Ddseddse
Esteemed Member
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Because it doesn't have the line "All I really wanted was a Pepsi... but she wouldn't give it to me!!!!" in it!I think it's better, considerably. I mean, why wouldn't it be?

I kid, I kid.
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Because it doesn't have the line "All I really wanted was a Pepsi... but she wouldn't give it to me!!!!" in it!I think it's better, considerably. I mean, why wouldn't it be?
My wife used to teach TK (now AD in the office) and advised a LOT of parents (not all) to keep their sons back a year (we did with our son). Some took her advice, some did not.These young men are facing real issues. I don’t think telling them to pull themselves up by their bootstraps is going to help, personally. In the same way that we have tried to level the playing field in employment for women, we have to start looking at what structures in society may be disadvantaging men, especially young men.
It’s clear that young men and boys are disadvantaged in the education system. It’s not because they just aren’t trying hard enough. We know that boys develop slower than girls, yet we start them at the same time in school and expect them to progress at the same rate. No wonder so many young boys are diagnosed with developmental delays, ADHD, etc. at that age.
There have been proposals to start boys a year later in school. There are steps we can take to fix this gap that has emerged in education. Just like we shouldn’t have told girls to just work harder to get a job in a market that they’re disadvantaged in, we can’t just tell boys to work harder. There are actual structures causing these issues, so let’s fix them.
Just one Pepsi!Because it doesn't have the line "All I really wanted was a Pepsi... but she wouldn't give it to me!!!!" in it!
I kid, I kid.
I do not understand trumps appeal with Hispanics or Black men as he's pretty clear that he doesn't care for them and if they happen to be undocumented, then he wants to deport them.Just because macroeconomic factors look good doesn’t mean people aren’t struggling. Rent is fucking expensive and price increases are outpacing wage growth. I think it’s arrogant to say that people aren’t really concerned about the economy.
How do you explain Trump’s growing appeal to Hispanics and Black men without the financial piece?
Yes, Asian countries especially.I think this has been a very interesting thread. Lots of good arguments around causes vs results vs correlations.
The "People are not as comfortable talking to other people any more" from @rodoheel really jumps out to me as a key impacting sex issues (which makes sense to me) as well as economic-distress (or resentments which impact male-dominated society a little differently) and gender-aspirations/pressures. It's just too easy to wander into echo-chambers, wander onto disinfo, then your tribal bias is less about your local community, rather some faceless online monoculture.
But would this be happening even without social media or kids being so online? Since "Sex and the City", there is a new objectification of men... but would it be a problem?
Paine mentioned this being an international phenomena, does it go beyond US and UK?
I was not going to post this video in the covers thread due to how wildly problematic it is, but it sure checks a lot of boxes in this thread.
Punk? Check.
Hip-hop? Check.
Gender Assumptions? Check.
Misogyny and Toxic Masculinity. Check - but with the caveat this is early enough in the cycle where it was still OK to show some level of vulnerability in your disaffection. Showing any sign of vulnerability is verboten in today's toxic masculinity circles.
Gaming culture? Check.
Racism? Check.
Soy Boy Trope? Check.
Released a solid decade ago. I think it could be taught in a seminar on the origins of toxic masculinity.
Lot going on in this video [NSFW - lotta F-bombs]...
Any country that has traditional masc/femme gender norms is going to have this issue if they don’t already.Yes, Asian countries especially.
As an evolutionary matter, even several centuries probably are not long enough to have such and effect (and arguably war should cut the other way as the most likely to go fight should be culled from reproducing).What's a few thousand years of preparing young men to be ready to go to war in the early teens have to do with it? Anything?
I began my career at Duke Univ/Hospital My vice Chancellor was a "domineering" large male who bedded his subordinate secretary (of course both were married )and scared his subordinate Male "Lts". I moved to UNC and my Dept head was an old School Labor relations guy brought to UNC to bust the Cafeteria strikes He liked to cross his arms and glare. I moved to Memorial Hopsital for a hot minute and the guy that ran the large Accounting /collections division was a bulldog who literally slept with 50% of his employees ., but is also frequently an effective work technique.
Ha! Yeah, for some reason I'm stuck on the the flying carpet. Such casual racism that no one bothered to differentiate the flying carpet (Arabian) with the Taj Mahal (Indian), sure there was a massive amount of cultural exchange in real life, but they couldn't even be bothered to get their racist tropes straight. But then again, maybe this is just another "I don't give a fuck" element that was intentionally (and ironically) inserted? I don't know, tbh.Just one Pepsi!
