white disclaimer

mewiet:

mattandsaraproductions:

lyricwritesprose:

thenotoriousscuttlecliff:

lyricwritesprose:

prince-atom:

textsfromsuperheroes:

Andrew: A lot of people criticize Steven Moffat saying he
doesn’t know how to write anyone other than a white man and as a response he
made the female version of the Master and made the lesbian character of Bill
but it always felt like he was writing these characters reluctantly and with a
grain of passive aggressiveness, like “Fine I’m doing it are you happy?”

Diana: I know what you mean because he also has the
characters constantly pointing out that he’s done it. Like the Master cannot
stop talking about how’s she’s female now in almost every scene to the point
where you expect her to look at the audience and ask, “Are you happy now? Can
we get some credit for this?”

Andrew: And that’s the grain of “Fuck You” that Steven
Moffat puts into his writing. Steven Moffat writing diverse characters is like
a teenager angrily doing chores he doesn’t want to do. And it’s like, this is a
trivial task, this should not be such a big deal to you.

Diana: It shouldn’t be, because these characters mean so
much to so many people. It should be an honor and you should be so happy and
proud to give these characters to people, and we don’t want to feel this
passive aggressive quality in them. It really takes away from this really
important thing that’s happened.

– The Hosts of Talk From Superheroes on Steven Moffat and
Diverse Characters

Listen to more episodes here, on iTunes or wherever you
listen to podcasts.

Are we watching the same show.

Exactly who, in this scenario, is making Moffat do his chores?  The BBC?  The BBC cares if the show gets ratings, not whether it’s progressive.  The fans?  I sincerely hope they’re in a minority, but you can find plenty of fans who want Doctor Who to stop with all this feminism and diversity and give them the Man Does Smart Man Stuff show.  Moffat’s wife?  Okay, I’ll grant you she probably pushes him to be a better feminist, but he not only married her, he works under her regularly, so I don’t see the “reluctant homework” aspect coming from there.  So who is it?  Who, exactly, is forcing Moffat to do this stuff?

At a guess, maybe, himself? I mean, didn’t he say himself that this is what people in his position should be doing and not patting themselves on the back for it? Can’t remember the exact quote, but it was something along those lines.

And, seriously, who watches seasons 8-10 and comes away thinking he begrudgingly cast Michelle Gomez as the Master?

Assigning yourself “homework” is the opposite of angrily doing homework that someone else forced you into, though.  It’s not, “Fine, I’m doing it, are you happy?”  It’s, “I’m doing it because I believe in it.”

Mind you, deciding that you need more representation doesn’t mean that you’re going to write it well.  If the podcast had said, “It seems like Missy cannot stop reminding you that she’s female now, and that strikes me as clumsy writing by someone who has never really tried writing gender-fluidity of any kind,” well, I’d point them to “Curse of Fatal Death,” and I might quibble with phrases like, “in every scene,” but ultimately, that’s criticizing the execution of the idea, not the motive behind it.  That’s what’s bugging me about this piece.  It’s not saying, “I think X was executed clumsily,” it’s saying, “I think X was executed clumsily because Moffat is really a bad person who didn’t actually want to.”  And that bugs me.  It’s an accusation of bad faith, I guess.  It says to me that no matter how a writer tries, no matter how they improve, no matter how they learn, it doesn’t count, because someone out there “knows” that they’re really a bad person who didn’t actually want to.

That’s discouraging on a personal level, not just an interpersonal one.  I mean, I’m a writer who’s trying to put more diversity into my work.  And it doesn’t come intuitively.  I’m constantly second-guessing myself. I’m sure I’ve made some errors somewhere along the line.  And it’s nice to know that if I ever get myself noticed, someone will be along to say, “Well, yes, she writes quasi-Egyptian fantasy and diverse science fiction and whatnot, but I don’t like the way she does it—which proves she’s really a bad person who didn’t actually want to.”

What’s wrong with, “I don’t like the way they do it,” full stop?

A: “Moffat is A Terrible Person!”

B: “Why?”

