The very next day, March 8, front
page again...

Wait, there is something underneath
this Medicaid mom article: “Police Abuses Start to Get Attention
in China.”[1] It turns
out that four men are victims. But as male victims they are not
worthy of a headline. Or a picture. What makes the headline is the
image of men-as-abusers: Chinese police (read: men). Even when only
men are the victims, The New York Times finds a way of headlining
the men who are the perpetrators.
The problem? This is reinforcing
the message to our daughters that the path to attention and empathy
is victimhood. This disempowers women. And it tells our sons their
path to attention is saving women. Which leaves our daughters feeling
entitled, and angry when men don’t deliver.
About the
Good Times
I had hopes for The New York
Times when it began to do a weekly “About Men” column. And
some of its columns did hit home. But overall the column focused
on self-effacing, personal anecdotes that consistently stopped short
of touching on underlying men’s issues such as why our teenage sons’
suicide rate is increasing (and what we can learn from the decrease
in our daughters’ rate). I flew from San Diego to New York to meet
with the editor and discuss incorporating these underlying issues
into the “About Men” column. I could feel, even as I was getting
through to him, that he felt the column had a formula, and his hands
were tied. The column was ultimately reduced to twice per month
(alternating with a column called “Hers”) and was then replaced.
All this said, about one or two
articles per year appear somewhere in The New York Times
with at least an attempt at looking at men’s issues. One was, “A
Few Good Men? Don’t Look in the Movies.”[2] And don’t look in The New York Times.
The Lace
Curtain in Magazine Publishing
Switch with me to the largest circulating
weekly magazine in the United States, Parade. Perhaps Parade
‘s most visible weekly feature is a column by Marilyn vos Savant,
whose claim to fame is having the “highest IQ on record.”
She is asked, “Are women really
better at ‘being good people’ than men are?”[3]
Her answer: Yes. She gives two pieces of “evidence.” First, more
men are in prison. If more women were in prison, might Ms. Savant
be suggesting that it is because women are the most disadvantaged?
Would she say African-Americans are worse people because higher
percentages are in prison?
Second, she says, men caused the
wars. If we had required only women to be drafted, then blamed women
for causing the wars, wouldn’t someone call that “blaming the victim”?
We have already seen Parade’s headlines turning men’s deaths in
war into female victimhood. Is there a pattern here?
Behind this lace curtain, a few
exceptions have been found. Time ran two cover stories with
male-positive themes: one on a father searching for his kidnapped
children[4]; the other on man-bashing.[5]
Forbes did a feature on men committing suicide and why they
do it.[6] Some of
the worse examples of the lace curtain, though, are in the women’s
and even men’s magazines.
Go to any news stand any month.
The titles of the articles in women’s and men’s magazines are basically
the same as they were when I reported my first analysis (1986) of
women’s and men’s magazines in Why Men Are The Way They Are.[7] In fact, Cosmopolitan has a book filled with titles and
how long it should be before they are recycled.
Women’s magazines promise the world
and deliver male dependency; men’s magazines promise little and
deliver female avoidance. Men’s and women’s magazines work together:
His keeps the man “out to lunch” which keeps the woman wanting him
to buy lunch; hers keeps the woman complaining and misunderstanding,
which keeps the man searching for a woman who isn’t just faking
understanding. Here’s how...
Open a
Woman’s Magazine, Find a Mixed Message
Are women’s magazines still teaching
women how to seduce their boss in one article and sue for sexual
harassment in another? Yes. Metaphorically and literally. Let’s
start with literally. The title is “How to Seduce Your Boss.”[8] Working women are given the working
plan....
• Step one: ask boss to explain
some aspect of the job... and “Sit close while he does so...don’t
be afraid to show him that you’re physically interested.”[9]
• Step two: “Start involving him
in your personal life...ask his advice on private matters....” By
this time,
• Step three is either the indirect
method, that is, he asks her out or, if all else fails, the direct
method, such as she invites him to a “small cocktail party at your
apartment.” Then, when he wants to go to bed, use
• Step four: “Act innocent and
defenseless and girlish (although quite adamant that he’s not
going to take you to bed). And, believe me, you’ll have him hooked.”(Emphasis
mine.) Of course, once she says an adamant no, next time she’s free
to say yes. Which leads to
• Step five: “Every two hours or
so during your first night together, wake him up and tease him into
giving you more.”
