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GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
Is it such a bad thing?
Thursday, December 30, 2004 6:42 PM
ANGUSTHERMOPYLE
Thursday, December 30, 2004 8:26 PM
WILLOWY
Thursday, December 30, 2004 9:15 PM
NEUTRINOLAD
Thursday, December 30, 2004 9:17 PM
THEPLAGUE
Quote:Originally posted by AngusThermopyle: Buffy was the perfect example: It started out as a fun, hip, show and ended up as some feminist propoganda thing.
Thursday, December 30, 2004 9:26 PM
PURPLEBELLY
Thursday, December 30, 2004 9:40 PM
Quote:Originally posted by PurpleBelly: ...but I agree that the nascent quality of the existing episodes are a large part of their appeal to me.
Friday, December 31, 2004 1:17 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Willowy: [Above all, do not bash The Joss here.
Friday, December 31, 2004 2:35 AM
PSYCHICRIVER
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 6:02 AM
BADGERSHAT
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 8:00 AM
Quote:Originally posted by BadgersHat: Keep in mind (yes, I'm saying that again), keep in mind thatJoss was NOT the ONLY driving force behind Buffy in later seasons. He was the executive producer, but had Angel and Firefly at the same time, plus other various projects like Fray and such. Other personages had more or less taken over the wheel for the last part of Buffy, and yes, it DID get a little heavy handed at times, and Buffy herself got a bit over the top in the speechifying department. But Joss himself had a lot less to do with Buffy in the later seasons than most people realize--much like Gene Roddenberry and Star Trek, other people were in charge. --Jefé The Hat *************************** --Don't bother trying to predict, figure out, second guess, criticize, or suggest anything that comes from the mind of Joss Whedon, for you shall usually be wrong, and shall find out the Truth and Purpose in due time. (This is the Truth of Whedoning) "I like smackin 'em"--Jayne
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 8:41 AM
GROUNDED
Quote:Originally posted by AngusThermopyle: I haven't seen the final series of Angel yet - the previous have been excellent, especially 2 - but friends who have said they were disappointed. I'm waiting for my girlfriend to get the DVDs when they come out next month (region 2).
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 9:02 AM
ZEEK
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 10:56 AM
NICOLACLARKE
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 11:49 AM
MISGUIDED BY VOICES
Quote:Originally posted by PsychicRiver: I love Buffy. But youve got a good point. I mean what if Joss had chosen to blow up Serenity at the end of Season 3?
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 12:20 PM
ZOID
Quote:I really do love the show, and would love to see more; however, the question is valid. Discussion forum, you see? How sad is it when people answer messageboards using the vernacular of a TV show? Would've swore at you in Mandarin, but I don't speak it, unfortunately.
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 2:13 PM
MALICIOUS
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 8:36 PM
Quote:Originally posted by NicolaClarke: To the over-protective Joss fans: lighten up! :smiles: Since when has FFF.net required every poster to blindly preach the Gospel of Whedon? Joss is a big boy and doesn't need you to jump all over anyone who offers a constructive (if strongly-worded) criticism. I'm sure even Jossage himself would admit that not everything he touches turns to gold. Dissenting opinions, where they're not simply the work of trolls, are natural and useful. This forum would be very dull if no-one ever challenged us... To AngusThermopyle: I agree with you on Buffy - I loathed season 6 so much I couldn't even bring myself to watch 7. Not so much because of 'feminist propaganda', however - unless by that you mean its shamefully sidelining of all the male characters bar Spike (who himself only got screentime when he lost his shirt, it seemed). More the humourless dirge part. *ducks flames* Couldn't say re. Angel - have only seen 1-3 thus far, and adored it for the most part. All that said/written, it seems to me that being grateful Firefly got canned just in case its quality dipped is unfounded pessimism at its silliest. (So I'm going to counter it with a desperately silly analogy...) It's a bit like being glad you've had your legs amputated, because at least now you can't cross any roads and perhaps get hit by a car. More seriously, wouldn't you have liked to see what happened, rather than second-guessing the show's development based on what has gone before? BTW... good choice of name, particularly given your apparent propensity for stirring. / pure intentions, juxtaposed /
Tuesday, January 4, 2005 8:56 PM
