e-mails, scolding me for non-responsiveness. I e-mailed him back, saying, “Look, this is a disproportionate response to a single date. You are making me uncomfortable. Do not contact me again.” It is now October 7th. Does he still e-mail?

Yeah. He does. About every two weeks.

This man scores higher on the threat level scale than Man with the Cockroach Tattoos. (Who, after all, is guilty of nothing more than terrifying bad taste.) You see, Mr. E-mail has made it clear that he ignores what I say when he wants something from me. Now, I don’t know if he is an actual rapist, and I sincerely hope he’s not. But he is certainly Schrödinger’s Rapist, and this particular Schrödinger’s Rapist has a probability ratio greater than one in sixty. Because a man who ignores a woman’s NO in a non-sexual setting is more likely to ignore NO in a sexual setting, as well.

So if you speak to a woman who is otherwise occupied, you’re sending a subtle message. It is that your desire to interact trumps her right to be left alone. If you pursue a conversation when she’s tried to cut it off, you send a message. It is that your desire to speak trumps her right to be left alone. And each of those messages indicates that you believe your desires are a legitimate reason to override her rights.

For women, who are watching you very closely to determine how much of a threat you are, this is an important piece of data.

an excerpt from Phaedra Starling’s “Schrödinger’s Rapist: or a guy’s guide to approaching strange women without being maced” (via lostgrrrls)

HOLY FUCK THE TRUTH.

Can every one of my male followers read this? And please, before you get defensive (“I would never rape anyone!”) keep in mind, women being afraid of Shrodinger’s Rapists (oh my god i still can’t get over the encompassing brilliance of this phrase) is a conditioned, learned response from being immersed in rape culture and the evolution of sexism and sexual violence in our society from the day we’re born. And unfortunately, it’s very difficult to unlearn without the efforts of all genders to dismantle it. Which is where you come in.

(via lil-ith)

It’s also just rude and disrespectful to patently ignore what someone has told you regarding their personal space, body, and time. Get a clue.

(via geekdomme)

I will always reblog this. Always.

(via myherocomplex)

So if you speak to a woman who is otherwise occupied, you’re sending a subtle message. It is that your desire to interact trumps her right to be left alone.

(via alamaris)

Oh my lord, everything in this.

(via littlelull)