Seriously, I get your point and I was thinking about it a bit more just now. I agree that some of the stereotyping in the video is really unnecessary. I actually don't mind soy boy. You kind of need the vegan guy to look like that, to make the humor work. There's really no reason to make the call center guy Indian, though in fairness there's one line to that effect but it doesn't go any further. Nothing else about that guy has anything to do with ethnicity. And the imagery of the wife is maybe over the top. It obviously serves the purpose, which is that Ice-T obviously doesn't give a fuck about her, but I guess it didn't have to go that far.
I also like the lyric, "Oprah ain't got no man," although it's a bit of a guilty pleasure. It shouldn't be funny.
You are correct that Black and Hispanic people are not necessarily more anti-gay. I do not believe in racial essentialism. Do you? But, in 2024, it is clearly true that homophobia is quite rampant among non-college educated black men, and somewhat among Hispanics. By contrast, the same poll I quoted shows that black men with a college degree were the least homophobic cohort.Pursuing progressive economic policy seems to blunt the force of this reactionary force though. Look at Mexico for example. A culture that was written off as hopelessly machismo just elected a leftist woman as president.
Just because a poll shows that Black people or Hispanics in the U.S. are more anti gay or anti trans than white people doesnt mean these numbers are set in stone.
1. I didn't even notice anything in the window until you pointed it out.Ha! Yeah, for some reason I'm stuck on the the flying carpet. Such casual racism that no one bothered to differentiate the flying carpet (Arabian) with the Taj Mahal (Indian), sure there was a massive amount of cultural exchange in real life, but they couldn't even be bothered to get their racist tropes straight. But then again, maybe this is just another "I don't give a fuck" element that was intentionally (and ironically) inserted? I don't know, tbh.
Absolutely a guilty pleasure. I was dying to drop it in the Covers thread, but felt like I couldn't in good conscience. So when I saw the opportunity to drop it in this thread I jumped on it.
To bring the discussion back around to the topic of this thread, I do think it's staggering how many proto-toxic masculinity tropes are all packed into this one video. I think the producer of the video (I assume Ice-T) identified the cultural emergence of some of these topics early on and wanted to do a piece that was thought provoking and mildly subversive (against a problematic status quo) which I think is fine in isolation.
But nothing ever stays "in isolation". To me this is a great example of the irony poisoning topic that I've raised before. I don't think it has to always be an intentional tactic from the start. An argument can be made that this type of content can, down the road, metastasize into something ugly by people who strip away the nuance (i.e. irony) and, unintentionally or intentionally, decide to take the content at face value.
That puts us all in an awkward position. The last thing in the world I want to be is a stick in the mud killjoy. But at the same time, I do think we need to be careful, in the times we find ourselves in, about how content is going to land once it is (intentionally or unintentionally) stripped of it's irony and nuance.
Which was kind of my point in saying that this video could be taught in a seminar on the origins of toxic masculinity. I wasn't holding it up as an example of toxic masculinity specifically (though it does have it's problematic aspects as have been discussed), more that I think it offers a lot of insight into how the stripping of nuance, and the swapping of an ironic/subversive frame with an adamantly literal frame is a huge part of the problem.
My only comment other than thank you for your postI was just listening to a podcast about incel culture the other day in the middle of a 17 hour cross country drive.
I had not thought deeply about how marriage (or just partner-choosing) has radically changed since women have been in the workforce. The point was made that as few as 50 years ago, pretty much any man was going to make more money than any woman and therefore the pool of potential husbands that would economically improve a woman’s life was huge. These days this narrows considerably as people tend to marry within their socioeconomic bracket and a successful career woman is not going to probably be interested in some loser sitting around watching Andrew Tate videos and complaining that the world is unfair instead of doing something for himself.
But that’s only the relationship side…you also have to take into account that the further we move away from an economy that has lots of jobs in manual labor, factory work, agriculture, or trades that require short term education…the less opportunity for a male to put no effort into school but make it based on a willingness to work and therefore support himself and a family.
Women and girls have always had to put so much more into education in order to make it in the workplace and society has not adjusted to this yet. As our economy becomes even more focused on service and includes even more automation, it will get worse before it gets better.
I also saw a special report on MSNBC where Alex Wagner went to a union hall in Pennsylvania and talked to the workers there about the election. The older guys were all Harris supporters but the 20somethings were all either Trump or “undecided” but leaning Trump. They all parroted talking points about the southern border but had no idea how any policies were helping their jobs directly. But they’re blue collar guys in a country where blue collar jobs are drying up, so I’m not surprised. Easy to blame immigrants for stopping them from living the American dream rather than adjust to what the job market really is looking for.
I continue to think we have to be creative as a country in what our kids can do with a high school education. Even expecting everyone to do community college or post k12 training is a pipe dream. We need opportunities for people to make a decent living and based on how people currently parent and what society pushes the genders toward academically, the majority of those non-college people are going to be men.