• Step six is after his wife finds
out: “There is no onus on you to feel guilty about his wife...These
days, there is so much more at stake in human relationships than
unquestioning loyalty.”
This article appeared about the
same time a woman named Monica was an intern – “innocent and defenseless
and girlish” – who had nevertheless been fired from her internship
for doing too much hanging around at every Presidential appearance
to which she could gain access.
The articles in women’s magazines
are enormously male-dependent. But they almost always leave a woman
with as much misunderstanding as understanding. As a result, the
women are left with failed relationships, buy another woman’s magazine
with another new title offering new hope, find reality dashing that
hope, which leads to depression and anger. Meantime, the men in
her life are deprived of what I call men’s primary need: understanding,
without which there is no intimacy.
Open a
Men’s Magazine, Find a Feminist
Most of the men’s magazines are
no better. They are less about female dependency than female avoidance.
They focus on “the five male crutches”: business, politics, sports,
equipment and women in a sexual sense. As a result, women feel
less than misunderstood. They feel they don’t matter enough
for him to even make an attempt at understanding. Men, and men’s
magazines, keep men pleasing women by buying women things rather
than psychologically connecting with women.
There is, though, a new twist.
When magazines with mostly male subscribers, such as Money and
Fortune, do focus on relationship or gender issues, it is
surprising how often they too are from a feminist perspective. Susan
Forward, author of Men Who Hate Women and the Women Who Love
Them is chosen to write a piece for Money called “Next
Oprah: Men Who Waste Money And The Women Who Love Them.”[10]
The focus is money-reckless men and their female victims…without
a single reference to money-reckless women.
Many of the men’s magazines are
now run by women. Even Gentlemen’s Quarterly has 28 women
and 14 men in its top editorial positions ; Playboy is
run by a woman, and its “Forum” section is run by a feminist.[11]
Playboy funds feminist causes much more than men’s causes.
And Penthouse? Let’s take a look....
A 64-year-old male teacher explains
to a female Penthouse advice columnist (Xaviera Hollander
– of The Happy Hooker fame) that he had a stroke after 34
years of teaching, which led to money problems, and to sexual problems
with his wife[12]:
“...Although
she lets me have intercourse with her twice a week, she does it
with scorn.... My wife tells me that breasts are for nursing babies,
not husbands, and now I can’t even enjoy seeing them because she
hardly ever goes naked in front of me.... I can’t touch her. If
I do, she spins around and twists away from me....”
Now, here is how the Penthouse
columnist’s response to the man began:
“If any
American wife could go before a court and have the judge declare
her husband to be an incompetent nincompoop, what a wonderful place
the world would be – and what a victory for women’s lib. Luckily
for you, the law is not really prepared to accept a wife’s unsupported
opinion concerning her husband’s imbecility, because I suspect if
this were the case, all the husbands would be safely tucked
away in sanitariums and we women would be running the country.”
(emphasis mine)
There are good men’s magazines,
like Men’s Health; and an exceptional columnist on men’s
issues, Asa Baber in Playboy. The good news of men’s magazines
is no false hope and no self-righteousness; the bad news is no consciousness.
Modern
Maturity or Modern Misandry?
You’re too old for women’s and
men’s magazines? Then the word is not “old,” it’s “mature.” Modern
Maturity is the largest-selling monthly magazine in the United
States. After it censored my article (see above), I couldn’t help
but keep an eye out for whether it ran other articles that discussed
the positive aspects of men and masculinity. One, titled “He Said,
She Said”[13] and
written by a husband and wife, held out hope. Until I saw the formula....