Quote:Originally posted by zoid: AngusThermopyle wrote: Quote:I really do love the show, and would love to see more; however, the question is valid. Discussion forum, you see? How sad is it when people answer messageboards using the vernacular of a TV show? Would've swore at you in Mandarin, but I don't speak it, unfortunately. Okay. I'm gonna take things a little further, and then hopefully draw them back in again, into a tidy little bundle. I watched a couple of single episodes of BtVS and Angel. I never liked them. SMG gives me a rash, as does James Marsters. My teenage daughter loves these shows, which is how I wound up watching them at all. They never appealed to me. Maybe it's something to do with the prosthetics or all the farcical machinations with daylight and stakes, and evil characters becoming the good guys, etc. When Firefly first hit the small screen on Friday nights at 7 PM in my locality, I thought, 'Cool. Something to watch before Farscape', which frankly had lost its appeal when Zhaan left. Virgina Hey was the only reason I originally watched that series, due to a lasting crush on her since "The Road Warrior". Farscape started getting wackier and she left, and I lost a lot of my interest in the show, which I had come to fully enjoy. Then I catch the first episode of Firefly and, bam! I am hooked. And I'll be honest, I gave the show a look because of Morena Baccarin. But by the end of the first episode I was hooked because of the dialog and Wash and Zoe's relationship. It was and continues to be one of the best TV depictions ever of the give-and-take of married life. On top of that, my wife's name is Kayley. I didn't stand a chance... I watched every episode, taking care to check my listings, so I wouldn't miss an episode due to displacement by MLB playoffs. When F*x showed the 2-hour episode, I was in hog heaven. This show was so great, and the '2-hour event' only proved it, and F*x's dedication to the show. Yippee! Next week, there was no episode, and none the week after; but, it was NFL playoff season by then, and I just figured F*x didn't have room for it right then: It'd be back. As the weeks drug on into a month, I started going into withdrawal, and went to the 'Net looking to see what was up, when the next episode was going to air. That was when I found out F*x had cancelled it. I was literally devastated. Forlorn. How could a merciful God allow something of such beauty to be so callously taken from me? (Yeah, it was childish, but I couldn't help feeling betrayed.) About three months after its cancellation, I started hanging out on alt.tv.firefly and talking to others who felt the same way. It was at that point that I learned Joss Whedon was the show's creator, and that he had created BtVS and Angel. I downloaded all the eps -- including ones never shown in the U.S. -- and if anything I felt worse, more angry. Then somebody turned me on to FFFn and I've been here ever since. Like group therapy... Would I have eventually soured on the show? Who can say? I frankly have never been keen on River being psychic. It smacks too much of Buffyverse to me. Especially since I think her 'insight' could be explained much more satisfyingly by conventional means. Remember "Rain Man"? Raymond takes one glance at the spilled matches and can tell you how many there are; he can remember all the cards that have been dealt at blackjack. Is he psychic? No. He just perceives the world differently than other humans. In one scene, it is explained that people think autism means being cut off from reality; but, it is further explained, in fact he senses more of the world's stimuli than we do, not less. When Simon diagnoses River's condition, he says something similar: She senses too much, "she can't not". Apparently, it's set in stone. River's psychic. I don't like it but, hey, I've learned enough about Joss' talents to believe the storytelling will still be compelling. Which brings me to my main point: I didn't like Joss' previous works; but I believe in artists maturing in their work. I didn't like BtVS or Angel; but I do like Firefly. Joss -- for my tastes -- has gotten better at what he does. It seems so natural to say: Artist gets older, artist gets wiser, artist creates better art. But many think of JW as an unchanging entity: he's the same as an artist today as when he created Buffy, or Woody, or the human-alien hybrid. Nothing, no one, stays the same. Change is the only constant in Life. Ponder this. Then, think on it some more, because it applies to all human beings, including you and me. Which brings us, at long last, to your thoughts I quoted above. As a preamble, let me say, "Welcome to the board." Seriously. Stick around, post some invective, occasionally say complimentary things, and play with the other hominids over in the treehouse. It's a good family. They forgive. They encourage. They'll befriend you, if you let them. Next I'll say, "Have a little respect for those whose opinions differ from yours." Just because you're a lone wolf, an independent thinker, doesn't give you the right to belittle those who enjoy fitting in, by calling them sheep. I'm an independent thinker, too. Who knows? Maybe in 30 years or so, you'll even come to appreciate my perspective. But just because I'm an 'independent thinker' doesn't make me better than other folk. And it doesn't make you better either. We here at FFFn are an eclectic bunch of kids and oldsters, liberals and conservatives, men and women. ...And everything in between those labels. If you put someone beneath you, you turn off the intellectual, social and emotional growth you might otherwise get -- and supposedly want -- out of the experience. And of course, if you play wolf by calling the other gentle souls on this board 'sheep', you'll have to deal with me: your cousin and nemesis, the German Shepherd Dog... Respectfully, zoid _________________________________________________ "Burn the land and boil the sea, you can't take the sky from me." The Ballad of Serenity
