Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Ethics smethics...let's talk graphics.

I'm a little confused by the ABC's choice of graphic to illustrated a story headlined 'The Gene Genies' and illustrated with a double helix DNA strand (understandable) and Barack Obama (confusing). Now, if the piece was about Obama's recent reversal of stem cell research, the illustration would make sense. However, it quickly transpired the piece was in fact about a report on the use of genetic testing by insurance companies when issuing policies. In Australia. There was no mention of the US or Obama at all.

The piece went on to explain that one person had been found to have (and I paraphrase) 'a gene for breast cancer and a gene for ovarian cancer....as well as this HE also had a slightly increased risk of prostate cancer'.

Can someone with a better understanding of such things please explain to me how (and if) a man can have a gene for ovarian cancer and breast cancer?

The following story was about Obama and stem cell research, using a very similar graphic (he was sitting in same position but with his head turned the other way!) and a headline so catchy I have forgotten it.

It all just seemed a bit sloppy really.

And yes, I realise that in relation to these two topics there are probably far more important issues to discuss than their illustration on the ABC news but that's just not what I do.

notsopassiveaggressivenotes.com

This note is pinned above the adult magazine section at my local newsagency:




Only in Darwin...

I'd also like you to know that this photo was captured at great personal risk. I had to be very discreet as I don't think whoever wrote this note would be very sympathetic if they mistakenly thought I was taking photos of the covers of the adult magazines rather than purchasing them.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Or what I was really trying to say:

Check out The Age Online Opinion piece:

No sex, please, I'm too busy vacuuming by Helen Elliot

Awesome.

While it might not seem like it, this is what I was really trying to get at in my last post.

Glad to see they're running this.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

What makes a happy marriage? Just lie back and think of England!

Because I foolishly use a mac I seem to be unable to do various things on this blog including commenting on my own, and other people's blogs, and posting links to other sites. So I'm just going to have to tell you about and then you can google it if you're mad/sad/joyous enough.

The other day I read an article in the online addition of The Age which was provocatively and, as it turns out, inaccurately titled 'What makes a happy marriage? Sex!'(Curtin, J. 28/02/09). What is should really have said is: 'What makes a happy marriage? Rape!' because that's pretty much what the two auther's conclusion amounted to. The article claims that the main finding of sex therapist Bettina Arndt's new book (which is based on the 'sex diaries' of 98 couples) was a nation of 'women dreading bedtime and men hurting from rejection.'

Now, I can't judge the book because I haven't read it but the more I thought about the tone of this article the more it bothered me. I had to go back for a second read to see if it was really as bad as I remembered. And yup, it sure was.

Let's start with the opening paragraph shall we?

'Forty years after liberated women felt able to say "no" to their partners' demands for sex, they have been urged to say "yes" more often to keep their men happy.'

Forty years hey Curtin? Not in the eyes of the law. It is only in the last 20 years - 1985 in Australia, 1991 in England and 1993 in the USA (some states in both Aust and US earlier)- that 'marital exemption' laws were fully abolished and spousal rape made illegal. Seems like a bit of a flippant remark when you consider the continued instances of marital rape that go unreported and under-prosecuted. And that's without mentioning the numerous countries in which it is still not illegal.

Which brings us to women apparently 'dreading' bedtimes. Surely 'dreading' is a bit of strong word to use? What have women got to dread? Unless of course they are being asked to or even forced to submit to sex against their will - which would seem to be what Curtin and, she would have us believe Arndt, is advocating - in which case 'dreading' seems quite appropriate. Curtin and Arndt seem to place the fault with the women who are doing the 'dreading', suggesting as you will see below that they should instead just relax and enjoy it.

I don't mean to say that all men are rapists and that any of the people in the survey have experienced marital rape. It's the one-sidedness of Curtin's article that I object to. She quotes Arndt as saying that men 'listen to what women want, try to please them and … this need that is so important to them is totally ignored.'

