Article written by tigtog :: (RSS)

tigtog (aka Viv) is the founder of this blog. She lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves.

This author has written 3171 posts for Hoyden About Town. Read more about tigtog »

14 responses to “Media Circus: read my memoirs edition”

  1. Chris

    I think that excising the mainland from the migration zone is an appalling decision. Its times like this that make me ponder if we’d actually get more humane treatment of asylum seekers under an Liberal government. At least then we’d have an opposition that protested against these sorts of policies rather than one that just eggs the government on to further extremes.

    When is the ALP going to realise that no matter how far they go the Opposition under Abbott is always to going to demand they go a little bit further and portray them in public as not having done enough?

  2. MrRabbit

    A. How can you excise the mainland from the migration zone? It makes no sense to me. I’m so disgusted. It’s getting really hard to tell who is least evil, Liberal or Labor. It’s why I can’t vote for either of them.

    B. There was a recent discussion on Feministe.us about street harrassment of queer men, which degenerated as discussions often do, but this report reinforces connections between sexual harrassment of women (queer and nonqueer) and of men who dare deviate from our strict gender codes (who may also be queer or not queer).

    C. Shonky awards out: shocking! Mould killers don’t kill mould. But vinegar does. It makes the mould explode! I feel so mean now, cleaning my shower.

  3. Jo Tamar

    @Chris, re the decision to excise the mainland from the migration zone: yes, absolutely appalling. Also truly absurd, isn’t it? I wondered when I saw it if it was 1 April or if someone had picked something up from The Onion.

  4. Jo

    That sexual harassment point in really telling. Obviously the stats still show that women are overwhelmingly the targets of harassment. But maybe the thing under attack isn’t so much women anymore but femininity. Or maybe it was right from the start. Women who “get ahead” are typically seen as those who are less stereotypically feminine. And men who may perform aspects of what is traditionally deemed “femininity” are getting mocked all the more. Backlash, anyone?

  5. Rebekka

    But maybe the thing under attack isn’t so much women anymore but femininity. Or maybe it was right from the start. Women who “get ahead” are typically seen as those who are less stereotypically feminine. And men who may perform aspects of what is traditionally deemed “femininity” are getting mocked all the more.

    As a woman who’s not particularly stereotypically feminine, I’d dispute this. I’ve not experienced sexual harassment at work, but I’ve certainly experienced discrimination, and in my experience that’s all about being female and nothing to do with being feminine (or not).

  6. Jo

    Hmm, maybe you’re right Rebekka. There is definitely a thing of femininity = woman = baaaaad thing though. Urgh, sexual harassment/discrimination is the worst.

  7. Chris

    Jo @ 3 – I was very surprised by the announcement, but apparently it was one of the recommendations from the Houston report. Still very disappointed.

    Jo/Rebekkah – the femininity angle was suggested by Broderick in an attempt to explain the growing number of discrimination cases where men are victims. I doubt it explains all the cases though. Anyone who sticks out from the “norm”, for whatever reason is at increased risk – the sexual aspect of the harassment is just the weapon.

  8. David Irving (no relation)

    I just watched Senator Joist with Ms Crabb. He’s a [redacted], but so’s she, frankly. He tried to come over all philosophical. It didn’t work, although it may have fooled Ms Crabb.

    Moderator note: try and find a more creative insult than a gendered slur, please, next time?
  9. Chris

    tigtog @ 9 – The Joe Hockey one is worth catching if it’s still on iView. Discovered that the Minister for Defence (Brendan Nelson) was living in a converted garage that only had enough power to run either the heater *or* the lights in a Canberra winter (he was going through a divorce and so couldn’t afford anything else). This is where defence personnel used to visit him at night to get his permission for various things….

  10. Aphie

    Kind of enjoyed Triple J’s Hack edition yesterday on the whole excising issue, in that they let a racist caller carry on in such a way as to point out just how stupid he was, inviting a Turkish refugee to comment on the “back door” crap, and then getting a very measured elder politician (can’t remember her name, sorry!) to comment on the “one liners being thrown around, when it’s a very complex issue” ending with commentary about human lives and dignity being worth more than politics.

  11. Rebekka

    Jo, I suspect it’s more about policing a very traditional/rigid gender binary.

    Yes, that – the thought was trying to happen in my brain but I wasn’t quite getting there.

    There is definitely a thing of femininity = woman = baaaaad thing though.

    Not sure about this one either Jo. My feeling is more what Tigtog was suggesting – femininity is good for women (we’re conforming to our socially approved role) but bad for blokes (they need to be manly).

  12. Mindy

    There is definitely a thing of femininity = woman = baaaaad thing though.

    Perhaps not so much baaaad thing, unless you are a bloke in which case yes definitely, but a less valued thing?

n.b. our posts are closed to new comments after 60 days. If you wish to discuss a closed post, please use the latest open thread.

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