He puts himself down, and she puts
him down. Well, that explains their marital harmony! Here’s how
she explains him (all her words): as a scratching, swearing, uncaring,
grunting, insensitive member of a sex that is lower on the evolutionary
scale than herself and her sex. Then, in a moment of compassion,
she condescends: “I realize you are not entirely responsible for
your limited ability to perceive the more elevating aspects of existence.
There are two ways to look at life: the female way, a way of warmth
and beauty; and the male way, a way of bashed heads and broken bones.
You, unfortunately, are limited by your sex. You’re male.”[14]
The man she is writing about, her
husband, is not Mike Tyson, but Alfred Martinez, a columnist
for the Los Angeles Times. She writes, “He grunts when words
are just too much trouble.” He makes his living grunting? Her
only bio description is “running the Martinez household.” Translation:
This living he makes “grunting” pays not only his bills, but hers.
Talk about biting the hand that feeds you. Maybe I should try this
grunting. Don’t worry, Alfred... you’ll die sooner.
There is a gap here between the
medium and the message. The sex of warmth and beauty is ripping
him to shreds; the sex of uncaring insensitivity argues his point
with enough caring and sensitivity to never once criticize her.
Had she taken a more troubled man
– like Mike Tyson – and declared him to be a member of a race
that is lower on the evolutionary scale than her Caucasian self,
could Modern Maturity publish it and claim to be either modern
or mature?
The Five
Stages of Lace Curtain Censorship in Book Publishing
Censorship
by Constituency
Why do books like No Good Men
get published, but not No Good Women, No Good Blacks,
or No Good Jews? And why do titles like Women Who Love
Men and the Men Who Hate Them become big best-sellers while
titles like Men Who Love Women and the Women Who Hate Them
can’t even get published? The spate of “women good/men bad” books
(under the guise of “self-improvement") inspired one author
to do a take-off on the genre: Men Who Hate Themselves and the
Women Who Agree with Them.
Has this occurred because approximately
90% of relationship book readers are women and – as Jesse Owens
put it – “You don’t get nowhere by giving people the lowdown on
themselves”? Yes. Why do women need this self-assurance? Both sexes
need it when rejected. When rejected, a self-assurance book is to
a woman what a bar is to a man – each disappears into a safe place
of assurance. Why do women attack men? Because it is men who have
rejected them. When you expected that man to save you, well, that’s
a long hard drop.
It’s not that men who are rejected
don’t want to attack the woman, it’s that it creates more of a conflict
for a man: it conflicts with his male credo: heroes protect women;
villains and sissies attack women. And that’s in his genes. So men
have to be really down and out before they could read a Men
Good, Women Bad book. However, when women reject men, men also have
their not-so-pretty defenses (gambling, porn, mid-life crises, drinking...).
It’s just that when men reject women, women’s more likely defenses
include reading.
The self-assurance book’s job is
to assure a woman she is better off without him, that she is better
than he, that she lost him because she is capable of love,
he is not. Thus, the three most ingenious titles: Women
Who Love Too Much, the above-mentioned Women Who Love Men
and the Men Who Hate Them and Everything Men Know About Women
– the blank book that gets that knowing look. From there, they specialize...
If he is afraid to commit it must
be because he can’t love (Men Who Can’t Love), is immature
(Peter Pan Syndrome), is psychologically disturbed (Casanova
Complex), or is a scared wimp (Cold Feet).
If he wasn’t afraid to commit,
but the commitment didn’t last, she can be assured it is his fault
– he was either Foolish Choice A or Foolish Choice B (Smart Women,
Foolish Choices; The Field Guide to North American Males, a Peter
Pan, Casanova, or some type of “man who can’t love”) or a woman-hater
(Men Who Hate Women and the Women Who Love Them). Meantime,
she is smart, mature and filled with love.
Worst of all, if he committed to
another woman, a younger woman, a woman with a type of power she
used to have, he will ideally be seen as having a psychological
problem with a name (Jennifer Syndrome). The inevitable conclusion:
For “self improvement,” a woman must undo her addiction to loving
these jerks too much. And if she fails? Read Why It’s Always
the Man’s Fault.
