T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
234.1 | You Betcha | PARITY::DDAVIS | Dotti | Thu Mar 05 1987 13:26 | 1 |
| For half a million? YUP, I'd do it!
|
234.2 | but nobody would look :) | CEODEV::FAULKNER | now i got nuttin | Thu Mar 05 1987 13:39 | 2 |
| heck I'd do it for nuttin
|
234.3 | We're all mercenaries on this bus | NACHO::CONLIFFE | Store in a horizontal position | Thu Mar 05 1987 13:56 | 32 |
| Everyone has a price, be it financial or otherwise.
Not everyone believes that they "can be bought"; this usually indicates
that no-one has made them an offer that comes close to their price.
It becomes an issue of bargaining; is it worth it to me to make the deal worth
it to you? That is, if I really want to make you do something (and I have the
necessary resources), then I can offer you enough {money, status, toys,
warm-fuzzies, moral reward} to make you do it.
Nigel
ps: Old joke about the Woman and the Philosopher follows <FF>
A philosopher came up to a woman at a party and the following exchange
took place:
Philosopher:
"Would you sleep with me for $1000000?"
Woman:
"Certainly"
Philosopher:
"Well would you sleep with me for $10?"
Woman: (in very angry tone)
"What do you think I am, a whore?"
Philosopher:
"We've already established that; now we're just arguing about your
price"
|
234.4 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 05 1987 14:45 | 10 |
| How about a third question - "Do you believe this story?" I'd
answer "No". The thing that makes me doubt it is the quoted fee
- far too high.
The latest Newsweek has a small item on Miss Hall. It seems that
she is one of the few honest people who worked in that department,
and leads a very straightforward and wholesome life. Why is everyone
foaming at the mouth trying to add sex to what is already a sorry
mess?
Steve
|
234.5 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Thu Mar 05 1987 14:55 | 4 |
| I wouldn't do it -- I have a high "privacy" level and modeling nude
implies a willingness to have your privacy violated in other ways
(i.e. media coverage, unwanted attention in public places, etc.)
|
234.6 | whos fohmingh ad the mouff | CEODEV::FAULKNER | now i got nuttin | Thu Mar 05 1987 15:00 | 3 |
| foaming at the mouth
who's foaming at the mouth?
|
234.7 | want to see me in the ruff ? | VIDEO::OSMAN | and silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feep | Thu Mar 05 1987 16:17 | 13 |
| Hmmm. I'd pose nude for not too much money. No big deal. They're not
going to cut it off, are they ? Just photograph it, right ?
So, just pay me for my driving and time, and you can take my picture
in the nude.
How much ? Well if local, not too much driving, $100 ought to cover
it.
I suppose the only thing that might make me raise my price is economics.
If everyone else is chargin $1000, hell, pay me $500 and let's go !
/Eric
|
234.8 | AHHHHHHH at Last!!! | VAXWRK::CONNOR | John Connor | Fri Mar 06 1987 10:15 | 2 |
| What's a good scandal anyway without a bit of spicy sex?
Go for it Fawnie; it's the American way.
|
234.9 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Fri Mar 06 1987 16:40 | 19 |
|
If true as reported this story does raise a question in my mind:
A few yesrs ago these magazines paid the model of the centre fold picture
set $500. It has presumably gone up with inflation, but I doubt it has
gone up by a factor of 1000.
Therefore, if true, it seems to me that the magazines are, in a sense,
in a morally questionable area. A professional model who poses for the
magazine and gets paid is merely a professional doing work they presumably
find reasonably acceptable. But this large fee implies that this woman
is merely an object to be bought for a negotiated price. Now *that*
I find sexist, as well as being morally objectionable.
Should she do it? well she can live quite nicely on the money and two
months after the pictures appear nobody will remember. The moral paupers
here are the magazine publishers, not the potential model.
/. Ian .\
|
234.10 | | CSSE::CICCOLINI | | Fri Mar 06 1987 17:19 | 45 |
| Men are 'foaming at the mouth' because she is a pretty female.
Rita Lavelle caused no such 'foam', nor did Nixon's secretary who's
actions had far deeper implications than Fawn's. Since she is now
known, men are very interested in what her nips look like. Her
modeling agency is now receiving over twice the calls they ever
did before - but she's the same physical model they shunned in the
past. Should she pose nude? That's no one's decision but hers
but my opinion is if she's going to trash her dignity for men's
money, why stop at a one shot deal? She could probably draw a high
price over and over again for her body on the hoof!