We don't, however, get any details of HOW men are trying to please women or what THEY might need to do to solve the problem of, as Arndt insists on calling it,'mis-matched libidos'. Says Arndt, a partner with a low-libido (who Curtin helpfully points out are mainly women) 'needs to put sex on the "to-do list", even if they don't feel like doing it.'

Actually, screw not judging Arndt and her awful book. In closing she says:

"The notion that women have to want sex to enjoy it has been a really misguided idea that has caused havoc in relationships over the last 40 years.'

And Curtin then attempts to defuse this comment with Arndt's reassurance that 'with the right approach from a loving partner, if women were willing to be receptive "and allow themselves to relax … they would enjoy it"...

REALLY? With the right approach from a loving partner women are going to enjoy sex? I don't think any of us need a sex-therapist to tell us that!

Comments suggesting women should 'relax and enjoy it' sound dangerously like the candidate for the governor of Texas in 1990 quoted in Alisson&Wrightsman(1993) who commented 'Rainy weather is like a woman being raped; if it's inevitable just relax and enjoy it.'

Well I'm sorry, but for me the 'right approach' does not include being coerced or physically forced by anyone into having sex when I don't want to have it: is it possible that THIS behaviour (and accompanying societal attitudes that are complicit in condoning it) is what should be scrutinised for having 'caused havoc in relationships over the last 40 year', rather than women who inconveniently assert their human rights?



I realise that this post becomes increasingly hysterical as you read it but being up after 12am and reading 'Lifestyle' articles and self-help books that condone rape has that effect on me...

Sunday, March 1, 2009

The Latest (no really!) from the Oscars

I'd like to preface this post with a WARNING: I was drunk and I don't expect you to find this as amusing as I do.

In lieu of real-life company during the Oscars broadcast (and after several glasses of wine) I took the following notes, never actually thinking I'd subject anyone else to them. And yes, I realise that drinking alone, watching television alone and taking notes whilst watching television and drinking alone is not a practice most people subscribe to and may not be entirely healthy. SO to accompany that little insight into the sad reality of my life here is an unabridged, unedited, unspell-checked insight into my train of thought on Oscars night.

Enjoy.


Melissa George has a ridiculously large head.

Baz and Catherine are revoluting. She’s revolting. Has she been drinking?

Vomit. Penelope Cruise.

Kate Winslet also has huge head and tiny boobs. Starting to think it’s the camera angle. Everyone has tiny boobs.

Deborah is gorgeous.

Orange Richard is Orange.

Slum Dog stars are adorable.

Good god. The girls are tiny!

Good god- that’s it Wilks? That was over so quick! (bet you've heard that before! bahahahaha...)

Hugh Jackman is gorgeous.

Australia joke….even better – New Zealand Joke.

My god. His performance is adorable. And hilarious!

I love it. They’ve totally embraced the whole ‘economic crisis’ thing and made it work!

It’s lovely! It’s intimate and its funny! And its budget…

Anne Hathaway isn’t as annoying as I thought…clearly has lungs and a sense of humour.

Mmmmm…Hugh…

Hilarious. The Reader. Dance section. Hugh’s losing it. Really what they were they going to do with an underage Mrs-Robinson-esque Nazi love story?

Fuck.

He’s gorgeous.

Awww. Meryl hearts hugh so hard. But not as hard as her daughter hearts him.

Oh no. Tilda is wearing another beige sheet.

Goldie Horn’s tits look like they’re about to escape.

God I hate Penelope cruz. Her hair is so much bigger than her face.

Whoopi still got it! Nun jokes.

Amy Adams…hmm…cutie pie. Huge emerald necklace thing.

Actually, the beige sheet is kind of working for her…looks like one of the fates.

* At this point my television lost colour and I, simultaneously, interest. I tuned back in for Sean Penn but had sobered up by then and had nothing snide to say about his lovely speech anyway. I would also like to retract any complimentary comments I made about Anne Hathaway. I wrote them before I heard her describe her strongest memory of Heath Ledger:'What I remember most about Heath was that he was just...so...alive'*