Suppose, though, she is married
to a faithful, dependable man, but she’s feeling the stale air of
his dependability and yearns for fresh air? She can run to the Bridges
of Madison County; then, once addicted (when the stale air of the
affair requires more fresh air), to any of a hundred thousand romance
novels. What to do if he’s the one to have an affair? Well, er...impeach
him.
The newest layer of men-are-evil,
women-are-victims books to make it big are Christian romance novels.
Frank Peretti, the “king of the genre,” spins tales of male serial
killers in books like The Oath.[15]
In secular romances, these male serial killers are usually balanced
by an idealized male hero. In the Christian romance, man-as-hero
is replaced by God-as-hero, and the best men are vulnerable heroes
unless they submit to the Lord.
The good news is the Christian
romance encourages women to select men who can ask for help. The
bad news is, the man is still expected to save her, but God is thanked
when he does. In brief, the unadulterated seat on the Christian
novel’s bus of virtue is reserved for God.
Censorship
by Editor and Writer
Most of this “I’m OK, He’s Not”
bias is generated by the power of a female constituency, but there
is also the lace curtain in publishing. Which starts with the background
of relationship book writers and editors....
Virtually no relationship book
editor has the two experiences common to millions of everyday American
men: job experience in a hazardous job, engineering, corporate sales,
or career military with little choice of leaving because of responsibilities
to be the primary breadwinner for both a spouse and children. A
few relationships book writers have this experience, but they are
more likely to have psychological and academic backgrounds with
career oriented wives. Writers who are exceptions find it difficult
to find editors who are exceptions. (If one editor is an exception,
it is almost impossible for him to persuade his colleagues, in part
because relationship books are bought about 90% by women – and so
we come full circle!)
Here’s how this works, based on
my three decades among relationship book editors and other authors.
Both the author of relationships books and the relationships book
editor are usually a graduate from a top college, and a liberal
arts major. I document above how these majors are taught largely
by professors with a feminist orientation. The person who chooses
liberal arts enters it knowing she or he is making a monetary sacrifice
vs. going for an engineering degree or an MBA. It therefore selects
for a more feminine sensitive and feminist sensitive personality
than that of the teamster or engineer. The male editor and writer
is more likely to have his wife’s help with income (or have no one
to support) than does the average American man; the female editor
is more likely to have a man help with the children, or have no
children.
That’s the basics with the heterosexual
male relationship book writers and editors. Among male editors,
though, many are gay. The gay man, while subject to many biases
himself, does not have the same pressure to take jobs that are high
enough paying to give a wife the options to be full time or part
time with the children. That’s the key differentiation between the
heterosexual family man and the gay family man. It makes it as difficult
for the gay male editor to identify with the heterosexual male life
experience as it does for the heterosexual editor to identify with
books on the gay experience. This doesn’t mean it cannot be done,
but our life experiences are our most powerful single reference
point.
Approximately three quarters of
relationship book editors, though, are women,[16]
almost all feminists. A colleague of mine reported to me that his
editor on a book about relationships (due to be published in 2000)
made him take out all references to females who cheat on
their husbands. No, it was worse than that. The names were changed
so that real-life women who had cheated became men who cheated!
He was forced to choose: the woman-as-victim point of view or not
be published.
The nature of these backgrounds
leaves most relationship book editors and writers believing what
she or he reads in the news about the “new woman” being out there
initiating sex, paying for dinners, marrying aspiring househusbands,
and doing all those liberated things. Bottom line? When this combines
with the purchasing power of the female book buyer, few books on
the male perspective make it through this Lace Curtain.
Censorship
by Acquisition
These perspectives lead editors
to give $400,000 contracts to feminists like Susan Faludi to write
a book on men because her last book, Backlash, sold well,
and said men couldn’t handle feminism. The fact that it was filled
with hatred toward men and victim feminism made no difference, because
for many in the publishing industry it fit their stereotype of men.