>But this large fee implies that this woman is merely an object to be
bought for a negotiated price.
And what are all the others? More moral, more 'human' and less
of an object because they are paid less? Puleeze! It's men who
are setting her high price. That they would even offer any price
at all establishes that to them she is already an object.
>well she can live quite nicely on the money and two months after the
>pictures appear nobody will remember.
Try telling that to Madonna, to Vanessa Williams and to Vanna White
that no one will remember 2 months after they pose. I thought we
were talking about the same planet earth here!
And what I never understood about the whole deal was granting Fawn
Hall immunity. Can you be prosecuted for obeying your boss? Of
COURSE if your boss asks you to sell heroin at the local junior
high school the situation is clear, but PLENTY of bosses ask their
underlings to shred documents. I don't understand how she was in
danger of prosecution. She's in far more danger of objectification.
>The moral paupers here are the magazine publishers, not the potential
model.
Big schmeal. There isn't a hetersexual guy alive who wouldn't
willingly accept the title "moral pauper" for a lifestyle that
involved beautiful, naked female exhibitionists with low self-esteem
and no rent money. Would calling you a "moral pauper" cause you to change
anything about your life? Men don't care if women "lose respect"
for them, (Cheryl Teigs note), and the CERTAINLY aren't going to
care if somebody calls them names! Hefner, Guccione and Flynt would
laugh in your face at your self-righteous morality.
|
234.12 | | WHOARU::WONG | The Mad Chinaman | Fri Mar 06 1987 20:21 | 14 |
| Oh what the hell...some trivia here...
Last I heard...Playboy centerfolds get $10K for their photo spreads,
with the Playmate-of-the-Year getting $25K. If someone is not
particularly self-conscious about their body, to them it's like
getting paid alot of bucks for doing nothing.
I remember, back when Farrah Fawcett was popular, she was offered
one million for a photo spread; she didn't need the extra notoriety
at the time so she didn't take the offer...
yep...it's big business...if you've got a body that everyone wants
to see.
|
234.13 | well....here goes | FANTUM::MARCOTTE | | Mon Mar 09 1987 06:06 | 6 |
| re .10
Just curious....have you, in your lifetime ever met a man or men
that were worth anything to you....besides being objects for you
to beat on?
|
234.14 | | NRLABS::TATISTCHEFF | | Tue Mar 10 1987 10:41 | 10 |
|
re -.1
Tsk, tsk. Just cause Sandy was the first to say it here doesn't
mean she's the only one to get pissed off on this issue. If other
women aren't screaming loud (I've F10-ed a couple of my own reactions
to this so far), it could be because they don't want to be accused
of man-hating. You don't have to be a militant to get mad.
Lee
|
234.15 | Pornography is NOT a pretty little world! | CSSE::CICCOLINI | | Tue Mar 10 1987 16:24 | 67 |
| Yes, I've met men that are worth something, but unfortunately very
few.
The majority have bought into the Tarzan/Jane flavor of our culture
and most of them I can't blame. If society told me that what I
was made me king of this jungle I'd be hard-pressed to argue!
Most men I feel know exactly what's going on but the same dynamic that
occurs in the medical profession occurs in the 'male' profession and
that is the attitude "Keep quiet about your errant colleagues because
we have it real good here and tomorrow it could just as easily be you
on the hot-seat".
>If someone is not particularly self-conscious about their body, to
them it's like getting paid alot of bucks for doing nothing.
This is a big male myth! You think a woman just walks out of a traditional
life and into a centerfold for big bucks? We live in a society that
still thinks women somehow 'deserve' rape and you think that a woman
who works naked in the pornography industry leads a charmed life while
waiting for that big break to be bunny-of-the-day or something?
Because these days pornography is packaged to look like
Disney-World-For-Big-Boys men easily forget that it's a rough world
run by men who make their fortunes looking at women as objects and
ornaments, the more they do, the better.
Naked models are bullied and pushed around by the men in their world
probably more than the average woman is in hers because to men she is
symbolizing the idea that females are just bodies. Men sometimes
look sexually at a woman who is running for office or trying to
publish a brilliant research paper or shopping in the grocery store
with her children. If men look upon 'everyday' women this way,
how do you think the men in the pornography industry treat women
who regularly spread 'em and smile?
