ugh
So remember a couple of weeks ago when those cringe-inducing pictures of Allison Brie and Gillian Jacobs in lingerie paddling each other with ping-pong paddles that were like the absolute definitions of "male gaze" were making the rounds on tumblr?
Apparently the entire photoshoot is now appearing on GQ's site (and hence ALL OVER THE INTERNET EVEN VIDEOGUM), and I refuse to link to them. I feel like I should have some deep insightful thing to say about the fact that there's this whole "women in comedy" thing where supposedly we're giving women all these opporunities in comedy now but really whenever we talk about women in comedy we end up talking about how attractive they are (I still can't bring myself to watch 30 Rock because I find the premise that Tina Faye is unattractive so very ludicrous that I don't think I can take the show seriously) or how they're in competition with other women in comedy (I wish I had a link to that youtube video that shows Amy Poehler getting interviewed and SHUTTING THE GUY DOWN when he tried to make it a competition between her and Tina and she was all "Tina is my BFF. I want her to succeed. There is no cattiness here." And I fell even more in love with Amy Poehler).
Yes, I should have some deep insightful thing to say about that, but instead I just feel tired. Just tiredtiredtired of living in such a sexist, misogynist rape culture where even though women can technically enter just about any profession we choose, we still know that what really matters to people is the way that we look and where we're expected to be in constant competition with other women instead of having supportive relationships with each other. Where a woman who's just as funny as Gillian Jacobs and Allison Brie (Yvette Nicole Brown) doesn't even get invited to the photoshoot because she doesn't fit a certain image and where women who are as dazzlingly talented as Gillian Jacobs and Allison Brie are instead reduced to playing up faux lesbianism in order to titilate men instead of, you know, letting them show off their excellent senses of humor.
I just want to go take a nap (after having taken a nice long shower to wash the grossness away) and wake up in a world where this isn't the case.
Apparently the entire photoshoot is now appearing on GQ's site (and hence ALL OVER THE INTERNET EVEN VIDEOGUM), and I refuse to link to them. I feel like I should have some deep insightful thing to say about the fact that there's this whole "women in comedy" thing where supposedly we're giving women all these opporunities in comedy now but really whenever we talk about women in comedy we end up talking about how attractive they are (I still can't bring myself to watch 30 Rock because I find the premise that Tina Faye is unattractive so very ludicrous that I don't think I can take the show seriously) or how they're in competition with other women in comedy (I wish I had a link to that youtube video that shows Amy Poehler getting interviewed and SHUTTING THE GUY DOWN when he tried to make it a competition between her and Tina and she was all "Tina is my BFF. I want her to succeed. There is no cattiness here." And I fell even more in love with Amy Poehler).
Yes, I should have some deep insightful thing to say about that, but instead I just feel tired. Just tiredtiredtired of living in such a sexist, misogynist rape culture where even though women can technically enter just about any profession we choose, we still know that what really matters to people is the way that we look and where we're expected to be in constant competition with other women instead of having supportive relationships with each other. Where a woman who's just as funny as Gillian Jacobs and Allison Brie (Yvette Nicole Brown) doesn't even get invited to the photoshoot because she doesn't fit a certain image and where women who are as dazzlingly talented as Gillian Jacobs and Allison Brie are instead reduced to playing up faux lesbianism in order to titilate men instead of, you know, letting them show off their excellent senses of humor.
I just want to go take a nap (after having taken a nice long shower to wash the grossness away) and wake up in a world where this isn't the case.

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Yep. ...and I don't even find the pictures funny? Like, if it's supposed be about funny women, you think there would have been an attempt to at have some humour in with the male-gaze.
(I still can't bring myself to watch 30 Rock because I find the premise that Tina Faye is unattractive so very ludicrous that I don't think I can take the show seriously)
To be fair, I think that's part of the joke of the show? Like OF COURSE it's ridiculous that Tina Fey would be considered so unattractive. Apparently it was lampshaded in an episode where she visited a non-showbiz city, and everyone kept asking her is she was a model. ...then again, they might have only lampshaded it because everyone who writes about the show mentions how ridiculous it is that Tina Fey would not be considered attractive.
"Hollywood Homely" is such a widespread thing though, so I might just have low standards. I mean, AUDREY HEPBURN has been portrayed as unattractive. Leelee Sobieski, Anne Hathaway, Kate Winslet, Mandy Moore (so yeah I started looking at TVTropes). ...Jennifer's Body did a good job with this, since Needy (Amanda Seyfried) was told not to dress cute enough to show up Jennifer. And Jennifer getting "ugly" from not feeding on boys was "ugly for her" - meaning she looked a little tired.
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Also: *shares in your general growliness about above photo spread and shit cultural norms*
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I also wonder sometimes how much of it is 30 Rock meta-ness, what with Tina Fey having been denied on-screen work for so long herself because she (though still gorgeous because she Tina) not as thin as she is now, and so I wonder how much of it is that we're seeing those insecurities still with her. And that's an uncomfortable phenomenon for me, if a real person feels the need to self-flagellate in public like that, no matter how entertaining.
I mean, I totally agree with your read on it. There are just other things I'm ambivalent about, if that makes sense.
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I also wonder sometimes how much of it is 30 Rock meta-ness + that's an uncomfortable phenomenon for me, if a real person feels the need to self-flagellate in public like that, no matter how entertaining.
I get the impression that the show is mostly meta, or at least, the premise is highly autobiographical and some of the later seasons have, by necessity, strayed from that. And I understand what you mean about the uncomfortableness of watching someone say about themselves the same mean things other people have said about them. However, I wonder how much this has to do with comedy as a genre. I mean, when I look at comedy, and comedians in particular, it seems like what they do, what they are good at, its taking the painful parts of their life and putting them out in in public for people to laugh at. And of course that has the potential be massively maladaptive, right? I mean how many SNL alumni have died of drug overdoses at this point? (I am reading death-by-overdose as coping mechanism gone awry.) Did I have a point here? I'm not sure... :)
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Amy Poehler is flawless. FLAWLESS.
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All shows need to take awesome lady lessons from Parks & Rec. The world in general needs to take awesome lady lessons from Parks & Rec.
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Ugh.
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Anyway, that photoshoot is gross and unnecessary and does nothing to illustrate how funny and talented those two actresses are, and if that is the only way that the men running that magazine could think of to illustrate women in comedy, then I feel sorry for their poor, humor-deprived brains.