The acquisition process is acquiring
another curious twist. Remember when our English teacher told us
how George Eliot was really a woman (Marian Evans) who felt it wiser
to adopt a man’s name to prevent automatic rejection of her writing
by 19th century publishers and readers? Well, today an estimated
10% of romance novelists are men with women’s names.[17]
Jennifer Wilde is a 6-foot Texan
named Tom Huff. Best-selling romance novelist Melissa Hepburne (Passion’s
Proud Captive) is actually Craig Broude. Craig, though, needed
some education about titles. His choice was Forgotten Glory;
his publisher objected: It would help to have emotions and a victim.
Try a captive. Craig agreed: Passion’s Proud Captive. A best-seller
was Craig’s reward.[18]
Now, once you know a romance novel’s real author might be a man,
even reading the dedication can be fun. The dedication to Lisa Lenore’s
Dance of Desire is “to Craig Broude, my one true love.”[19] Funny, Craig.
Perhaps a century from now our
Men’s Studies teachers will be telling of how backward the 20th
and 21st centuries were when men who wrote romance novels had to
assume a female name to be published.
Censorship
During the Writing
The book you are reading has itself
endured a lace curtain censorship experience, stage one. It was
originally under contract with Simon and Schuster with a wonderful
feminist editor named Marilyn Abraham, also a Vice President. Marilyn
had been my editor for The Myth of Male Power. As her questioning
and double checking my data left her satisfied she became my spokesperson
at S&S. Unfortunately, Marilyn retired after editing some chapters
for this book and my next one (Father and Child Reunion). At the
time all the chapters were to be part of this book. They were soon
turned over to another feminist editor, and that’s when the fun
started...
The new editor, let’s call her
Frances, has since been “let go” (I don’t believe it had to do
with the experience I am about to share except, perhaps, to the
degree it was representative). To be fair to Frances, when she got
to my chapters on fathers’ issues, she had just become a first time
mother. I was bringing to bear some cross-cultural data that showed
that children living with only with dads fared better than children
living only with moms. I made it clear that this did not imply men
made better parents, but only that the type of man motivated enough
to be a father today seemed more effective than the average mom.
Nevertheless, Frances had a visceral reaction to these chapters.
Of course, Frances could not say
“censored” directly. She said it indirectly by requiring I eliminate
that material which described children of divorce and focus instead
on the intact family. Of course, in an intact family it is impossible
to separate out the influence of the dad from the mom, preventing
me from articulating my core theme. I explained. She insisted. I
submitted the manuscript essentially as it was when Marilyn had
approved it. She rejected it, along with two chapters that now appear
in this book (on domestic violence and housework).
When I received the rejection letter
my brain gave way to a stomach that had lost its bearing. I suddenly
deepened my empathy for the men from whom I receive calls reporting
false accusations. I called other editors at Simon and Schuster
who I had heard respected my work. They were empathetic but were
fearful of becoming political. I suddenly felt isolated and lonely
– me against the world’s biggest publisher. I felt like David, with
a broken slingshot, encountering Goliath.
The isolation abated a bit when
I took my own advice and reached out to my support system. Certainly
I was tempted to sue for censorship, but pretty quickly I submitted
my material to other publishers and was fortunate enough to obtain
an editor I thus far love (I have to wait to see what he does with
this chapter!). I sit here with letters in front of me from other
men who have been less fortunate. Some will publish with small publishers.
Others, even brilliant writers like Fred Hayward, have clear voices
yet to be heard. I hope this book will bring them some satisfaction
our voices can be heard, but I know it will also bring them grief
their voice was not the one heard, that they could have expressed
this better than I.
Censorship
After Publication
From The New York Times
Book Review to talk shows, from feature pages to CNN news, the male-positive
book encounters media land mines (or, on the air waves I suppose
it’s air mines) at every turn except radio. But the most important
resistance it encounters returns us to the beginning of the cycle:
the female constituency.
Nothing defeats censorship more
than good sales. But I make that statement with caution derived
of some strange experiences. For example, when The Myth of Male
Power became a number one bestseller in Australia and a substantial
first printing quickly sold out, Random House of Australia refused
to do a second printing. When Andrew Kimbrell’s first printing of
The Masculine Mystique sold out quite quickly, Random House
of the US refused to do a second printing, or publish it in paperback
– despite sending Andrew the money for the paperback.[20]
Censorship? Coincidence? Conscious? Unconscious. Some things we’ll
never know.