Fawn Hall is a model and probably knows full well that agreeing
to this offer is FAR MORE than just having some "tastetful", (what
the heck does that mean, anyway?), pictures taken. She is a woman
and as such knows that it's damned hard to get a man to respect
you as a human. If she sheds her clothes for the world, men are
going to feel justified in treating her as more of an object than
they already surely do. You can be SURE women in her position think
about the money and do a little rationalization if they can. But
Fawn Hall has turned down this offer to 'do nothing' for big bucks
and not one guy in this topic has speculated as to why. Stupid,
ain't she????? ;-)
Unless she was offered enough to retire to Fiji on, she'd be a fool
to do something that would be construed by men, (and it WILL be),
as accepting her mere object status.
I see lots of nastiness on the road to that Centerfold brass ring
that the majority of naked models never even reach. There is
something more at work than money for a woman to subject herself so
completely to the wishes of men. The possibility of being Hugh's #1 honey
this month can't be it either.
> yep...it's big business...if you've got a body that everyone wants
to see.
Not really. It's big business even if you've got a body NOBODY
wants to see. The majority of skin mags are not prettily done up
in the furry pearls and lace tone of the 'big one'. A good body may
make you a higher paid exhibitionist but you gotta start with no
self respect because the majority don't start in a 'tasteful' spread
in Playboy.
|
234.16 | unfortunately porography is BIG business | FANTUM::MARCOTTE | | Tue Mar 10 1987 19:55 | 30 |
| re: .15
congratulations....you have come thru with another fine choice of
words and examples. I am also glad that you have met some of us
that meet your standards.
I have been wondering...but not much...as to why Fawn decide not
to do the photo layout. The only reason that makes any sense to
me is that she thinks more of herself, than to allow herself to
be put in the object catagory. whatever her reasons...they are hers
and i don't think she will suffer for them.
Question: do you (women in general) feel that because some women
do pose for that type of magazine (skin), they compromise all women?
in other words...they give the message....."we are objects...wanna
a little fun". Also do they seem to set the women's movement back
because of their exhibitionism.
the Tarzan/Jane maybe true to a certain extent...but i can tell
you one thing Sandy...the young woman of today is better armed mentally
and physicaly to deal with the "macho" bullshit thats out there
than her sisters of a generation ago. Some are louder than others,
in their voicing of their feelings, but they are all better prepared
to deal with the "mans" world than they have ever been. i know..i
know...not fast enough...not soon enough...not equal enough, but
it is better, and it continues to get better.
Paul
magazine
|
234.17 | Return Fire | MPGS::LAVNER | TOP GUN | Wed Mar 11 1987 03:58 | 30 |
| RE:10
I have a hard time feeling sorry for Madonna. Her videos are blatant
sex and anyone who wears a belt buckle that says "BOYTOY" deserves
the 'object' status she works so hard to promote.
RE:15
While I agree in general with your reply Sandy, the last time I
checked this is America. No one is forcing Fawn to pose and she
has stated she won't. What bothers me about the tone of your reply
is that I get the impression that you feel all woman are manipulated
into posing for these Mag's. You seem to think that if these woman
thought for a moment and came to their senses, they wouldn't do
it. While I agree that many men buy these mags to check out this
months centerfold, many women pose in these magazines as a means
of furthering their own ambitions. Lets not kid ourselves here.
Heffner/Guccione is not forcing anyone to do anything. Many women
promote themselves however they can. I seem to remember Christie
Brinkley, Janet Jones, Suzanne Sommers, Goldie Hawn sticking their
face, and other body parts in Playboy (for a nice little fee) to
help further their careers. So while I agree that Pornography is
basically a dirty business, models/actresses ect... have used it
for years for their own selfish reasons and will continue to do
so whether you or I like it or not.
Bob
|
234.18 | Overgeneralizing | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Wed Mar 11 1987 12:35 | 50 |
| I think that much of what has been said here over-generalizes
far too much about people--both men and women.
I've known women who were open about sex and nudity because they
had lots and lots of self confidence and a very strong self
image. I've known women who were open about sex and nudity
because they had no self-confidence and had to prove their
worth. I've known women who were open about sex and nudity
because they were as horny as Hell. I've known women who were
open abut sex and nudity because it enabled them to manipulate
and have power over men. I have no reason to believe that the
women who appear in Playboy come in all of these classes.