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 3:48 AM
MAUGWAI
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 4:29 AM
NKYJAY
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 9:58 AM
Quote:Originally posted by maugwai: Wow, so much Buffy bashing. Angus, I'm just curious. Do you prefer stories that slide women to the sidelines and let the men do all the fighting? Flip it around and imagine that all the main characters were men and the women were the sidekicks. Nobody would even notice. The feminism is what made that show such an unusual thing when it came out, and as a woman, I was thrilled to see a female hero who didn't have to be an angry butch lesbian to get the job done. Heroes don't always wear white hats, and villains aren't evil for no reason. Buffy explored this in a way few shows or even movies have ever dared. But perhaps it's a difference in perspective. Some people like their stories black and white. I love it when I'm not sure who the bad guy is. Buffy, and especially Angel, excelled in that kind of thinking. "Dear diary, today I was pompous and my sister was crazy."
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 10:54 AM
Quote:Originally posted by zoid: SMG gives me a rash, as does James Marsters.
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 3:18 PM
Quote:Originally posted by AngusThermopyle: I know of no-one who thought that the feminism issue interesting or appealing. In fact, the all seem to have found it pretty annoying. And they are 90% women. Feminism isn't really real life, but because people are so influenced by the media, they think it is. I'd go so far as to say, feminism has done a lot of harm to society, especially in families. I'm all for women being respected and honoured. I'm not a feminist, but that doesn't really mean anything. I support my girlfriend however I can - I'm talking emotionally here, not financial. She is my equal.
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 5:59 PM
VETERAN
Don't squat with your spurs on.
Quote:Originally posted by AngusThermopyle: I love Firefly. I love the whole idea of it. ... I have only just bought the DVD set and it was my first time seeing it. T'was exceedingly good. I'd recently borrowed all my girlfriend's Buffy sets and watched all seven series, back to back....if Buffy is anything to go by - and Angel according to friends (I haven't seen series 5) - then I'd have to say I'm kind of glad it remains perfect and unspoiled... May none of your pizzas have unfortunte toppings.
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 6:01 PM
DACUTE1
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 8:05 PM
Quote:I love this random, made-up statistic you've got there. 90% of what? Your girlfriend, your mom and your sister?Quote: That was pretty cheap. Of course I meant 90% of the people I know... Did I get you so that you decided to have a go at my grammar? My girlfriend is 100% woman, thanks all the same. Are you so naive that you think that beaten women would be allowed to watch such episodes of Buffy? You think they'd say to themselves: "Of course, I've had all those years of martial arts training. I'd forgotten about that..." I know about those countries you mentioned. Probably a lot more than you do. In most cases you're talking about Islamic regimes that I knew were carrying out these sorts of atrocities long before it became common knowledge. I grew up in the middle east. I also know that everyday men and women are falsly accused of blasphemy for merely saying what they believe (if they aren't Muslim, or convert). To women and children who are being abused, Buffy will have little or no effect on their lives. That job belongs to you and me. Why does everyone expect TV to educate and change things? We had the most shocking TV ad. at Christmas against drink driving. Who do you think the people this ad had the most impact on? People who didn't drink and drive, of course? We let TV educate and entertain our kids coz we have things we'd rather be doing. History is taught by Hollywood, morals by Buffy? That would be a very bad thing. You think young girls saw Buffy in a very bad relationship with Spike or Willow get so powerful using the Occult and say: "Oh right, those are bad things"? Of course not. Girls want to be in sexual relationships with Spike, coz he's powerful and a bastard. Since Buffy, Charmed, Sabrina etc, the amount of teenage girls getting into the occult and black magic has gone through the roof. Is that a positive influence? Yep, I know one person who thinks the feminist issue was interesting and appealing now. Probably a white, middle-classed and liberal? This world needs people who are willing to give up their time to do something about the issues you raised. So, you are obviously infuriated about these injustices abroad and in your own country... Yes? What are you doing about it? May none of your pizzas have unfortunte toppings.