The Lace
Curtain in Film

[21]
Perhaps the art that best reflects
life is film. In the chapter on man-bashing I review the way films
bashing men reflect our culture. But 1998 did at least see two films
that were masterpieces in their empathetic representation of the
male experience: Saving Private and Life is Beautiful. I review
them on my website, but suffice it to say here that part of their
significance is that they were both a commercial and critical successes,
representing, therefore, holes in the lace curtain.
Unfortunately, these films were
more the exception than the rule among recent films. Titanic
is the rule. No reality-based film had a greater opportunity to
allow the world a clearer look at men’s willingness to sacrifice
their lives for women and children than Titanic, on which
men died more than women at a rate of more than 9 to 1.[22]
While we know Titanic had
a fictionalized story line, Titanic developed a reputation
for being meticulously researched with many characters based on
reality. In some ways that was true. But one of the most fascinating
stories behind the movie is the story revealed by what is and is
not fiction. When we uncover how we fictionalize reality we discover
ourselves. And we also discover the methods used by the
lace curtain to fictionalize reality. (Which is what distinguishes
this analysis from the previous chapter’s look at man-bashing in
films.) So welcome aboard...
Titanic
Fiction: A woman saves a man at the repeated risk of her
life.
Titanic
Fact: There is no record of a woman risking her life to save
an adult man, no less repeatedly.
Titanic
Fiction: Men in charge decided to lock third class (steerage)
passengers below the decks.
Titanic
Fact: Public Record Office documents in London show that this
never happened – in fact, a higher percentage of men from second
class died than from third class (92% vs. 88%) and 55% of the third
class women lived, which would not have been possible had they been
locked below.[23]
Titanic
Fiction: Being poor made one even more disposable than being
a man.
Titanic
Fact: Being a man and being poor both increased disposability,
but being a man increased it significantly more than being poor.
First class men were 22 times more likely to die (66% vs. 3%) than
first class women.[24]
The richest men were significantly more likely to die than the poorest
women.
Theoretically, there were three
classes on the Titanic. Practically, though, men were more likely
to die than the citizens of the first, second, or third class. In
reality, the men were the invisible fourth class citizens. Here
is the breakdown by class and sex[25]:
|
Titanic
And the Invisible Fourth Class
|
|
Class
|
% of Men Dying
|
% of Women Dying
|
|
1st
|
66%
|
3%
|
|
2nd
|
92%
|
16%
|
|
3rd
|
88%
|
45%
|
Finally, the multiple scenes of
men as cowards (“Men first! Leave the women and children behind”[26]) negates the reality, especially regarding First Officer William
Murdoch, who was portrayed in the film as taking a bribe, shooting
a third-class passenger, and then killing himself. In real life,
“Murdoch behaved heroically, sacrificing his life after laboring
frantically to save others.”[27]
Twentieth Century Fox did apologize for their distortion,[28]
but all the scenes of his corruption and cowardice remain.
In brief, the mandate of masculinity,
to be more disposable than a third class citizen, was diluted
by three methods, all fiction: (1.) Showing a woman also willing
to die to save a man; (2.) Turning a heroic man (William Murdoch)
into a coward and killer; and (3.) Sensationalizing class disposability
(via the lockout scene and the portrayal of Murdoch killing a third
class passenger while accepting a bribe from a rich man). When disposability
is falsely made a characteristic of both sexes, and class disposability
is played up, it leaves us downplaying the true disposability of
masculinity – only 8% of the second class men saving themselves
while saving 84% of their wives and 100% of their children.
What Do
“Guy Films” and “Chick Films” Have in Common?
Many trees have given their lives
to tell us how “Guy Films” and “Chick Flicks” differ. But what they
have in common is just as telling. The formula for fiction-based
films that I document in The Myth of Male Power still prevails:
Any woman-in-jeopardy who is portrayed as positive and feminine
in a fiction film for more than three scenes does not die.
