Sunday, November 6, 2011

Miss Representation


Please craft a blog post that reflects on the film “Miss Representation.”
You may use the questions below to guide your reflections.
What most surprised you about the film?
What did you learn from the film?
Miss Representation director, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, and many of the
interviewees, such as Margaret Cho, Jane Fonda, Jennifer Lawless, and
Devanshi Patel, talk candidly about their experiences with sexism. What
connections or empathy did you feel with the experiences presented in the
film?
What strategies are working to promote more women to leadership
I think the thing that surprised me most about the film, “Miss Representation” were the statistics. I hadn’t noticed, until the film pointed it out, that most of the women on television and in films are only in their 20s and 30s. The idea that a woman is only useful/viable while she has potential to bear children and then can be thrown away after she has served that purpose is staggering. The statistics that support that claim are even more noteworthy. While women aging from 20-30 years old make up only 39% of the population of the United States, they comprise 71% of the figures on television. Where do all the old women go? The idea that the female actresses interviewed were pressured to lose excessive amounts of weight, get botox, and undergo minor plastic surgeries to improve their appearances for the sake of television programs is ridiculous. I must admit that my knowledge of popular culture is so pathetic that I’m not sure of the name of the actress who found the botox procedure so incredibly traumatizing (was that Jane Fonda?) but her description of her experience alone is enough to make one stop and consider how one supports these industries. She got the procedure done reluctantly and was so objectified and made to feel so insignificant and dehumanized by it that it has had a lasting impact on her. She has taken the stance for now of refusing to have it done again, but she did make herself a pretty loophole should she decide it’s important for her career to have it done in the future.
I learned a lot about the representation of women on cable television from the film. I don’t have cable, nor do I watch much television that I don’t hand choose from Hulu (Modern Family, 30 Rock…those are about the only two with random geek attacks of Terra Nova when I really want to shut my brain off) so I had no idea what cable news shows looked like. They’re a far cry from the BBC broadcasts I watch I can tell you. (And my NPR intake doesn’t really help with my visual understanding of how women are depicted in the media). Imagine the outcry if a male newscaster showed up on screen in a Chippendale’s outfit. The things (and lack of things) those women were wearing was absolutely astonishing. The idea that a woman is powerful and authoritative (and that in only a limited scope) so long as she is also sexually interesting and entertaining is absurd.
I also learned the neat tidbit that it is actually harder to induce men to watch television. That makes the programming being streamed today make so much more sense. Of course the advertisers are in cahoots with the producers of film and television (aren’t most of them produced by the same corporations anyway?) to make the programming appealing to men so that they will watch it so that they will see their ads. Yet, why do they undercut men to such a degree? Don’t they think there are any men out there who care about the content they view as much as they care about their visceral entertainment? Our media is undermining the intelligence and maturity of the men of our country. In so doing, they are producing generation after generation of men who don’t actually care about the more important things in life, who do only value women for their appearance and sexual utility, and who will only watch television if it is stimulating them on some base level. Yet, if we provided programming that was free from any of the superficial junk which we spoonfeed every member of our society day in and day out, maybe we’d all grow up a little. Maybe if the consumers demanded that the companies that produced their entertainment take a public interest, they really would.
Instead, we’re all happy to shut our brains off and veg out in front of television which objectifies and simplifies us all, especially women. I’m not saying we should “re-regulate” the industry. I think that the FCC was silly in a lot of ways in the ways it attempted to control freedom of expression. Yet, I think that it’s time for us to start voting with our remotes (especially where people are buying cable programming) and watching only things which promote the decency, respect, and civility of humanity. It might be hard to find shows which do that at first, but I’m pretty confident that once we decide as a whole, that’s what we want, that’s what they’d provide. Of course, with men in charge of the programming and men watching the programming provided for men and women watching it too because that’s all there is, this cycle should be difficult to break. However, steps are being taken to educate our younger generations about the harmful effects of what they’re seeing on television. They know the damage it can cause because they live with it every day. They’re voices are being heard and some of them at least are choosing to reject those messages of value rooted purely in appearance.
I, like most young women have struggled with my appearance, especially in terms of my weight. I have an on again off again eating disorder as a result of young men who took offense to my inability to live up to their expectations of femininity when I was younger. Their media intake caused them to produce output which was seriously damaging to my self image (which had been relatively unscathed by the media at large due to diligent parenting and free thinking). Yet, I didn’t manage to avoid the self-esteem problems associated with the warped media message being sent to young people because I operated within spheres with young people who were actively being shaped by it. Their perceptions of me in comparison to what the media had taught them to expect resulted in the message being passed down to me in a more personal way than simply subliminally through the advertising and programming of television and film. There is absolutely no escaping it.
When the population who is funding this kind of programming ceases to do so and ceases to stand up for individuals who condemn women in leadership because they are not perfect, things might begin to change. Those women who are in positions of power now are fighting for change and they’re being successful to some degree. They’re using their place to speak out and up for themselves and others like them so that they can carve a place of leadership in politics and in the media which is defined by intelligence and self-worth, not fashion and physicality. Respectable, strong women in positions of power are growing in numbers and as they become more and more visible, more young women of generations to come are seeing models they can follow to provoke change and to encourage them to follow in their footsteps. 

1 comment:

  1. I really liked your loophole comment. I was thinking the same thing-she really seems against it now that she's an established actress and leader. Yet, she was only able to get that respect and fame from taking actions to try and play the role of that ideal woman. Isn't it funny how that works out?



    I'm glad you discussed the media regulation vs. free speech argument. I failed to mention anything about that in my blog post yet it is a really good point to make. Our nation (and entire culture for that matter) is founded on the principals of freedom. So I can understand why so many people would be against increasing regulations for the media industry.



    And finally, I am very touched that you are confident enough in yourself to disclose information that is still quite taboo in our society. I am refering, of course, to your eating disorder. It has been explained to me that at the very core of such disorders is a control struggle. Women yearn for control over their lives and sometimes their diet is one of the few things they can control, unfortunately. I am not surprised that the power of media can influence such control issues.

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