minajen--disqus
MinaJen
minajen--disqus

You also forgot the passive/submissive parts. There's also the 'same-sex marriages' of what we consider gay men in which the bride (more often than not, a slave, again, the position of powerlessness) is the one penetrated.

Internalized misogyny, everyone!

Show is less feminist than the books.

Which is funny, because you think the place with all the rapists and murderers would have well, more rape and crime issues.

Orange is the New Black, Spartacus. Mad Men.

They changed the ENTIRE plot surrounding Winterfell - except the rape.

That it is.

Pushing idealogy…..that men and women are equal? That courage is not specifically a masculine trait, that taking care of kids is not specifically a feminine trait - and that it's okay for people to take on duties assigned to genders because we are an advanced society that can identify that people are not defined by

When women denigrate men, we can call it sexism. When women point out attributes of masculinity that are harmful to men and women - well, isn't that a good thing?

And there is also a point to be made that by exhibiting attributes of toxic masculinity, Jeri/Jessica/Trish/whathaveyou - they do damage and hurt the situation more than they help.

Well, given the Reddit is kinda big, that AV Club comments on TV and pop culture, and that yes, the RedPill Subreddit is kind of notorious in pop culture/Geek circles - which comic adaptations DO have an overlap, in a review discussing themes and shit, it might have added significance given that this is a show about a

Well, while the term Toxic Masculinity has its origins in Frank S Pittman's "Man Enough: Fathers, Songs, and the Search of Masculinity," as an exploration of how current Western culture (the book was published in 1993) was failing boys and men, and the term grew from there.

But I pay my bills …

But that is the feminaziSJW one…

Uh, that creed being we should think outside ourselves and our own experiences to consider others' points of view, life experiences and history?

Women being treated as equals and individuals =irrational idealogy.

Orange is the New Black did a rape scene that focused on the character that was being raped that didn't come across as exploitative, that didn't hide from the audience and was a showcase for the actress.

Yeah, and he dealt with it for tge rest of the season, and it explored power dynamics within the hierarchy of those we thought were untouchable, as Roman aristocratic women, and men who should be untouchable, were subjected to the torture they inflicted on others, those that should have been "safe."

Because they addressed ongoing sexual abuse and the power dynamics of slavery and viewing people as objects/property as a horrific act that destroyed both men and women with nuance IN addition to cathartic violence? Because generally, actions were a result of previous actions and not so much, "We wanted this to happen

"You want a good girl but need a bad pussy." <- Emmy-worthy writing, right there, folks.