I've known women who were very private about sex and nudity
because they had little or no confidence in their own worth or
attractiveness. I've known women who were very private about sex
and nudity because they valued sexual intimacy and wanted to
share only with someone very special. I've known women who were
very private about sex and nudity because they hated, distrusted
or feared men. I've known women who were very private about
sex and nudity because they thought it ugly, dirty, distasteful,
or immoral. I have no reason to believe that Fawn Hall falls
into anyone of these categories.
I certainly have no reason to judge, or look down on, or dislike
the women who appear in Playboy, Fawn Hall, Madonna, Hugh Hefner
or anyone for there willingness or unwillingness to be open
about sex and nudity. More than that I have no reason to like or
dislike all men or women on the grounds that they are men or
women or because I feel only one or two of the above motivations
exists.
As to one specific statement upon which I do have personal
knowledge, I can state that it is absolutely false that
"There isn't a hetersexual guy alive who wouldn't
willingly accept the title "moral pauper" for a
lifestyle that involved beautiful, naked female
exhibitionists with low self-esteem and no rent money."
Personally, I hold ethics and living by principles to be
extremely important, and would not accept the title of
"moral pauper" lightly, and certainly not in exchange for
giving up the very good life I have for an inferior dream
such as listed above. I have no interest in being sexually
involved with more than one woman, nor with women with low
self-esteem, nor with women more interested in exhibitionism
than intimacy, love and romance.
JimB.
|
234.19 | Sex and nudity | TLE::FAIMAN | Neil Faiman | Wed Mar 11 1987 12:43 | 10 |
| Bravo! to everything in .18, except:
You've used the phrase "sex and nudity" as though the two are
inseparable, and each necessarily implies the other. There are
certainly many people who are "open" about nudity, but not about
sex; and I imagine it works the other way as well. This cultural
confusion of sex and nudity is certainly fundamental to the
discussion going on here.
-Neil
|
234.20 | There definitely IS a difference | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Wed Mar 11 1987 16:23 | 19 |
| Gee, the reason I specified both was 'cause I thought they
were separate and DIDN'T imply each other. Ah, well...
Perhaps it should have been "sex and/or nudity", but then
I'd get a lecture on how "and/or" isn't a legitimate
construct. :-)
In fact, there's more to the confusion than just between sex
and nudity. We also muddle intimacy, romance and sex in a
rather hopeless manner. As I have said a number of times in
this file, personally I'm not at all interested in sexual
partners outside of my marriage, however this doesn't mean
that a little romance (so long as it doesn't interfere with
my marriage) or intimacy with a member of the opposite sex
is out of the question. This often confuses people who will
see that I'm on fairly intimate terms with some young lady
or another, and can't reconcile that fact with my rather
strong advocacy of marriage and monogamy.
JimB.
|
234.21 | | CSSE::CICCOLINI | | Wed Mar 11 1987 16:44 | 81 |
| >I am also glad that you have met some of us that meet your standards.
If we're both real honest about it, I've probably met as many men that
meet my standards as you have women that meet yours.
>Question: do you (women in general) feel that because some women
do pose for that type of magazine (skin), they compromise all women?
You mean you don't? Skin mags, commercials, movies, etc. haven't shaped
your impression of women one tiny bit, eh? You treat all of them with the
same respect you had for the first woman in your life? Really?
>...but i can tell you one thing Sandy...the young woman of today is better
>armed mentally and physicaly to deal with the "macho" bullshit thats out there
>than her sisters of a generation ago.
You're telling ME this? Who didn't know this? We're talking about the macho
bullshit that's still out there. You're hearing from us BECAUSE we're better
prepared mentally and physically. Our mothers' generation and those before
them were intimidated and bullied by threat of abandonment into meekness.
Now that we have control over random pregnancy and can pay our own rent,
abandonment is no longer the threat it was. Now we're calling society on the
carpet for the macho bullshit and saying we don't HAVE to take it. Our
mother's DID have to take it. They couldn't have fed us otherwise.
Gee Bob, who feels sorry for Madonna? I just stated what happened I didn't
say I pitied her! Passivity and compliance is her trademark and I bet
she was the least concerned about her past coming back to haunt her. I only
mentioned her and others to illustrate that the past DOES come back to haunt
you because someone said no one would remember if Fawn Hall posed anyway.
