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MTR in the Media Category

Going Gaga over raunch dressed up as liberation

Articles 2010, MTR in the Media 29 Comments »

gagasketchUS pop juggernaut Lady Gaga is bursting on to Australian stages this week. The much hyped tour began in Sydney last night with the first of 13 all but sold-out concerts.

The 24-year-old New Yorker, christened Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, has sold eight million albums. While she’s here, we’ll hear all about how she’s avant-garde. Cutting edge. Risque. Experimental. Transgressive.

But Lady Gaga isn’t pushing boundaries. She’s a conformist. This is demonstrated in the nine-minute video clip for her new hit single, Telephone. It’s revered by frenzied Gaga lovers across the globe as the next Thriller. Popular blogger Mia Freedman, recently lamenting the sexualisation of girls, “adores” it. It’s filed under “cool clips” on her blog.

But the clip endorses and entrenches some of the worst stereotypes about women and sexuality. And littering the film with a range of brands suggests Gaga and the media moguls who run her empire are more about profit than art.

Her clip, viewed millions of times since last week’s release, is set in a women’s prison filled with prostitute-styled nasty girls. As one yells: “Gonna make you swim outta here in your own blood!” (how adorable), Gaga is thrown into a cell by two tough female guards and stripped. Naked, she throws herself against the cell bars. Her barely pixilated genitals and breasts are freeze-framed. Her boyfriend calls but she tells him she’s “kinda busy right now”, then cavorts with her sexy inmates in skimpy bra and knickers. Some argue this is the radical bit. She wants to be herself and have “fun with the girls” and not be bothered by a man.

This fun includes watching two jailbirds fight, one kicking in the other’s head with her stilettos and punching her in the face as inmates cheer. It includes being submissive to a heavily tattooed butch lesbian (I hate to spoil the surprise, but she’s in leather) in the prison yard, who touches Gaga up while pulling a mobile out of her pants. Cue lingering camera shot on Virginmobile.

If Gaga is so radically different, why is her clip one big advertisement? Virginmobile, Polaroid, LG, Diet Coke, some kind of fast-food something. Pro-Gaga cultural analysts respond that this is an ironic take on the power of capitalism and advertising. “Give us more irony!” say the corporations.

Our heroine is then bailed out (by Beyonce, no less) who tells her: “You’ve been a bad bad girl, Gaga.” Did you get the S & M reference? How daring.

They then go on a mass poisoning spree (Beyonce’s breasts make a special appearance) before driving off Thelma and Louise style, although T and L didn’t have “Pussy Wagon” sprayed across the back of their car, a yellow Chevrolet Silverado SS borrowed from Kill Bill: Volume 1. That’s where all the cool Quentin Tarantino references come in. It really is one big Macy’s parade mess of Midnight Express meets Kill Bill meets Thelma and Louise meets Zoo magazine meets Pulp Fiction meets Martha Stewart on crack. All these pop-culture references make it a masterpiece, apparently.

The clip is just one more thing catering to pornographic male fantasies, part of a broader cultural story being read by young people forming their understanding of relationships and sexuality.

Women, aka bitches, love being violent to other bitches. Girl-on-girl action, lesbian cliches. Nakedness. Voyerism. Exhibitionism. Objectification. It’s a carnival of spread legs and pubes shaved to within an inch of the performer’s life and inanimate objects as phallic symbols. Because, as we know, women can’t help sucking things that have any distant resemblance to the male organ. And what’s so counter-cultural about groin-emphasising costumes, shredded fishnet stockings and a leopard-skin body suit? That has never been done before?

This is not about being edgy. It’s about playing to sex industry-inspired scripts. Fetishising sexual violence isn’t all that imaginative. It’s standard fare.

The film ends with the feminist symbol. Now this is audacious. In attaching this liberation symbol to her video, the film sends a deceptive message about what feminism is. Is not answering the phone to be seen as some radically defiant act? Does feminism mean violence is so democratised that women are free to hurt each other and men as well? Is baring your body the way you strike a blow for women? Is taking a ride on a disco stick a sign of true womanhood?

That’s what some women think the film is about. One wrote in an online forum about the clip: “What’s wrong with a girl having her boobs out in a confident and completely sexy, self-assured way?” And another wrote: “Gaga’s clip shouts girl power with its nakedness.”

Gaga is contributing to the distorted, one-dimensional cultural script about girls and women that is spread with zeal under a veneer of liberation. It not only constricts their freedom but takes the focus off what needs to happen for true freedom to be realised.