Ironically, although many men
might die saving her, only she is viewed as in jeopardy. Often she
doesn’t shed blood, even if the men around her are dying. Even in
an era of supposed equality the Lace Curtain in all of us makes
the woman-in-jeopardy bullet proof. Remember, though, she must
be seen for at least three scenes, otherwise we have not had a chance
to be attached to her – that is, she has not developed in our minds
as a woman ; and the film must be fiction – in real life, women
do get hurt, we just don’t want to make it part of our fantasy life.
Below-the-Belt
Films, An Itsy Bitsy Teeny Weanie Division of Lace Curtain Studios
In The War of the Roses,
it’s about two hours into the divorce wars when Michael Douglas’
character, still believing his future ex wife may be his friend,
is lulled into believing she wants to have, er, ...the pleasure
of his penis. It is only when she takes a bite out of it that he
“gets it.” Quite a metaphor for what may sidetrack a man here or
there from seeing a woman’s anger.
The anger at men not investing
their sexuality in marriage is an international theme. We could
see it as early as 1976 in the Japanese-French film, In the Realm
of the Senses. A prostitute strangles her lover, then slices
off his penis, Lorena Bobbitt-style (perhaps Lorena’s inspiration?),
then spends some four days deliriously wandering the streets of
Tokyo “resplendent with happiness”[29] (neither a typo or a pun). The
man can’t say he wasn’t warned. The prostitute’s name is Sada.
In many movies the gross castration
of men seems more for its entertainment value. Caligula features
a man’s penis being chopped off and fed to a pack of dogs; in The
World According to Garp, a car accident results in Garp’s penis
being unwittingly bitten off by Ms. Hurt (another foreboding name)?
Yes, it’s a metaphor for Garp’s life, but isn’t illustrating it
like that a bit, well, below-the-belt? Yet no one protests this
treatment of men’s genitals; in fact, Disney promotes it...
Disney films normally take care
to avoid sex, and certainly violence against women, yet often make
trailers out of violence against men’s and boys’ sexual organs –
as in kicking a boy in the groin, or having a puck hit a boy in
the testicles (The Mighty Ducks). In The Three Musketeers,
for example, a woman threatens a man’s penis with a knife (”I’m
going to change your religion”).[30] These are frequently the scenes
selected for the trailers for Disney films, thus seen repeatedly
even if the movie is seen only once. And since the average child
watches 25,000 hours of TV before his or her 18th birthday,[31] this can have some impact!
I don’t think we would feel comfortable
sending our daughters to Disney movies in which the trailer showed
a scene of a man threatening to cut off a woman’s clitoris with
a knife. Our attitude is part of what creates the lace curtain.
TV’s Lace
Curtain
“The network that most
endears itself to the lady of the house has the best chance of survival.”
—Newsweek[32]
Item.
Dead Husbands. The description in TV Guide: “A rollicking
1998 cable comedy about wives who try to dispose of their insignificant
others.”[33] The
“insignificant others” are their husbands. When John Ritter’s character
decides to give up writing, his wife and her women’s group try to
have him shot, stabbed, strangled and poisoned. That’s what makes
it so funny. (And that’s what keeps me writing!)
An analysis of the Boston TV schedule
on a random day found that 80% of the programming addressed women’s
problems and interests, and that a high percentage of it was blatantly
man-bashing.[34] Women in jeopardy TV fits all these requirements.
“Women
In Jep”
In one year, half of the 250 made-for-TV
movies depicted women as victims.[35]
Although three quarters of real-life murders are of men, there is
no “men in jep” TV (with women competing to earn a man’s love by
saving his life at the risk of her own). In real life, women are
as likely to batter men as men are to batter women, but a man being
battered by a woman is to your TV what a four leaf clover is to
your back yard.
The ability of the networks to
have a “Throw the Bum Out Week”[36] but not a “Throw the Leech Out Week” reflects
a more deeply-seated prejudice men encounter when divorced – she’s
the victim, he’s the bum. Even though she’s kicking him
out.