>What bothers me about the tone of your reply is that I get the impression
that you feel all woman are manipulated into posing for these Mag's.
Wrong impression then. I think the women who pose choose to do so out of
revenge. Unfortunately it's empty revenge because men don't see it. All
women know that they are evaluated by men first for their sex appeal.
Women who pose are thinking, "At least the scumbags are gonna PAY me!".
I think the women who pose willingly feel sorry for their less-attractive
sisters and think, "There, but for the grace of God, go I". In this society
the men are the kings and the women are their slaves but the very attractive
woman is saying, "At least I'm at the top of the slave heap". This message
that women who pose are giving reinforces the belief in ALL people that women
are indeed the slaves.
>I certainly have no reason to judge, or look down on, or dislike the women
>who appear in Playboy, Fawn Hall, Madonna, Hugh Hefner or anyone for there
>willingness or unwillingness to be open about sex and nudity.
And this is where you miss the point. As someone else already pointed out,
sex and nudity are two different things. But more important there is nothing
wrong with either of them! What's wrong is men's use of it to keep one class
of people subjugated to the other. Now there's nothing at all wrong with
a woman who is barefoot, is there? Anything wrong with a woman who is preg-
nant? Of course not. Then think about what causes the snickers in the old
'barefoot and pregnant' line. There is nothing wrong with what a woman is
but sexism is the doctrine that says yes there is. Sexism is the doctrine
that says what is not male is not good enough. Sexism says females are
worth little except in how they directly benefit men. Skin mags exemplify
this attitude by dissecting and glorifying ONLY the side of human females that
directly benefit men. If magazines published pictures of men ONLY from their
wallet to their car, I doubt men would like it too much. Men would be
screaming that they are NOT just banks for women. Same dynamic here. What's
so hard to understand about it?
> "There isn't a hetersexual guy alive who wouldn't
> willingly accept the title "moral pauper" for a
> lifestyle that involved beautiful, naked female
> exhibitionists with low self-esteem and no rent money."
> Personally, I hold ethics and living by principles to be
> extremely important, and would not accept the title of
> "moral pauper" lightly, and certainly not in exchange for
> giving up the very good life I have for an inferior dream
> such as listed above.
Who said give up anything? You missed the point. Any man who had the
opportunity to work among naked models would not decline simply because
someone would think him a 'moral pauper'. My point was you can call
such men anything you want and they would just laugh at you and assume
you were jealous.
|
234.22 | we are all still learning | FANTUM::MARCOTTE | | Wed Mar 11 1987 19:05 | 40 |
| re:21
>Question: do you (women in general) feel that because some women
>do pose for that type of magazine (skin), they compromise all women?
o.k....poor choice of words. Looking at the question now, i should have
put it this way. It seems that there was a lot af anger and "men bashing"
coming from your direction towards what seemed to be men in general.
What i should have asked was..are you angry at the men..or the women for
selling out to the men...in regards to posing. Hope that makes more sense
to you.
>You mean you don't? Skin mags, commercials, movies, etc. haven't shaped
>your impression of women one tiny bit, eh? You treat all of them with the
>same respect you had for the first woman in your life? Really?
Yes it has shaped my impresssion of women, more than one tiny bit. Some
good....and sadly...some not so good. I am a victim of the media barrage
just like everybody else. The only difference now...is after getting into
these notes files and listening and reading about women and their concerns,
I have to say my thinking is changing again. We discussed this, once before
I think. What is coming around, for me, anyway is more respect, a lot more
understanding, and a hell of a lot more questions, about women and their
issues.
>...but i can tell you one thing Sandy...the young woman of today is better
>armed mentally and physicaly to deal with the "macho" bullshit thats out there
>than her sisters of a generation
I didn't know it...because I never took the time to try to understand or
even care about it. I (mea culpa) bought the Tarzan/Jane garbage. "me work,
You cook"....didn't seem bad to me...at the time anyway. So I don't think
that I will ever be able to tell you anything new...the reason that I am
here...is to LEARN somwething from you and the others in this note. I
guess I will just read for awhile.
Paul
|
234.23 | Another female voice | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Thu Mar 12 1987 10:28 | 18 |
| Excuse me, ladies. Aren't you assuming a bit much when
you charge men with buying "pornographic" magazines and
therefore "exploiting" women?
A percentage of the readers of these magazines are female.
I admit to purusing them myself occasionally.