Quote: That was pretty cheap. Of course I meant 90% of the people I know... Did I get you so that you decided to have a go at my grammar? My girlfriend is 100% woman, thanks all the same. Are you so naive that you think that beaten women would be allowed to watch such episodes of Buffy? You think they'd say to themselves: "Of course, I've had all those years of martial arts training. I'd forgotten about that..." I know about those countries you mentioned. Probably a lot more than you do. In most cases you're talking about Islamic regimes that I knew were carrying out these sorts of atrocities long before it became common knowledge. I grew up in the middle east. I also know that everyday men and women are falsly accused of blasphemy for merely saying what they believe (if they aren't Muslim, or convert). To women and children who are being abused, Buffy will have little or no effect on their lives. That job belongs to you and me. Why does everyone expect TV to educate and change things? We had the most shocking TV ad. at Christmas against drink driving. Who do you think the people this ad had the most impact on? People who didn't drink and drive, of course? We let TV educate and entertain our kids coz we have things we'd rather be doing. History is taught by Hollywood, morals by Buffy? That would be a very bad thing. You think young girls saw Buffy in a very bad relationship with Spike or Willow get so powerful using the Occult and say: "Oh right, those are bad things"? Of course not. Girls want to be in sexual relationships with Spike, coz he's powerful and a bastard. Since Buffy, Charmed, Sabrina etc, the amount of teenage girls getting into the occult and black magic has gone through the roof. Is that a positive influence? Yep, I know one person who thinks the feminist issue was interesting and appealing now. Probably a white, middle-classed and liberal? This world needs people who are willing to give up their time to do something about the issues you raised. So, you are obviously infuriated about these injustices abroad and in your own country... Yes? What are you doing about it? May none of your pizzas have unfortunte toppings.
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 8:14 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dacute1: Feminism doesn't exist in real life? Maybe not, sexism does though. I have to agree with maugwai here. Looking outside of this society women are getting beaten, killed, raped and mamed because they are female. Maugwai talked about Nigeria, I know there are countries in Africa where they perform female genital mutilation, meaning cutting parts of the genitalia and sewing it up leaving enough room to urinate thereby making intercourse so ungodly painful that they don't look at anyone of the opposite sex. Oh, and this procedure happens before puberty. Not sure if that's what Maugwi was talking about.... Anywho, just my thoughts.
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 11:27 PM
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 11:42 PM
MANIACNUMBERONE
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 11:52 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Nkyjay: I certainly didn't find the feminism annoying. I consider myself a feminist, although not one who feels a uniform is necessary in order to identify myself as one. I always enjoyed the fact that both good guys and bad guys in Buffy, Angel and Firefly were women, and women who thoroughly enjoyed being women too. I was slightly annoyed by the Wiccan stereotype lesbians in Buffy, though I felt Willow and Tara's relationship was well handled - as a relationship that happened to be between two women, with all of the usual difficulties that any relationship faces. I felt there was no particular feminist message in their relationship, although naturally the simple fact that they were lesbians equated it with feminism (which is unusual for Joss, he doesn't' usually succumb to stereotypes without pointing out that they're stereotypes first). I believe there was a stronger feminist message in Buffy's several (hetero) sexual partners and obvious enjoyment of sex, and that is again presented in the character of Inara. The truth of the matter is that women are still viewed as either virgins or whores wherever you are on the planet, and the fact that these two strong, female characters explore this social reality - Inara most pointedly - is much more feminist in its intent than Willow and Tara's relationship. (grin) Hope that doesn't put you off Firefly now, Angus.
Thursday, January 6, 2005 12:20 AM
Thursday, January 6, 2005 3:14 AM
Thursday, January 6, 2005 5:00 AM
Quote:Originally posted by maugwai: Wow, Angus. You said in your other thread that enjoy stirring things up. So you came here and stirred things up, and when people disagreed with you, you took it personally, made personal attacks and ran for the door. It seems like you think television should have no meaning because the right people don't watch it or something, or maybe because people shoudn't be watching TV because they should be out saving the world? I didn't really get where you were going with that since you are posting to a fansite for a show you keep saying you like. As for what I do to help, I belong to UNICEF. I also teach world literature, so for a living I educate teenagers in this area about the problems in the world. Each semester, I make them write letters to governments to show them how they too can have an impact on society. I also run charity drives within my classes. I am white, I am middle-class and I am liberal. I am also very well educated and well-traveled, and I'm not apologizing for that, although I am a little appalled at your predjudice against my particular socioeconomic group. "Dear diary, today I was pompous and my sister was crazy."