A: “He doesn’t write diverse characters!”

B: *points to all the diverse characters in Moffat’s Who*

A: “Well clearly he was forced into doing that!”

B: “OK, what’s the evidence for that?”

A: “Because he’s A Terrible Person!”

Please, fandoms of Tumblr, stop with this manichaean view of goodness. People just can’t win with you, can they? People don’t deserve cookies for doing the right thing, no. But the moment some creator does the right thing without wanting your applause for it, you turn on him, focused only on what he’s done wrong. Well let me tell you something: It’s not about you. It’s not about your patting yourself on the back for liking only the Correct And Good Works. It’s about telling better stories, and creating a better world because of it.

People are not Good, nor are they Bad. That’s because goodness is not a trait, but a virtue. It’s something we exercise, and get better at doing. And Moffat has gotten better at writing diverse characters, and at writing generally. You don’t like his version of Doctor Who? Ok, that’s fine. I don’t much like Douglas Adams’s episodes. Opinions differ, isn’t that lovely? But stop penalizing people for becoming better.

Moffat isn’t a Good Man, but he’s not a Bad Man, either. He’s an idiot… passing through, helping out, learning.

(And then you have the other side, the comments from dudebros whinging over Moffat pandering to social justice warriors. Haven’t they stopped watching or reading fiction by now? What’s left with only straight white dudes?)

As much as I hate to reblog the links to the baseless podcast in the OP, the above five responses to it need to be shared.

“White People Find Something To Dislike In The Characterization Of A Black Lesbian Hero, They Don’t Actually Know What, But By Gosh They’re Sure It’s There!”

mycharliequinn:

kittydesade:

feynites:

azzandra:

team-magi:

wardencommanderrodimiss:

elizabethplaid:

unclefishman:

shapingthewater:

silverhawk:

never have i wanted to read an article less in my life.

Suddenly I forgot how to read…

The Shape Of Water Review: The Problem With Inter-Species Romance

The review is from Gamespot, by the way.

It’s one thing to ask audiences to suspend belief for this fairy tale, and it’s a whole other thing to ask them to consider for one moment that an otherwise sane woman would be so desperate as to fall for a creature who can’t even survive on dry land–not when there are actual men in this town.”

Haha man someone tell this dude that he is not the hot commodity that he thinks he is and personally speaking I for one am eager to get away from actual men and be whisked into the loving arms of a fishman.

@blazichu

Did Gaston write this article?

Aaaand now I can’t stop picturing Gaston, furiously typing with his index fingers at some laptop with antlers glued to it, just muttering ‘what woman would have some beast when there are men like me?!’ to himself.

I feel this should start becoming a thing in the comment sections of articles like these. “That’s nice, Gaston. I’m sure you’re very pretty, too, Gaston.”

I’ve seen this on my dash like three times, each with different slams about how this dude has no concept of what women want, and I only just now clicked on the article.

it’s written by a black woman who only recently started working there and has some valid points about why is it always the woman who falls in love with the non-human creature, and how a black woman is yet again cast as the best friend/sidekick.

and her main hangup from the movie was that she wouldn’t want to spend her life with a fishman and so it came across to her that male gaze deciding that being male is sufficient to get you any lady you desire even if you’re a grotesque monster. 

she listed “

Male-gazey woman-on-monster relationship” in her list of cons. 

I just don’t think this article is what you think it is. 

It’s not what anyone thinks it is, and it’s baffling. The sum total of the article is basically “I don’t get why a woman would have a relationship with a fish monster, especially if there’s other options open to her” and somehow it’s turned into “ASSHOLE NICE GUY HATES WOMEN, FISH, PROBABLY ALSO YOU.” That’s not even getting into her – a black woman’s – opinion on the film’s racial politics, which it seems no-one cares about, not when there’s hatin’ on an imaginary person (the aforementioned nice guy) to be done.

(Incidentally, although that’s Candice Frederick’s first article for Gamespot she’s a very successful film critic overall. One of her recent articles is titled “John Boyega is the Sci-Fi Icon We Need.” Hmmm, that sounds awfully familiar.)