I don't find it exploitive. The women (and the men who
pose also) are being paid to do a job. Period. I don't
see any difference between a woman posing nude in Playboy
and a woman posing dressed in Vogue. The latter exploits
women also. It suggests to the reader that the "ideal"
woman is 5'10", weighs 105 pounds and has $800 a week to
spend on fashion. Give me a break! The ads I see in
fashion magazines are often as suggestive as the more
honest spreads in Playboy.
To answer the question posed in the base note-no, I wouldn't.
|
234.24 | I wouldn't... | YODA::BARANSKI | Searching for Lowell Apartmentmates... | Thu Mar 12 1987 11:28 | 17 |
| RE: .
"If magazines published pictures of men ONLY from their wallet to their car, I
doubt men would like it too much. Men would be screaming that they are NOT just
banks for women."
I don't know about anyone else, but *I* don't understand what you're saying...
...
The assumption is that "There isn't a hetersexual guy alive who wouldn't
*willingly accept* the title "moral pauper"" to work in the pornography
industry. Well, I'm hetrosexual, and I *will not* willingly accept the title
"moral pauper" to work in the pornography industry; not that I would want to in
any case...
Jim.
|
234.25 | | CSSE::CICCOLINI | | Thu Mar 12 1987 14:28 | 22 |
| And Steppin' Fetchit was 'just doing a job, period' too! Remember
him? The good little white man's nigga, (I am NOT a racist. This
sarcasm is here to illustrate the point that he was though of as the
good little white man's nigga), who always played the shuffling
black butler, janitor or shoe-shine boy.
He was loved by the white men in hollywood and was paid more for por-
traying the white man's idea of black men than for anything else a
black man could have done in those days. He was the one who coined
the phrase, "mo' tea, suh?". He did precious little for the
emancipation of black people and today you're not likely to see a
Steppin' Fetchit movie at all!
Women who pose for men are playing the role of the white man's little
bimbo. Just as Steppin' Fetchit was cheered on and encouraged with
money, so too are women cheered on and encouraged with money to
portray their stereotypes. The good little bimbo bowing and smiling
and saying "Yessuh, yessuh. Mo' tit suh?". It's no different.
White men had their black, their indian, their chinaman, their
sex-symbol and today it's only ok to continue stereotyping woman.
|
234.26 | are you feeling threatened? | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Thu Mar 12 1987 15:20 | 16 |
| Oh, give me a break!! And give men more credit!!
Lassie certainly portrays dogs as heroic, intelligent,
creative and fearless. What would MY dog do if confronted
by a raging bear? She'd run home with her non-existent tail
between her legs, leaving ME to my own devices!!
I think Lassie is great to watch. Then I accept reality with
my dog. The men in my life enjoy watching women in "fantasy"
roles. Then they are quite satisfied with the reality that I
offer them.
Maybe it's simply my confidence in myself as a woman, and as a
human being....
|
234.27 | | WHOARU::WONG | The Mad Chinaman | Thu Mar 12 1987 21:41 | 3 |
| RE: .25
Smile when you say "chinaman"... :-)
|
234.29 | Welcome to the world of Newspeak | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Mar 12 1987 23:44 | 63 |
| Wanna know a secret? I'm obviously one of worst things you can
be in this world--totally despicable--much worse than a "moral
pauper". You see *hush now*, I'm a Middle class, White, Anglo-
Saxon, Protestant, Male, Heterosexual, Married, Suburban, Able-
bodied, College Educated Professional--your basic scum bag.
Ever noticed how you can't bad things about black people,
or poor people or women, or homosexuals or the handicapped,
by people like me--we're fair game.
Does it matter how I've treated blacks? women? or anybody? No,
all you have to know is my people have been in New England for
350+ years, and you know enough to condemn them and me. All you
need to know is that I have only one X-chromosome and you can
tell I'm a pig. All you need to know is the color of my skin and
you can judge me. If I let you know I went to the same private
school as the Kennedy's you just know what kind of over-bearing
snob I must be, regardless of how hard my father had to work to
put together the tuition.
It isn't sexism to hate me because I'm a man. It isn't racism to
hate me because I'm white. It isn't religious discrimination to
tell me I can't pray in school. Sexism is defined as mistreating
women, or just being male. Racism is mistreating blacks,
orientals, American Indians, Hispanics or anyone who isn't
white. Religious oppression is forcing someone to be a Christian
or mistreating them because they aren't one.