Published in theaustralian banner

Melinda Tankard Reist is editor of Getting Real: Challenging the Sexualisation of Girls and a founder of Collective Shout: for a world free of s*xploitation (www.collectiveshout.org).

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March 18th, 2010  
Tags: lady gaga, music video, objectification, Sexualisation



MTR in the media this week

MTR in the Media 4 Comments »

qalogoTranscript of ABC’s Q&A in which precious minutes are wasted as I try to explain the term ’skanky hos’

Melinda Tankard Reist: What would have been controversial would have been if Tony Abbott had said: “I want my daughters to be skanky hos.” Then you might have had a controversy.

Satyajit Das: Sorry, what is a “scanty ho”?

Melinda Tankard Reist: Skanky ho. Whore.

Satyajit Das: What is that?

Rebecca Huntley: I’ll show you after.

Satyajit Das: You’re on.

Rebecca Huntley: We’ll just go out.

Barnaby Joyce: It’s a derivative.

Satyajit Das: It’s a derivative?

Lindsay Tanner: It’s a family show.

Satyajit Das: It’s a family show?

Lindsay Tanner: It’s a family show.

Melinda Tankard Reist: It’s a rough term for a loose woman. Skanky whore…

Satyajit Das: Oh, right…

Melinda Tankard Reist: You obviously don’t listen to enough rap music.

gerard henderson media watch dog

Gerard Henderson’s take on Q&A, with special empasis on the skanky ho educational segment.

Interview on 3CR ‘Right Now Radio’

3cr logo

Interview with Mia Freedman about Collective Shout.

mamamia

Sarah McMahon’s guest blog post ’Promoting gastric banding to 14-year-olds: malnutrition and maintenance on the menu’ reprinted in On Line Opinion. 

onlineopinion logo

Emma Rush’s guest blog post ’The market is eating our children’ repirnted in On Line Opinion.

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February 19th, 2010  
Tags: censorship, child pornography, china, collective shout, human rights, objectification, sexulisation, women



Today in selling misogyny, Feministe

MTR in the Media 0 Comment »

Australian men’s fashion company Roger David are selling some rather horrific and misogynistic t-shirts…

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January 26th, 2010  



Outrage over graphic tshirts prompts pornography row, The Sunday Age

MTR in the Media 1 Comment »

Outrage over graphic tshirts prompts pornography row

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January 25th, 2010  
Tags: Age, graphic, Outrage, Pornography, row, Sunday, tshirts



Sexual message offends as T-shirts labelled rape chic, The Daily Telegraph

MTR in the Media 1 Comment »

Sexual message offends as T-shirts labelled rape chic…

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January 25th, 2010  
Tags: Daily, labelled, message, offends, rape chic, Sexual, T-shirts, Telegraph



Shock horror: Nude supermodel has dimple on thigh

Articles 2010, MTR in the Media, News of Note 2 Comments »

The Australian article published on Online Opinion

http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=9890

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January 6th, 2010  



Howard Sattler interviews Melinda on 6PR about Jennifer Hawkins’ Marie Claire photos

MTR in the Media 0 Comment »

Melinda on 6PR with Howard Sattler

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January 6th, 2010  



Getting Real reviewed in Online Opinion

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Nightmare in girl world

By Anna Krohn

Posted Tuesday, 24 November 2009

“At my 21st, I want people to say “Here comes one hot chick!”

So declared a 14-year-old schoolgirl in a class discussion a few years ago.

My job at the time was to explore the topic of self-worth and “relationships” with a large group of private school girls. I proposed that we visualise ourselves seven years hence, and this was the first answer.

Then it hit me like a pole-dancer’s kick. That despite her tender age, this girl’s dumbed down, sexed-up aspirations were a set-piece, not only of her generation, but of her mother’s and even of the primary-aged girls, posing their Bratz dolls and rocking to raunchy Beyonce videos at slumber parties. Read the entire review.

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November 24th, 2009  



Getting Real reviewed in the West Australian

MTR in the Media 0 Comment »

One woman is saying no to our increasingly sexualised culture, reports Tamara Hunter. Read the full review.

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November 18th, 2009  



ABC Radio National: Life Matters

MTR in the Media 1 Comment »

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November 8th, 2009  



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    • Going Gaga over raunch dressed up as liberation
    • MTR in the media this week
    • Today in selling misogyny, Feministe
    • Outrage over graphic tshirts prompts pornography row, The Sunday Age
    • Sexual message offends as T-shirts labelled rape chic, The Daily Telegraph
    • Shock horror: Nude supermodel has dimple on thigh
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