To put it bluntly, man, this whole post & replies & accompanying nonsense would be a great case study for… something.

Okay, that post (well, the replies to it, really) going around about that one The Shape of Water review is rubbing me up the wrong way. The points it was making (as neatly summarized at the end in fact!) are basically just “I don’t like woman/monster romances, I find them unrealistic, I want more female monsters in movies rather than male ones, and the film underuses its only black character”. So you’ve got most of the comments under the link to the review (I don’t know how many actually people read it) calling the author “a Nice Guy” and “jealous” and waaaay worse, but-

The author’s a black woman, Candice Frederick, here’s some of her other work (Much of it is focused on white woman representation vs the lesser black woman representation in movies). She’s not an “incel”, she’s not a “trog”, she is presumably not “a festering asshole”, and her one mildly negative review of a (pretty white, come to think of it) film about a fishman is not any sort of death knell for movie journalism.

Like… Tumblr in general makes a big show about supporting black women both as a group and as individuals with voices, but you can’t put all that to the side just because she didn’t like a movie Tumblr likes.

Maybe this speaks to tumblr’s bizarre ‘perfect pure progressive thing/trash awful anti-progressive thing’ dichotomy more than anything else (because a different more unknown white guy will be writing the new Doctor?) , but I’m sort of discouraged that the reaction to the 13th Doctor news from a lot of quarters has been “oh good, I can finally watch this show again, it is Progressive now”. And I don’t want to underplay the huge deal that a female Doctor is, it is a huge deal. But…

Bill Potts was a huge deal too. People who see themselves in her have written about her importance at length. She was (heck, is, she’ll almost definitely be back for the Christmas Special, Pearl Mackie’s been spotted on set) a black, lesbian, working-class co-lead on one of the biggest sci-fi shows ever. Bill beamed out from a lot of the posters and from the children’s tie-in magazines. Bill kissed a girl on television, a full-on passionate overjoyed kiss, during family viewing hour on the BBC. Bill had natural hair. Bill became immortal (by choice) in a world where TV producers almost seem to hate gay characters getting happy endings. Bill was an audience surrogate who represented a lot of Brits who don’t see themselves represented on British TV often. It’s just –

The companion’s the audience surrogate. Everyone was encouraged to see themselves in Bill Potts. And she was the co-lead. That bears repeating. The Doctor’s one lead of Doctor Who and the Companion’s the other one.

If a black, lesbian, working-class co-lead wasn’t enough to get you to Finally Watch The Show Again, why is a white female co-lead what eventually manages to do it?

tumblr_okkg5f6EC21w2eh75o1_1280

harriet-spy:

OK, I swear I’m not seeking out random fandom idiocy to raise my blood pressure, but this…

ACTUAL PEOPLE ARE IN ACTUAL DANGER TONIGHT. ACTUAL FAMILIES ARE BEING BROKEN UP. ACTUAL ORPHANS ARE BEING KEPT FROM THEIR FOSTER FAMILIES.

YOUR SELF-INFLICTED HURT FANNISH FEELINGS MEAN NOTHING IN COMPARISON. N-O-T-H-I-N-G.

Johnlockers, COME GET YOUR FUCKING PEOPLE.

How much do you have to be luxuriating in white privilege to write something like that?

I was thinking the other day about how utterly Brooklyn 99 seems to destroy most stereotypes, and it occurred to me that it really flipped the script on that awful old “black men are absent/bad fathers’ stereotype by having all the Black fathers/father figures in the show be wonderful whilst all the white ones are completely goddamn terrible…

planettes:

blkproverbs:

blkproverbs:

blkproverbs:

on the anniversary of Mike Brown’s murder, the police have shot and murdered another Black man at the Ferguson protests. Just now. Right now.

I don’t even know what to say. I’m just pissed beyond measure. PISSED.

@search4swag has documentation on his twitter timeline but yall extreme TRIGGER WARNING. ok. it’s a lot

New report, he’s alive in critical condition, at the hospital.

fuck the police as usual