It doesn't matter that my ancestors were slaves or political
prisoners--they were WASPs so they were the oppressors. It
doesn't matter that an ancestor freed all of his slaves and gave
them property to live on and to farm and paid them for their
work long before those near him were forced to, clearly he was a
slave-owning scum.
I sure do wish my heredity didn't force me to be such an evil
person. It sure would be nice to be part of the guiltless
oppressed minorities--able to publicly vent my anger and insult
anyone I felt like.
It sure would be nice to believe that it's not racism to throw
around phrases like "little white man's nigger" because it isn't
the black man you hate but the white. It sure would be nice to
believe that it isn't sexual stereotyping to say "the isn't a
heterosexual guy alive who wouldn't willingly..." because it
isn't poor oppressed women you're lumping together but evil and
oppressive men.
Sorry to flame, but hatred, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness are
ugly no matter who uses them or who they're directed at. After a
while the two wrongs, or the ten wrongs or the hundred wrongs
not only don't add up to a right, but they become overpowering.
I try to understanding of why people let their hate, fear,
pain and bitterness get the batter of them, but there's a
limit to how much of it I can put up with.
After a while I don't care what pain it was that turned someone
into an unthinking, hate-filled bigot. All I can see is the
result. The causes don't excuse the behavior. There's only so
many decades you can listen to the recitation of how evil you
and your people are, and not stand up and protest. Well, I
protest.
JimB.
|
234.30 | Dollars and Sense?? | MPGS::BARKER | | Fri Mar 13 1987 04:11 | 6 |
| I wonder if Ms. Ciccolini would turn her nose up at 500g
and become "a whit man's little bimbo".
I certainly would'nt peak by her personality.
....And guess what... I like intelligent woman too!
|
234.31 | Some ideas... | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | the best is yet to be | Fri Mar 13 1987 07:58 | 30 |
| re .29
As this and other discussions have evolved I have wondered why I
haven't felt hatred. I have had four major incidents in my life
involving men...but not one of those men contribute to this file
so what purpose would it have for me to express anger here.
As a feminist contributing to this file I want to do what I can
to display the qualities I have as a woman that will add value to
my job and the world I live in.
Anger and rage, although justified, has rarely brought about change.
Change in individuals occurs only when they can see some benefit
to the change. We can make people do things differently but we
cannot change their attitudes...
And yet, for those who feel that the anger and frustration difficult
to handle look beyond that expression to the explanations. Sandy
has put a lot of effort into explaining and interpreting what has
happened to women over the years. This information is important
to all of us, both men and women, and we need to mull it over and
think about it.
Last but not least, for those of us who tend to generalize it is
important that we think about the ramifications of blaming large
groups of people for acts only a segmant has committed.
And those of us that are on the other side of generalizations we
must be careful that we do not change our attitudes because of the
generalizations of a few.
|
234.32 | puh-lease!!!! | DECWET::JWHITE | weird wizard white | Fri Mar 13 1987 21:37 | 16 |
|
This topic would be a whole lot more useful if people (men, especially)
would simply read what Ms. Ciccolini has to say. Responses of the
form, "I don't"/"the men I know don't"/"It used to be that way,
but things are so much better now" are all irrelevent. It is obvious
to me that her remarks are directed at our *male* dominated culture.
Does she really have to put in little disclaimers, "now I don't
mean all you nice, enlightened guys out there", and thereby dilute
her discourse????
If you don't, great; if the men you know don't, swell; if you or
your situation has gotten better, wonderful. The point is that men's
(many men/most men/ damn near ALL men) treatment of women is deserving
of rigorous criticism.
|
234.33 | | FOLES::FOLEY | Rebel without a clue | Fri Mar 13 1987 23:44 | 9 |
|
Sorry, NOT damn near ALL men.. Yes, SOME men.. I believe they
are the ones who make it rough for women (and other men).
Please, don't insinuate that "All men are pigs". (A famous line
from a former DECcie)
mike
|
234.34 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Sat Mar 14 1987 15:21 | 20 |
|
re .32: ... if people (men, especially) would simply read what Ms. Ciccolini
has to say... It is obvious to me that her remarks are directed at our
*male* dominated culture...