Thursday, January 6, 2005 5:10 AM
REEQUEEN
Quote:I honour women, like them and respect them, but I'm no feminist. I like people, no matter what the sex. I don't like labels.
Quote:I'd go so far as to say, feminism has done a lot of harm to society, especially in families. I'm all for women being respected and honoured. I'm not a feminist, but that doesn't really mean anything.
Quote:Female circumcision is certainly practiced in many African and Islamist cultures. I'm sorry, making intercourse so ungodly painful? You do know what it's used for right? To stop intercourse. It doesn't so much make it painful as impossible.
Quote:It occurs to me that there's a certain amount of hypocracy when it comes to supernatural TV series. For example, when Willow etc, pulled Buffy out of Heaven - later she was having a conversation with a vamp, and he asked if there was any movement on the God issue. She said there wasn't. Who was in Heaven then? What is it she wears round her neck? What does she splash on vamps to burn them? It seems that God has no place in TV, only demons. I guess he just isn't cool enough in the minds of writers.
Thursday, January 6, 2005 7:00 AM
XENOCIDE
Thursday, January 6, 2005 8:19 AM
Quote:REEQUEEN seems to think it is a single movement that, sometimes overzealously, defends women’s rights and battles against the many heinous abuses perpetrated on women.
Thursday, January 6, 2005 8:52 AM
MIKEYMO
Thursday, January 6, 2005 12:34 PM
Quote:First of all, will folks please quit capitalizing my entire name?
Thursday, January 6, 2005 4:55 PM
Quote:Sorry, but if you don't sign your post how the heck are we supposed to know how you want it formatted. The only place I see it in this thread is in the header...allcaps. (above edited for brainfart) Sorry if it is "mean" to be you but you can't be anyone else ;-)
Quote:I think it's a little high handed of you to lecture me about connotation when the point (and my pardon if I was unclear) of my previous post was that we are using the connotative (and therfore subjective) meanings of feminism in the posts instead of the denotative meanings.
Quote:Using those definitions I would classify myself as a feminist. Now I agree that in many ways the feminist movement is exclusionary. I only ever went to one meeting of NOW and left because I didn't appreciate the hate directed at me just because I'm a man. But anyway... as a philosophy and as a critical paradigm I am in agreement with feminism.
Quote:But by definition humanism is about reason and feminism is about equality. I'd mostly rather be a feminist.
Quote:And crap, we're having fun and we like each other. Thanks,Ree! This is fun! And again, my apologies to the non ontologists in the group! I love this place, where else could I post 'ontology?'
Friday, January 7, 2005 3:38 AM
Friday, January 7, 2005 5:20 AM
Friday, January 7, 2005 6:00 AM
Friday, January 7, 2005 6:08 AM
Friday, January 7, 2005 6:15 AM
Friday, January 7, 2005 7:13 AM
Quote:...It's not "belief" that offends me, it's the luggage that usually comes with it, and as far as I can tell, you've only got a carry-on...
Friday, January 7, 2005 9:21 AM
Friday, January 7, 2005 9:46 AM
Friday, January 7, 2005 10:24 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Zeek: I'm sorry that some people's actions and motives go against your beliefs but why were you given the all powerful position of deciding what's right and wrong? If a culture decides that gential mutilation is where it's at then that's for them to decide.
Friday, January 7, 2005 10:30 AM
Quote:Originally posted by maugwai: Quote:Originally posted by Zeek: I'm sorry that some people's actions and motives go against your beliefs but why were you given the all powerful position of deciding what's right and wrong? If a culture decides that gential mutilation is where it's at then that's for them to decide. Wow. Then I guess you'd be fine if someone cut your genitals off, if our society said it was OK. You wouldn't want anyone to step in and save you because that might have an adverse effect on society. By stopping genital mutilation. On you. I do not want to live in your world. "Dear diary, today I was pompous and my sister was crazy."
Friday, January 7, 2005 2:42 PM
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