Are you sure that you aren't merely reading into her remarks a general
agreement with your own feelings. A sense of lofty isolation -- pointing
remarks at a target such as a culture, rather than at [some or all]
members of that culture -- does not always jump from my terminal screen
as I read her remarks, or indeed those of several other contributors.
I try very hard to read behind the bitterness for there is much of value
in her remarks... so '9' for content, '1' for style and presentation.
It often seems here and in other conferences that we see the attitude
of "an prejudiced extremist is somebody who disagrees with me".
/. Ian .\
|
234.36 | I'll buy that | CSC32::KACHELMYER | Dave Kachelmyer CSC VMS SPACE | Sun Mar 15 1987 20:25 | 15 |
| RE: .35
I agree with that. I also feel that a strong emotional tone interferes
with the content of a message. However, if someone chooses an abrasive
style, the least they can do for their audience is to appropriately
acknowledge it with flame-on/off.
RE: .0
For .5MBucks? If I had a 'marketable' bod, I'd certainly give it
a thought! However, I don't, so I'm left with the lottery as my
big chance at the big bucks. :-)
Kak
|
234.38 | It's a two way street... or it should be! | YODA::BARANSKI | Searching for Lowell Apartmentmates... | Mon Mar 16 1987 12:54 | 8 |
| Hmmm... This is a "male dominated" world, eh? I've recently been running up
against problems with things in this world that are quite "female dominated"...
Believe it or not, there has been a lot more male aquiesence to allowing women a
freer choice, then there has been of female aquiesence of allowing men a freer
choice!
Jim...
|
234.39 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Mon Mar 16 1987 13:36 | 41 |
|
To revert to the topic:
In an earlier note I commented (perhaps with my usual opacity) that
I was concerned about the size of the offer. There is a market rate
for this work and she has been offered about 50 times the going rate.
I also said that if she did all would be forgotten in a couple of months:
I still believe that to be true. The Madonna example (and others) is
not totally similar. In these cases we have examples were early in their
careers (before their careers even started usually) someone does some
pictures for a photographer, not usually for the magazine that eventually
publishes them. They sell the artistic rights to the photographer (either
by not reading the fine print on the model release form, or by not caring
as long as they earn enough to pay the rent and buy food). At a later
date the photographer cashes in on their new found fame by selling
the old pictures for a large fee. This whole process I find objectionable,
and unethical (if I did it I would be thrown out of my professional
association). However in most cases no matter how sensational the publicity
somebody gets in the media this month, in a few months everything is
forgotten. There was a major brou-ha-ha last fall about the "girls of
Harvard" issue - interviews on the TV news, etc etc... but how many
people still remember the women who posed?
As for whether I would do it myself: when I was in art college learning
to be a photographer all the students (myself included) freely took
part in modelling sessions for the other students, much as in many art
colleges students of drawing act as models in the life class. I would
be very annoyed if one of those old photographs appeared in a magazine
(I'd sue and probably win - I did read the model release form and
commercial publication is outside the release). However if somebody
were stupid enough to offer me $500,000 I'd take it and laugh all the
way to the bank.
Its a free country (still, I think) and this is a perfectly legal financial
offer. She is free to take it or not, and should not be subject to moral
censorship or feminist derision if she chooses to take it, any more
than if she chose to sell her life story to a movie writer, or make
any other deal she chooses.
/. Ian .\
|
234.40 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Mar 16 1987 13:53 | 15 |
| On my questioning of the offer itself - the Boston Globe reported
that Penthouse had offered $500K, but that Playboy had merely said
they would be interested too - it did not place a figure on
Playboy's offer.
To me, Guccione's offer is for publicity purposes only - he may
even have figured she'd turn him down. I know that various
women in the political limelight have had pictorials in Playboy
(remember Rita Jenrette?).
Why don't we bring male models who pose nude for women's magazines
into this discussion? Aren't the women who buy Playgirl sexist
sows? Or is there a double standard here?
Steve
|
234.41 | Since it's the "in" thing to do... | 2B::ZAHAREE | I *HATE* Notes! | Mon Mar 16 1987 13:56 | 6 |
| > (remember Rita Jenrette?).
Er... ah... can we "plead the fifth?"
- M
|
234.42 | THE BETTER THE BODY, THE LOWER THE PRICE | VAXUUM::MUISE | | Wed Sep 30 1987 15:47 | 9 |
| Those who are proud of their bodies would, sooner than those
who aren't.
I aren't.
Jacki
|